Coyote on the prowl
Details in black
A peaceful litte spot
Not interested in us
Striped Coralroot
A close look
Yesterday's treat
A fascinating mushroom cap
Early Blue Violet
Arrow-leaved coltsfoot / Petasites sagittatus
Shootingstars / Dodecatheon
Black Bear busy feeding
The culprit
Fascinating forest find
Wild Strawberry
Canada Violet
One busy log
A fancy outhouse door
McDougall Church
Gaillardia against weathered wood
I'm in awe, no matter how many I see
Rev. George McDougall
Just playing ....
Come into my parlour, said the spider to the (butt…
Middle Lake, Bow Valley Provincial Park
White Spiraea, aka Birchleaf Spiraea / Spiraea bet…
Baby Barn Owl : )
Against the cabin wall
Burrowing Owl
A Black Bear sighting from May
Spirit
Reflected in the eye of an owl
Yesterday's excitement
Two small, orange butterflies - Northern Crescents
Moth on Creeping Thistle
Dwarf Dogwood
A look of intelligence
Now that's a whole lot of bull
Harebell and tiny visitors
McDougall Church on a sunny day
Where I was, yesterday
Looking a lot like fall
Watching and waiting
Burrowing Owl
Delicate
Forgetmenot Pond - one of my favourite places
At the end of the path
The beauty of low cloud
Forgetmenot Pond
Lenticular clouds over the mountains
One of my favourite Lichens
Between the trees
Mountain view
Like rays of sunshine
Yesterday morning's sunrise
Pine Grosbeak
Moose in a winter wonderland
Male Moose are judged by the size of their antler…
Soaking up the incredible beauty
Just in time
Texture of burnt trees
Heading into the sun
A solitary Moose cow
On guard
Near Morant's Curve
Beyond the treetops
Soft as velvet
A quick glance in our direction
Beauty in nature
On the prowl
Takes a lot of grass and leaves to fill a Bear
Not missing a thing
A disappearing act
Totally at home
Reflected beauty
Columbian Ground Squirrel
Happily feeding
Added for colour
Not dressed in their Sunday best
Happiness is ... playing in a puddle
Moth on a washroom window
Through the Rocky Mountains
Here one minute, gone the next
Lavendula
Through a fancy window
Colourful lichen on a bridge railing
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Audubon's)
A real treat from the weekend
Forgetmenot Pond
Police Car Moth caterpillar
Cascade Mt., Banff
Nothing but fluff
Lake Louise on a rainy day
Summer joy
Strawberries and cream fungus
Mistaya Canyon, Icefields Parkway
Impressive
A view from Mt. Shark, Kananaskis
Icy reflections
Golden Eagle
Short-eared Owl
Peaks and clouds
Columbian Ground Squirrel
Suillus tomentosus - for mushroom soup
Along the Smith-Dorrien / Spray Trail
Lactarius rufus
Feather finery
Spiked beauty
Bow Lake - Impressive Art
Bolete sp.
Pushing up through the mosses
Bold and simple
Coral Fungus sp
The beginning of fall
A splash of colour in the forest
Silene sp
Little alien at Lake Louise
They always look so serious
Fiery Fireweed in its fall colours
Magnificent Peyto Lake
Just for fun
Great Horned Owl juvenile
Power of the Golden Eagle
Big, shiny eyes
The stern look
See also...
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294 visits
After the fire
Has everyone seen the NEW Flickr layout that is now being Beta-tested? If not, check the Sticky in the Help Forum - it shows a sample screen shot. Comments are below the image, black text on white, etc., etc..
www.flickr.com/help/forum/en-us/72157645000450855/
This was a quick drive-by shot, taken on 14 May 2014, during a two-day trip to the Canadian Rockies. Though forest fires cause a lot of damage, the ones that are caused naturally, by lightning, are also necessary and very beneficial. I don't know what caused this particular fire, but the landscape looks very different when the mountainsides are covered in the thin, burnt remains of trees.
"Although often harmful and destructive to humans, naturally occurring wildfires play an integral role in nature. They return nutrients to the soil by burning dead or decaying matter. They also act as a disinfectant, removing disease-ridden plants and harmful insects from a forest ecosystem. And by burning through thick canopies and brushy undergrowth, wildfires allow sunlight to reach the forest floor, enabling a new generation of seedlings to grow." From National Geographic.
"Historically, when fires from natural or other causes began, efforts were made to control them as quickly as possible. That has changed somewhat as more has been learned about the role of fire within forest ecosystems. Forests in which fires are regularly suppressed can burn much hotter and more dangerously when a fire finally does break out. With suppression, large amounts of underbrush accumulate on the forest floor, certain tree species cannot regenerate (oak and pine, for example, need fire to crack their seeds), and trees that do flourish become densely packed. Within this forest structure, the number of fires continues to increase, getting larger and gaining in intensity. This has become increasingly dangerous as urban and suburban areas encroach on forested spaces." From enviroliteracy.org/article.php/46.html
www.flickr.com/help/forum/en-us/72157645000450855/
This was a quick drive-by shot, taken on 14 May 2014, during a two-day trip to the Canadian Rockies. Though forest fires cause a lot of damage, the ones that are caused naturally, by lightning, are also necessary and very beneficial. I don't know what caused this particular fire, but the landscape looks very different when the mountainsides are covered in the thin, burnt remains of trees.
"Although often harmful and destructive to humans, naturally occurring wildfires play an integral role in nature. They return nutrients to the soil by burning dead or decaying matter. They also act as a disinfectant, removing disease-ridden plants and harmful insects from a forest ecosystem. And by burning through thick canopies and brushy undergrowth, wildfires allow sunlight to reach the forest floor, enabling a new generation of seedlings to grow." From National Geographic.
"Historically, when fires from natural or other causes began, efforts were made to control them as quickly as possible. That has changed somewhat as more has been learned about the role of fire within forest ecosystems. Forests in which fires are regularly suppressed can burn much hotter and more dangerously when a fire finally does break out. With suppression, large amounts of underbrush accumulate on the forest floor, certain tree species cannot regenerate (oak and pine, for example, need fire to crack their seeds), and trees that do flourish become densely packed. Within this forest structure, the number of fires continues to increase, getting larger and gaining in intensity. This has become increasingly dangerous as urban and suburban areas encroach on forested spaces." From enviroliteracy.org/article.php/46.html
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