Along with , New York City has lured another Arctic visitor—Snowy Owls.
Seven Snowy Owls have been spotted near the city this season, though this is nothing compared to when owls were “appearing like magic” in the eastern United States in their greatest numbers in half a century, as Scott Weidensaul wrote in APP magazine. But compared to the rest of New York history, when you seldom saw a snowy, this is a rare urban storm you don’t want to miss.
Snowy Owls live at the top of the world with the polar bears, says of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. “They are like creatures from another planet.” By weight, they are the largest owls out there. While the birds feed their young small mammals, adults subsist mainly on other birds, he says. “They’ll go offshore at night and hunt sleeping ducks.” Weidensaul writes that he’s even seen them snatch Great Blue Herons and Canada Geese.
There are two main ideas for why these foreign raptors are flying south: either good conditions in the Arctic causing a population boom, or resources are low at home and the owls are out hunting for food.
Either way, this is an exceptional event. So go see them—just don’t get too chummy with these natural predators. “They get stressed ,” says Bate. They’re out of their natural habitat and like to rest by day so they can . Bate suggests not wriggling in to get that perfect photo. Take a good pair of binoculars instead, or even better, a scope.
Before they fly back towards permafrost and polar bears, try to spot them at these locations: Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn is a traditionally popular sighting ground, as is Breezy Point and Jamaica Bay in Queens. Governor’s Island saw its in remembered history this year, and Jones Beach along the Atlantic can lend some unbelievable sightings, says Bate—sometimes you can even see the Arctic travelers “on the dunes overlooking the ocean.”
If you’re unable to travel to these lookouts, here’s the second best vantage—owl photos taken in and around New York City during last year’s Snowy blizzard.