
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Just a couple dozen miles off the Northwest coast, immense dark birds with long, saber-shaped wings glide without effort above the waves. These graceful giants are Black-footed Albatrosses, flying by the thousands near the edge of the continental shelf. Black-footed Albatrosses do not breed until they are at least five years old, and after the young leave their breeding colony, they spend their first three years at sea. Learn more at BirdNote.org.
By BirdNote4.8
12381,238 ratings
Just a couple dozen miles off the Northwest coast, immense dark birds with long, saber-shaped wings glide without effort above the waves. These graceful giants are Black-footed Albatrosses, flying by the thousands near the edge of the continental shelf. Black-footed Albatrosses do not breed until they are at least five years old, and after the young leave their breeding colony, they spend their first three years at sea. Learn more at BirdNote.org.

91,059 Listeners

43,975 Listeners

38,212 Listeners

43,611 Listeners

27,062 Listeners

1,483 Listeners

10,276 Listeners

6,467 Listeners

358 Listeners

660 Listeners

1,257 Listeners

24,562 Listeners

416 Listeners

3,413 Listeners

883 Listeners

102 Listeners

1,246 Listeners

171 Listeners

14 Listeners