How's this for colour?
Whooping Crane / Grus americana
Fall colours near the Bow River
Huddled
The power of bokeh
Whooping Crane / Grus americana
When the weight of the world ...
Hooker's Thistle / Cirsium hookerianum
Sandhill Crane / Grus canadensis
Echinacea
And away they go ...
Lacewing / Chrysopidae sp.
The twist
A little find in the forest
Lachnum sp.
Earthstar
Reflection
.
Highbush Cranberry / Viburnum trilobum
Bokeh shower
I guess we do have SOME red : )
: )
Round and round ...
Dainty bells
The queen of fall colour
Cladonia Lichen
Long time no see
Out of the darkness - for the Chilean miners and t…
It's all about RED
Little moth of the forest
When the petals have fallen
I'm a Boreal Chickadee, not a Black-capped Chickad…
Fire and ice
A different Coral Fungus
Tarnished Plant Bug / Lygus lineolaris
Tropical leaves
Nodding Thistle/Musk Thistle / Carduus nutans
Soft-leaf Muhly grass / Muhlenbergia richardsonis
Reaching out to the sun
Bird's-nest Fungi by the hundreds
Silver threads
Beauty
White Columbine
Life on a leaf stalk
A metallic look
Greater Fringed Gentian / Gentianopsis crinita
Cladonia Lichen sp.
Sitting pretty
Barrier Lake
Mushroom magic
Against the light
Yellow Sweetclover / Melilotus officinalis
Earthstar / Geastrum sp.
Fireweed / Epilobium angustifolium
Black Currant Pie, anyone?
Invasive beauty
Insect casing
Hopper on Broadleaf Gumweed / Grindelia squarrosa
Tiny world on a leaf
Tartarian Honeysuckle /Lonicera tatarica
One of my favourite flowers
Tall Larkspur seed capsules / Delphinium glaucum
Lemon Drops / Bisporella citrina
Clasping-leaved Twisted-stalk / Streptopus amplexi…
Western Stoneseed seeds / Lithospermum ruderale
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140 visits
Scentless Chamomile / Matricaria perforata
A pretty little flower that tends to look like "just another daisy". Found on a walk at Clearwater Park on 4th September.
"Native to Europe, it was introduced as an ornamental and/or a contaminant in crop seed. This is not the chamomile used for tea as it is scent-less.... Scentless Chamomile and Oxeye daisy are often mistaken for each other as the flowers are nearly identical, but the leaves are very different. Both plants are weeds - there are no native white-flowered daisies in Alberta."
www.invasiveplants.ab.ca/Downloads/FS-ScentlessChamomile.pdf
"Native to Europe, it was introduced as an ornamental and/or a contaminant in crop seed. This is not the chamomile used for tea as it is scent-less.... Scentless Chamomile and Oxeye daisy are often mistaken for each other as the flowers are nearly identical, but the leaves are very different. Both plants are weeds - there are no native white-flowered daisies in Alberta."
www.invasiveplants.ab.ca/Downloads/FS-ScentlessChamomile.pdf
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