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  • Numerous large driftwood logs fill Ruby Beach in Olympic National Park, Washington.
    OlympicNP_Ruby-Beach_Driftwood_9099.jpg
  • Several rugged islands including Little James Island (foreground) and James Island (background) are framed by large logs on Rialto Beach in Olympic National Park, Washington.
    OlympicNP_Rialto-Beach_Driftwood_815...jpg
  • Spray from Snoqualmie Falls, located near Snoqualmie, Washington, freezes to rocks and logs at the base of the waterfall on a frigid 17°F (-8°C) morning.
    Snoqualmie-Falls_Ice_Base_8406.jpg
  • Several rugged islands including Little James Island (foreground) and James Island (background) are framed by large logs on Rialto Beach in Olympic National Park, Washington.
    OlympicNP_Rialto-Beach_Driftwood_815...jpg
  • Spray from Snoqualmie Falls, located near Snoqualmie, Washington, freezes to rocks and logs at the base of the waterfall on a frigid 17°F (-8°C) morning.
    Snoqualmie-Falls_Ice_Base_8421.jpg
  • The remnants of two large trunks from a fallen tree reach into Puget Sound, not far from Pigeon Creek, Everett, Washington. An 8-second exposure blurs the motion of the Puget Sound waves.
    WA_Logs_Puget-Sound_Beach_Everett_71...jpg
  • The golden light of sunset is reflected onto a fork of the Skagit River as it flows past driftwood in an estuary along Skagit Bay on Fir Island in Washington state.
    WA_Fir-Island_Golden-Sunset_Low-Tide...jpg
  • Pacific Ocean waves crash around driftwood that has washed ashore on Second Beach in Olympic National Park, Washington, as the clouds above are colored by the rising sun.
    OlympicNP_Second-Beach_Driftwood_Sun...jpg
  • Pacific Ocean waves crash around driftwood that has washed ashore on Second Beach in Olympic National Park, Washington, as the clouds above are colored by the rising sun.
    OlympicNP_Second-Beach_Driftwood_Sun...jpg
  • Pacific Ocean waves crash around driftwood that has washed ashore on Second Beach in Olympic National Park, Washington, as the clouds above are colored by the rising sun.
    OlympicNP_Second-Beach_Driftwood_Sun...jpg
  • The rising sun colors the sky above driftwood and three prominent sea stacks off Second Beach in Olympic National Park, Washington.
    OlympicNP_Second-Beach_Sea-Stacks_Su...jpg
  • Waves from Lake Washington crash into pieces of driftwood along the undeveloped shoreline of Saint Edward State Park in Kenmore, Washington.
    WA_St-Edward_Driftwood_6736.jpg
  • A bright rainbow falls on the roof of the Cunningham Cabin, a historic feature of the Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming. The cabin was build in 1890 by Pierce and Margaret Cunningham as part of a 160 acre homestead.
    CunninghamCabin.jpg
  • Against the backdrop of a pastel sunrise, water from the Pacific Ocean flows onto Second Beach in Olympic National Park, Washington.
    OlympicNP_Second-Beach_Driftwood_Sun...jpg
  • As the sun sets behind the Olympic Mountains, the red last light of day lights up the underside of clouds over Puget Sound and Marina Beach in this view from Edmonds, Washington.
    Edmonds_Marina-Beach_Stormy-Sunset_8...jpg
  • Three adult bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) rest on logs that have washed up along the Nooksack River near Deming, Washington. Hundreds of bald eagles winter in the area to feast on spawned-out salmon.
    Bald-Eagles_Log_Three_Nooksack-River...jpg
  • A female common merganser (Mergus merganser) rests with her downy young on a log floating on Lake Washington in Renton, Washington.
    Merganser_Mother_Babies_Log_Renton_4...jpg
  • A raccoon (Procyon lotor) looks up from its perch on a log floating on Lake Washington in Renton, Washington.
    Raccon_Log_Lake-Washington_Renton_49...jpg
  • A raccoon (Procyon lotor) carefully walks out onto a floating log to forage in Lake Washington in Renton, Washington.
    Raccon_Log_Lake-Washington_Renton_49...jpg
  • A mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) hen rests on a log in the wetlands of the Washington Park Arboretum, Seattle, Washington.
    Mallard_Log_Aboretum_0413.jpg
  • A raccoon (Procyon lotor) carefully walks out onto a floating log to forage in Lake Washington in Renton, Washington.
    Raccon_Log_Lake-Washington_Renton_48...jpg
  • Colorful swirls and streaks stand out from the bleached remains of a tree that had been submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington. The log reemerged after a prolonged drought caused the lake to lost nearly all of its water.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Bark-Exposed-Log_84...jpg
  • A raccoon (Procyon lotor) carefully walks out onto a floating log to forage in Lake Washington in Renton, Washington.
    Raccon_Log_Lake-Washington_Renton_48...jpg
  • A fisher (Pekania pennanti) looks out from a hollow log in an exhibit at Northwest Trek Wildlife Park near Eatonville, Washington. Fishers are found in forests throughout northern North America. They are omivours, feeding on a wide variety of small animals and occasionally on fruits and mushrooms. Despite their name, however, they rarely eat fish.
    Fisher_Hollow-Log_Northwest-Trek_922...jpg
  • A log points toward the reflection of a forested area on a large pond, partially covered in lily pads, in Parc des Sources, Brussels, Belgium. The public park is known for its numerous springs — called sources, in French — which provide drinking water to the surrounding area. Parc des Sources is one of six major parks that are connected in an ecological corridor in Brussles. In Dutch, Parc des Sources is called Bronnenpark.
    Brussels_Parc-des-Sources_Log-Lily-P...jpg
  • Colorful swirls and streaks stand out from the bleached remains of a tree that had been submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington. The log reemerged after a prolonged drought caused the lake to lost nearly all of its water.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Bark-Exposed-Log_84...jpg
  • Pipers Creek flows over a log, forming a small cascade in this top-down view Carkeek Park, Seattle, Washington.
    Carkeek_PipersCreek_Log_5423.jpg
  • A western toad (Anaxyrus boreas) crawls out onto a moss-covered log in the Lake Twentytwo Research Natural Area in Snohomish County, Washington. The western toad is found throughout the western United States in a wide range of habitats from sea level to more than 7,000 feet.
    Toad_Western_Lake22_8195.jpg
  • Seven mallard ducklings (Anas platyrhynchos) rest on a log in the wetlands of the Washington Park Arboretum, Seattle, Washington.
    DucklingsOnLog_SeattleArboretum_S02-...jpg
  • Seven yellow-bellied sliders bask on a log floating in Martin Lake, located in the Carolina Sandhills National Wildlife Refuge in South Carolina. The yellow-bellied slider is a pond slider that's native to the southeastern United States from southeastern Virginia to Florida. It's a diurnal turtle that feeds mainly in the morning and spends the rest of the day basking.
    Sliders_Yellow-Bellied_Carolina-Sand...jpg
  • Snow accumulates on a log sticking out of the mostly frozen Brohm Lake in Cheakamus, which is near Brackendale, British Columbia, Canada.
    BC_BrohmLake_Winter_Log_1748.jpg
  • Two snowy owls (Nyctea scandiaca) rest on a log at Damon Point in Ocean Shores, Washington; one appears to yawn while the other stretches one of its wings. Snowy owls, which spend the summer in the northern circumpolar region north of 60 degrees latitude, have a typical winter range that includes Alaska, Canada and northern Eurasia. Every several years, for reasons still unexplained, the snowy owls migrate much farther south in an event known as an irruption. During one irruption, a snowy owl was found as far south as the Caribbean. During the 2011-2012 irruption, Ocean Shores on the Washington coast was the winter home for an especially large number of snowy owls. Snowy owls tend to prefer coastal and plains areas, which most resemble the open tundra that serves as their typical home.
    SnowyOwls_OceanShores_TwoOnLog_9999.jpg
  • A painted turtle (Chrysemys picta) suns itself on a log off Foster Island in Seattle's Washington Park Arboretum.
    PaintedTurtleLog.jpg
  • A coyote (Canis latrans) climbs up onto a snow-covered log after crossing a shallow portion of the Madison River in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming.
    Coyote_Madison-River_Yellowstone_487...jpg
  • Layers of driftwood peel away in this detail of a log that washed ashore at Marina Beach Park, Edmonds, Washington.
    Driftwood_Layers_Edmonds_0353.jpg
  • A painted turtle (Chrysemys picta) suns itself on a log deep in the wetlands of the Washington Park Aboretum in Seattle, Washington.
    PaintedTurtle_Sunning_Arboretum_2666.jpg
  • A large crack is visible in a log exposed at low tide on the beach of Marina Beach Park in Edmonds, Washington.
    Driftwood_Split_Edmonds_0346.jpg
  • A log on the beach at Oyster Bay on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, is full of holes, likely drilled by clams that settled into the wood during their larvae stage.
    Driftwood_Holes_Oyster-Bay_Vancouver...jpg
  • Icicles hang from a downed tree over a creek in the Skookum Flats near Chinook Pass, Washington.
    Winter_SkookumFlatsIcicles_6484.jpg
  • A tree sprouts on a stump in the middle of North Creek in Bothell, Washington.
    North-Creek_Nurse-Log_7142.jpg
  • A tree sprouts on a stump in the middle of North Creek in Bothell, Washington.
    North-Creek_Nurse-Log_7164.jpg
  • The Merced River runs under a fallen, twisted tree in Yosemite National Park, California.
    Yosemite_MercedRiver_Log_8011.jpg
  • Foxfire is visible on decaying driftwood at midnight on Ruby Beach in Olympic National Park, Washington. Foxfire is a natural phonemonon produced by bioluminescent fungi typically found on rotting bark. The purpose of the glow is unknown, but it may help the fungus attract insects, which then disperse its spores.
    OlympicNP_Ruby-Beach_Night_Foxfire_9...jpg
  • The surface of a weathered piece of driftwood displays abstract patterns on the beach of Seahurst Park, Burien, Washington. Barnacles grow on the bark that remains.
    Seahurst-Park_Driftwood_Weathered_70...jpg
  • Weathered driftwood rests against a large beach rock in Marina Beach Park, Edmonds, Washington.
    Driftwood_Weathered_Smooth_Edmonds_0...jpg
  • A rock rests in a depression on driftwood on the beach of Marina Beach Park in Edmonds, Washington.
    Driftwood_Rock-Depression_Edmonds_03...jpg
  • Camera movement during a long exposure resulted in this impressionistic view of a fallen tree over Yosemite Creek in Yosemite National Park, California. Neighboring granite walls, turned golden by the rising sun, are reflected on the surface of the water.
    Yosemite_YosemiteCreek_FallenTree_Im...jpg
  • Green and yellow lichen grows on the peeling bark of driftwood that has washed ashore in Faye Bainbridge Park on Bainbridge Island, Washington state.
    Driftwood_Lichen_Bainbridge-Island_0...jpg
  • Foxfire is visible on decaying driftwood at midnight on Ruby Beach in Olympic National Park, Washington. Foxfire is a natural phonemonon produced by bioluminescent fungi typically found on rotting bark. The purpose of the glow is unknown, but it may help the fungus attract insects, which then disperse its spores.
    OlympicNP_Ruby-Beach_Night_Foxfire_9...jpg
  • The surface of a weathered piece of driftwood displays abstract patterns on the beach of Seahurst Park, Burien, Washington. Barnacles grow on the bark that remains.
    Seahurst-Park_Driftwood_Weathered_70...jpg
  • Remnants of a fallen tree stretch across Yosemite Creek in Yosemite National Park, California. The surface of the creek reflects the golden color of the neighboring granite walls at sunrise.
    Yosemite_YosemiteCreek_FallenTree_09...jpg
  • An old-growth douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) towers over a fallen tree and dwarfs newer growth in the Cathedral Grove, located in MacMillan Provincial Park on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada. Some of the trees in the protected forest are more than 800 years old and are up to 30 feet (9 meters) in circumference.
    Vancouver-Island_Cathedral-Grove_Old...jpg
  • Weathered driftwood rests against a large beach rock in Marina Beach Park, Edmonds, Washington.
    Driftwood_Weathered_Smooth_Edmonds_0...jpg
  • A cross-section of petrified wood displays a wide spectrum of colors in the Rainbow Forest of Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona. The petrified wood in the park is made up of almost solid quartz and the colors are the result of impurities in the quartz, such as iron, carbon and manganese. It formed more than 200 million years ago when logs washed into an ancient river system. The logs were quickly buried by sediment, which slowed decay. Over time, minerals, including silica, were absorbed into the porous wood, replacing the original organic material over hundreds of thousands of years.
    AZ_Petrified-Forest_Petrified-Wood_D...jpg
  • A close-up of a a cross-section of petrified wood reveals colors in abstract patterns in the Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona. The petrified wood in the park is made up of almost solid quartz and the colors are the result of impurities in the quartz, such as iron, carbon and manganese. It formed more than 200 million years ago when logs washed into an ancient river system. The logs were quickly buried by sediment, which slowed decay. Over time, minerals, including silica, were absorbed into the porous wood, replacing the original organic material over hundreds of thousands of years.
    AZ_Petrified-Forest_Petrified-Wood_A...jpg
  • Rocks and logs on the banks of the Snoqualmie River near Snoqualmie, Washington are encased in thick ice after several days of subfreezing temperatures. During the winter, temperatures occasionally drop so low that mist from the nearby Snoqualmie Falls turns to ice.
    SnoqualmieRiver_IcyBank_5587.jpg
  • Erosion debris from petrified logs and the bentonite clay hills collects at the base of the badlands of the Blue Mesa in Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona.
    AZ_Petrified-Forest_Blue-Mesa_Erosio...jpg
  • More than a dozen bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) rest on logs or in trees along the Nooksack River near Deming, Washington.
    Bald-Eagles_Nooksack-River_5005.jpg
  • About a dozen bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) rest on logs or in trees along the Nooksack River near Deming, Washington.
    Bald-Eagles_Nooksack-River_5003.jpg
  • Rocks and logs on the banks of the Snoqualmie River near Snoqualmie, Washington are encased in thick ice after several days of subfreezing temperatures. During the winter, temperatures occasionally drop so low that mist from the nearby Snoqualmie Falls turns to ice.
    SnoqualmieRiver_IcyBank_5551.jpg
  • Rough bark was mostly preserved on a log submerged for 100 years in Rattlesnake Lake near North Bend, Washington. The log reemerged after a prolonged drought caused the lake to lose nearly all of its water.
    Rattlesnake-Lake_Exposed-Bark-Patter...jpg
  • A male wood duck (Aix sponsa) in non-breeding plumage stands on a log over the water in the wetlands of the Washington Park Arboretum, Seattle, Washington.
    Duck-Wood_Log-Arboretum_3330.jpg
  • An American Golden Eagle (Aquila chrysaetos canadensis) rests on a log in an animal santuary in Washington state. The injured eagle was under the care of sanctuary staff. The Golden Eagle is the most common eagle. This particular subspecies is commonly found throughout the western United States and Canada.
    Eagle_Golden_Captive_1397.jpg
  • A common garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis) slithers across a log on Lodge Lake near Snoqualmie Pass, Washington.
    GarterSnake_LodgeLake_4233.jpg
  • Two snowy owls (Nyctea scandiaca) rest on a log at Damon Point in Ocean Shores, Washington. Owls typically rest during the day and hunt at night. Used to the open tundra, however, snowy owls rest on the ground, rather than on high perches. Snowy owls, which spend the summer in the northern circumpolar region north of 60 degrees latitude, have a typical winter range that includes Alaska, Canada and northern Eurasia. Every several years, for reasons still unexplained, the snowy owls migrate much farther south in an event known as an irruption. During one irruption, a snowy owl was found as far south as the Caribbean. During the 2011-2012 irruption, Ocean Shores on the Washington coast was the winter home for an especially large number of snowy owls. Snowy owls tend to prefer coastal and plains areas, which most resemble the open tundra that serves as their typical home.
    SnowyOwls_OceanShores_TwoOnLog_9839.jpg
  • A red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) rests on a log in a small inlet in the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington as a Canada goose preens itself nearby.
    Slider_RedEared_Goose_Arboretum_0792.jpg
  • A red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) balances itself on an exposed log in an inlet in the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. Red-eared sliders are type of turtle native only to the southern United States, though they have been introduced in many other areas, including ponds along the Pacific coast.
    Slider_RedEared_Balanced_Arboretum_1...jpg
  • A snowy owl (Bubo scandiacus formerly Nyctea scandiaca)  rests on driftwood during a rain storm at Boundary Bay in southern British Columbia, Canada. Snowy owls migrate that far south only once or twice a decade in a type of migration known as an irruption.
    SnowyOwl_BoundaryBay_Driftwood_Rain_...jpg
  • A snowy owl (Bubo scandiacus formerly Nyctea scandiaca) rests on driftwood at Boundary Bay in southern British Columbia, Canada. Snowy owls migrate that far south only once or twice a decade in a type of migration known as an irruption.
    SnowyOwl_BoundaryBay_Driftwood_6038.jpg
  • A snowy owl (Bubo scandiacus formerly Nyctea scandiaca)  rests on driftwood during a rain storm at Boundary Bay in southern British Columbia, Canada. Snowy owls migrate that far south only once or twice a decade in a type of migration known as an irruption.
    SnowyOwl_BoundaryBay_Driftwood_Rain_...jpg
  • An adult bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) sits on a log at the edge of the Squamish River in Brackendale, British Columbia, Canada.
    BaldEagle_SquamishRiver_Edge_3482.jpg
  • A layer of icy snow rests on a decaying log from a downed alder tree in Snohomish County, Washington.
    Alder_Decay_Snow_0063.jpg
  • A layer of icy snow rests on a decaying log from a downed alder tree in Snohomish County, Washington.
    Alder_Decay_Snow_0068.jpg
  • One male wood duck (Aix sponsa), also known as a drake, appears to argue with another while they are both perched on a log in a King County, Washington, lake.
    Duck-Wood_Arguing_Sammamish_5339.jpg
  • A juvenile bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) lands on a log after taking a bath in the Squamish River near Brackendale, British Columbia, Canada.
    BaldEagle_Juvenile_LandingOnLog_4841.jpg
  • A double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) opens its mouth wide as it rests on a log above Lake Washington in Seattle. This part of Lake Washington, located in the Washington Park Arboretum, is a freshwater lake. The double-crested cormorant is one of only two types of cormorants regularly found in fresh water.
    cormorant-mouth-open-2986.jpg
  • An invertebrate crawls on a decaying alder log in Snohomish County, Washington.
    Alder_Decay_Invertebrate_1725.jpg
  • A moose (Alces alces) rests against a log while feeding in an open range wildlife preserve in the Cascade Mountains of Washington state.
    Moose_Forest_Resting_Captive_3485.jpg
  • A snowy owl (Nyctea scandiaca) watches the sun set over the Pacific Ocean from its perch on Damon Point in Ocean Shores, Washington. The Olympic Mountains are visible in the background. Snowy owls, like other owls, hunt at night and rest during the day to conserve energy. Snowy owls, which spend the summer in the northern circumpolar region north of 60 degrees latitude, have a typical winter range that includes Alaska, Canada and northern Eurasia. Every several years, for reasons still unexplained, the snowy owls migrate much farther south in an event known as an irruption. During one irruption, a snowy owl was found as far south as the Caribbean. During the 2011-2012 irruption, Ocean Shores on the Washington coast was the winter home for an especially large number of snowy owls. Snowy owls tend to prefer coastal and plains areas, which most resemble the open tundra that serves as their typical home.
    SnowyOwl_OceanShores_Olympics_Log_10...jpg
  • Two bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus), an adult and a juvenile, feed at the edge of the Squamish River in Brackendale, British Columbia, Canada. The juvenile found a scrap of food on a log and carried it to the edge of the river. The adult chased the young eagle and snatched the food, visible on its right foot, for itself.
    BaldEagles_AdultJuvenile_SquamishRiv...jpg
  • An American bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) rests on a log in the wetlands of the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle.
    Bullfrog_Arboretum_4077.jpg
  • Two snowy owls (Bubo scandiacus, formerly Nyctea scandiaca) rest together on a log near Boundary Bay, British Columbia, Canada. Snowy owls, like other owls, typically hunt at night and rest during the day. Snowy owls are rarely found as far south as the Canada/United States border, but do migrate that far once or twice a decade in a type of migration known as an irruption. Irruptions occur when the snowy owl population is too large for the food supply on the Arctic tundra, forcing them to spread out much farther than normal.
    SnowyOwls_BoundaryBay_TwoResting_440...jpg
  • A juvenile bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) scavenges for food stuck to a log over the Squamish River in Brackendale, British Columbia, Canada. While bald eagles are thought of as predators, most often they scavenge for food.
    BaldEagle_Juvenile_Scavenging_Bracke...jpg
  • A snowy owl (Nyctea scandiaca) watches the sun set over the Pacific Ocean from its perch on Damon Point in Ocean Shores, Washington. Snowy owls, like other owls, hunt at night and rest during the day to conserve energy. Snowy owls, which spend the summer in the northern circumpolar region north of 60 degrees latitude, have a typical winter range that includes Alaska, Canada and northern Eurasia. Every several years, for reasons still unexplained, the snowy owls migrate much farther south in an event known as an irruption. During one irruption, a snowy owl was found as far south as the Caribbean. During the 2011-2012 irruption, Ocean Shores on the Washington coast was the winter home for an especially large number of snowy owls. Snowy owls tend to prefer coastal and plains areas, which most resemble the open tundra that serves as their typical home.
    SnowyOwl_OceanShores_Sunset_1346.jpg
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