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Snow Geese and Mount Baker, Skagit Valley, Washington

A very large flock of snow geese (Chen caerulescens) fly over the Skagit Valley of Washington state with Mount Baker in the background. Tens of thousands of snow geese winter in the Skagit Valley, feeding in farmers' fields. They breed during the summer months on the upper reaches of Alaska, Canada, Greenland and Siberia. Mount Baker, which has an elevation of 10,781 feet (3,286 meters), has the second-most thermally active crater of any volcano in the Cascade Range.

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SnowGeese_Flock_Baker_Skagit_6215.jpg
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Copyright 2014 Kevin Ebi/LivingWilderness.com. All rights reserved.
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5616x3744 / 8.6MB
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Chen caerulescens snow geese snow goose geese goose flock bird birds large many numerous thousands Mount Baker Baker volcano stratovolcano Skagit Valley Skagit Washington nature wildlife
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Snow Geese
A very large flock of snow geese (Chen caerulescens) fly over the Skagit Valley of Washington state with Mount Baker in the background. Tens of thousands of snow geese winter in the Skagit Valley, feeding in farmers' fields. They breed during the summer months on the upper reaches of Alaska, Canada, Greenland and Siberia. Mount Baker, which has an elevation of 10,781 feet (3,286 meters), has the second-most thermally active crater of any volcano in the Cascade Range.
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