The Avocet stretch
Police Car Moth and Skipper
Juvenile Wilson's Phalarope
Chokecherry / Prunus virginiana
The Wilson's Snipe - such a fine bird
A fancy fungus
Glad to see Gladioli
Now that's a whole lot of bull
Just before it jumped
Erosion in Dinosaur Provincial Park
Richness in nature
Mourning Dove
One of two little fawns
Clouds over Frank Lake
The twins' Mom
Broad-headed bug
Shades of brown
What could be cuter?
A quick, two-second rest
A beautiful display of Fireweed
Edelweiss
The Kent (Superman) Farmhouse
Embracing the sun
Cautious mother of twins
Pika, busily feeding
The smoke breathing monster
Police Car Moth
A touch of iridescence
Red-tailed Hawk with tree bokeh
Yellow-bellied Marmots
Yesterday's storm clouds near Skiff, Alberta
Pure joy
If it looks close, it's because it was!
Layers of blue
Cleaning the BBQ
Cameron Lake, Waterton
Those red, red rocks
A closer look
Bison Paddock, Waterton Lakes National Park
Dusky Grouse female
Sea Holly
Burrowing Owl, after the storm
Yesterday's treat
Hiding in the moss
Prince of Wales Hotel, Waterton
When the mountains turn pink
Irresistable
A change from Marmots
Almost like art
Just a little mushroom
Skiff Elevator, after the storm
Me and my shadow
Backlit
View over the Waterton Valley
Owl butterfly
McDougall Church on a sunny day
Watching and waiting
Listening
Fall colours
A moment to ponder
A sight for sore eyes
A youngster having fun
Young Yellow-bellied Marmot
For a complete change of colour
Found when I was lost
Individual flower of Showy Milkweed
In need of preservation
Here comes the rain
I'm ready to eat you
So perfect
Two of a kind!
Reflected in the eye of an owl
Clasped
Gorgeous iridescent feathers
Should I stay or should I go?
Yellow on gold
Spirit
Showy Milkweed buds
My favourite Thistle
Venus Flytrap flower
An attractive Dragonfly perch
A Black Bear sighting from May
Rust fungus on Western White Clematis
Vibrant pink
Wild European Rabbit
Burrowing Owl
Baby Barn Owl : )
Middle Lake, Bow Valley Provincial Park
Come into my parlour, said the spider to the (butt…
I'm in awe, no matter how many I see
Monarch beauty
Like a giant sandcastle
Tiny Bishop's Cap seeds
Wilson's Snipe - what a beauty
Majestic Castle Mountain
Eared Grebe with young one
Taking a good look
White-faced Ibis - very rare in Alberta
Driving in a sea of gold
I saw a Sora
Vesper Sparrow
Little hearts in a row
Dad on the pylon
12 baby Tree Swallows!
Thoughts of anything cold
A breathtaking landscape
Delicate flower of the Prickly Pear
Good friends
Mother Nature at her best
A beautiful display of Elephant's Head
Like scoops of strawberry & peach ice-cream
Snacking on grass
Blowing in the wind
Throat-tickling supper
Showy lady's-slipper
Where Dinosaurs used to roam
Red-winged Blackbird
The beauty of an invasive weed
Himalayan Blue Poppy
An over the shoulder look
Wild Strawberry
A colourful rocky spot
Yes, yes, YES!
Shootingstar
Handsome male
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A look of intelligence
Yesterday, I slept right through an hour of very loud music and then woke up nearly five hours later (around 11:30 a.m.)! As a result, I missed a trip with friends to a great place SW of the city, Brown-Lowery Provincial Park - one that I don't like going to on my own. Knowing that there would be other people in the area, I decided to still go, but not go very far into the forest on my own. Hopefully, the others would scare any Bears and Cougars out of the forest and not in my direction! To say that I could kick myself is to put it mildly!
So much for hoping that other people would scare off any bears. When I arrived at the not particularly well-known natural forest, I signed the "guest book" as I often do. Before I turned the page to sign on a nice fresh page, I happened to read a comment that someone had written - a Black Bear had been seen that day, on the very trail I wanted to go on! I put the can of Bear Spray into my fanny-pack (can't use a backpack because of the rotator cuff inflammation in both my shoulders), but after a few steps, knew it felt just too heavy. Put it back in the car and instead, attached my bear bell to my camera strap and clutched a small air-horn in one hand. I only spent about an hour in the forest, but did not enjoy a single step of it, lol! I was determined to at least go a very tiny way in, having driven all the way there. Very thankfully, there was no sign of the bear - but also no sign of any mushrooms other than one tiny cluster of Pholiotas at the base of a tree stump. Absolutely nothing, despite recent rain. Maybe it's still too early, especially after such a late spring? Saw very little on the drive home - a couple of Hawks (one on a hay bale), a few Ravens and a few Crows, one Cedar Waxwing, and several very distant ducks. No sign of any Red-winged or Yellow-headed Blackbirds and no Wilson's Snipe.
The Raven in this photo was not a local one, but one that friends Cathy and Terry, and I, saw on a 2-day trip to the mountains on 14 and 15 May 2014. I took so many photos of this bird - but nearly every time I clicked the shutter, it would turn its head away. Managed to get a handful of OK shots, though. These birds are always so fascinating to watch, especially knowing that they are very smart. This one was, of course, hoping for food - which it didn't get, I should add! When I see Ravens within the city, they are usually flying overhead or perched near the top of a very tall tree. Out in the mountains, they have, unfortunately, learned to follow people and like to hang out at stopping points.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_raven
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Common_Raven/id?utm_source=Co...
So much for hoping that other people would scare off any bears. When I arrived at the not particularly well-known natural forest, I signed the "guest book" as I often do. Before I turned the page to sign on a nice fresh page, I happened to read a comment that someone had written - a Black Bear had been seen that day, on the very trail I wanted to go on! I put the can of Bear Spray into my fanny-pack (can't use a backpack because of the rotator cuff inflammation in both my shoulders), but after a few steps, knew it felt just too heavy. Put it back in the car and instead, attached my bear bell to my camera strap and clutched a small air-horn in one hand. I only spent about an hour in the forest, but did not enjoy a single step of it, lol! I was determined to at least go a very tiny way in, having driven all the way there. Very thankfully, there was no sign of the bear - but also no sign of any mushrooms other than one tiny cluster of Pholiotas at the base of a tree stump. Absolutely nothing, despite recent rain. Maybe it's still too early, especially after such a late spring? Saw very little on the drive home - a couple of Hawks (one on a hay bale), a few Ravens and a few Crows, one Cedar Waxwing, and several very distant ducks. No sign of any Red-winged or Yellow-headed Blackbirds and no Wilson's Snipe.
The Raven in this photo was not a local one, but one that friends Cathy and Terry, and I, saw on a 2-day trip to the mountains on 14 and 15 May 2014. I took so many photos of this bird - but nearly every time I clicked the shutter, it would turn its head away. Managed to get a handful of OK shots, though. These birds are always so fascinating to watch, especially knowing that they are very smart. This one was, of course, hoping for food - which it didn't get, I should add! When I see Ravens within the city, they are usually flying overhead or perched near the top of a very tall tree. Out in the mountains, they have, unfortunately, learned to follow people and like to hang out at stopping points.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_raven
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Common_Raven/id?utm_source=Co...
Ken Dies, have particularly liked this photo
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