View from a barn doorway
Made to feel welcome
Do you see what I see? Look very closely at the w…
Old barn on the prairie
A prairie view
Tilting
Brown on brown
Mule Deer on the prairies
Horse on the prairie
A barn to be proud of
No two are the same
A prairie homestead
Old homestead with texture
A closer view
Old and new
Old farmyard windmill
The windmill from yesterday
Old, abandoned farm
Red barn in a field of gold
Rural decay in winter
One of my favourite barns
Textures of an old homestead
Old homestead and barn
With a view of the mountains and the prairies
Little red barn on the prairie
Home of the Snowshoe Hare
Time for an old barn again
A fine old barn
A life left behind
Built with love
Old barn in winter
Charcoal effect
An old barn in winter
Willet / Tringa semipalmata
This old house
Western Meadowlark
Prairie winter
Old, red barn
Weathered
A different backdrop
The prairies in winter
Old Prairie homestead
Rather fine old barn
Shades of brown
Mourning Dove
Deer in Foxtails
Found when I was lost
In need of preservation
Gentle or aggressive?
Before harvest time
Lost as the sun sets
Driving in a sea of gold
Vesper Sparrow
Into the sun
Western Kingbird
Dad on the pylon
Soon to crumble
Textures
The end is near
Gentle Longhorn
The olden days
Old barn and windmill
Springtime on the prairie
Little red barn
Home for the Pigeons
Iridescent beauty
What kind of horse am I
The day before Christmas
Rather a fine old barn
A different angle.jpg
Simplicity.jpg
Starling murmuration.jpg
The Pigeons' residence
Horned Lark
A touch of the past
How much is that owl in the window?
Horned Lark / Eremophila alpestris
Winter in Alberta
Prairie Falcon on a silo
Is it a Snowy? ... no, it isn't ... yes, it is!
Yesterday's natural high
Endless land and sky
Enjoying the sun
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Red
Three days ago, 21 January 2015, my daughter and I spent the day together, out in nature. I know I needed to get out myself and the fact that my daughter asked if we could do that, told me that she, too, desperately needed to get a break from all the sadness and reminders of her big sister/my older daughter for a few hours. Friends have been telling me how important it is to be outdoors with my camera, especially at a time like this, and I know they are right.
Much as it would have been great to have gone looking for Snowy Owls, I just didn't feel up to that long of a drive. Instead, I drove to a much more familiar, closer area, SE of the city. The day was a mix of sun and cloudiness, and though the sun was in the wrong position for some of our shots, we did OK.
As for birds, we saw a couple of Great Horned Owls, a very distant Snowy Owl, a raptor of some kind (either a Prairie Falcon or a Gyrfalcon), several Gray Partridge and what I think were Horned Larks.
The rest of the day, my daughter and I drove mostly roads that we had driven before, except for one short stretch where we found not just one beautiful, old, red barn, but two. This photo was taken at the second barn. This day was as much a barn day as a bird day, as there was one particular barn that I really wanted to see for the first time. We were lucky that this second barn was just down the road.
Normally, I never walk from the road on to the surrounding land, even when there is no "No Trespassing" sign, so we were standing on the road, photographing this second barn. While we were there, a lady on horseback came towards us along the road, calling out that it was her property, so to go over and explore. A similar story to the Great Horned Owl story under one of yesterday's images, thanks to someone's kindness. We smiled when she apologized that the barn wasn't in better condition - as we told her, we like barns to be old and weathered, of course!
I think being out with our cameras, driving the backroads, was therapeutic - certainly for me as I could enjoy my daughter's company, and hopefully for her, too.
Much as it would have been great to have gone looking for Snowy Owls, I just didn't feel up to that long of a drive. Instead, I drove to a much more familiar, closer area, SE of the city. The day was a mix of sun and cloudiness, and though the sun was in the wrong position for some of our shots, we did OK.
As for birds, we saw a couple of Great Horned Owls, a very distant Snowy Owl, a raptor of some kind (either a Prairie Falcon or a Gyrfalcon), several Gray Partridge and what I think were Horned Larks.
The rest of the day, my daughter and I drove mostly roads that we had driven before, except for one short stretch where we found not just one beautiful, old, red barn, but two. This photo was taken at the second barn. This day was as much a barn day as a bird day, as there was one particular barn that I really wanted to see for the first time. We were lucky that this second barn was just down the road.
Normally, I never walk from the road on to the surrounding land, even when there is no "No Trespassing" sign, so we were standing on the road, photographing this second barn. While we were there, a lady on horseback came towards us along the road, calling out that it was her property, so to go over and explore. A similar story to the Great Horned Owl story under one of yesterday's images, thanks to someone's kindness. We smiled when she apologized that the barn wasn't in better condition - as we told her, we like barns to be old and weathered, of course!
I think being out with our cameras, driving the backroads, was therapeutic - certainly for me as I could enjoy my daughter's company, and hopefully for her, too.
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