Sunshine on a mighty peak
Roller coaster roads in winter
Mountain splendour
Old and new
Driving in a winter wonderland
Bebo Grove, Fish Creek Park
Dwarfed by the vast expanse of clouds
Rural decay in winter
The golds and blues at Frank Lake
Pine Coulee Reservoir last November
Clouds over a prairie farm
Pine Coulee Reservoir, November 2013
Fields of golden stubble
One of my favourite barns
Changes by new owners in "The Famous Five" field
The Famous Five
My favourite view in Bow Valley Provincial Park
The joy of Dandelions
Impressive view at the Whaleback
At the start of our climb
Clouds and Dandelions
Three days in Waterton Lakes National Park
Red Rock (Canyon) Parkway, Waterton Lakes National…
Citadel Peak, Waterton Lakes National Park
View across the valley
A touch of sunset
Imagine waking up to this each morning
Red Rock Canyon, Waterton Lakes National Park
A beautiful property, SW of Calgary
Waterton town, from Bertha Lake Trail
Emerald Lake - a little gem of the Rockies
Emerald Lake, British Columbia
Beautiful Waterton Lakes National Park
Cameron Lake, Waterton Lakes National Park
Foothills and distant mountains
Looking towards our beautiful mountains
Cameron Lake, Waterton Lakes National Park
Maclean Pond, Kananaskis
Exploring Timber Ridge, Porcupine Hills
A view from Timber Ridge Conservation Area
Limber Pine on Timber Ridge
Too hard to resist
Down by the pond
Time to relax
View looking west towards the Rockies
Canyon Church Camp, Waterton Lakes National Park
A view at Marsland Basin
Dark clouds rolling in, yesterday
Our foothills in Impressive Art
A double dose of clouds
Autumn's glory
Greater White-fronted Geese, Marsland Basin
Sunflowers and a red barn
Farmland of the Alberta foothills
Forgetmenot Pond
The joy of peace and quiet
Maskinonge Lake, Waterton Lakes National Park
Jazzed-up silos
Along the Bow River in fall
CL Ranches, Alberta
Peace in the Jumpingpound area
Fence line in the fall
A narrow strip of light
Snowy Owl with mountain bokeh
A favourite tree
The Famous Five again
Our beautiful Foothills
Old Catholic Church, Dorothy
Weird and wonderful Badland erosion
The old and the new
A barn to be proud of
Mammoth Hot Springs, Yellowstone N P
Set from the movie, The Revenant
From shadow to light
Mountains at sunset
Red barn on a sunny day
Layers and stripes
Old barn with a view
Brown on brown
Cold, bleak and frosty
Our mountains in winter
Old barn on the prairie
Ice as far as the eye can see
View from a barn doorway
Rolling hills close to home
Sunlit peaks
A final goodbye
Sunbathed mountain slopes
Red Rock Coulee, US
A place of peace and beauty
Happy New Year, everyone!
Badlands of Alberta
Rolling hills in winter
I love our blues and whites of winter
Sunset on the Prairies
Light and darkness
Heading into the sun
Texture of burnt trees
Soaking up the incredible beauty
Yesterday morning's sunrise
Mountain view
Between the trees
Aging sentinel of the Badlands
The Bison Paddock, Waterton Lakes National Park, A…
Late fall on the prairies
Snowy peaks, Chinook Arch, golden stubble - who ne…
A barn with a difference
Snow + red barn = a happy day
Return of the Famous Five
Mammoth Hot Springs
Beautiful Waterton Valley
Layers of blue
Forgetmenot Pond
Light and shadow
A view from The Saskatoon Farm
The beauty of low cloud
United Church, Dorothy, Alberta
The Hoodoo Trail, near Drumheller
The Hoodoo Trail
Is that an owl in the window?
Badland sentinel
Old Catholic Church, Dorothy
The Hoodoo Trail, near Drumheller
A youngster having fun
At the end of the path
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There once was an owl
Taken from the top of a hill makes this red barn/shed look almost like a child’s wooden block toy. I had photographed it a couple of times before, despite the fact that it's not very photogenic. I remember the first time I ever stopped to photograph this barn, I noticed a Great Horned Owl perched on the top window sill, even though the window is boarded up. Never seen it since.
This photo was taken on 8 March 2015, when I made a last minute decision to finally drive SW of the city to an area that I had never driven myself before. I was only out for three hours, driving a total of 131 km. I wondered if the Wild Turkeys might be in view, but I couldn't see any at the place where other people had been seeing them. A short distance down the road, I decided to stop and take a couple of shots of the scenery, mainly so that I didn't go home with an empty memory card, lol. It was then that a familiar looking vehicle came down the road - it was friends Ron and Trish. They had been unlucky with finding birds further south and were on their way to see if they could find the Evening Grosbeak that had been seen recently. I followed them, but we were out of luck. We did hear a very distant call of either a Northern pygmy-owl or a Northern Saw-whet Owl.
After parting ways with my friends, I drove home via familiar roads, thinking of two spots I would stop at to take a scenic shot or two. Both were on fairly steep hills but had a pull-off big enough for one vehicle. There was a vehicle parked in each, so no scenic shots. Further on, I stopped to take a couple of photos of this barn and of the "famous" row of five, red, wooden granaries. Very rapid shots, as I found myself surrounded by bees as soon as I got out of the car by the row of granaries! Too bad they weren't all inside the row of covered beehives that are in front of the granaries. The enormous field that these sheds are on has been changed by the new owners. Instead of just an open, bare field, there are now several scattered clusters of coniferous trees, making me wonder what the plan is.
Once I was back in the city, I decided to call in at Fish Creek Park on the way home, to see if any photographers were in sight. Not a single one, but the parking areas were packed with people who had come to enjoy the beautiful weather. Smoke from barbeques was rising into the air and you could hear kids having fun. I asked myself how much wildlife might be seen on such a busy, noisy day, a Sunday - and decided to go straight home!
This photo was taken on 8 March 2015, when I made a last minute decision to finally drive SW of the city to an area that I had never driven myself before. I was only out for three hours, driving a total of 131 km. I wondered if the Wild Turkeys might be in view, but I couldn't see any at the place where other people had been seeing them. A short distance down the road, I decided to stop and take a couple of shots of the scenery, mainly so that I didn't go home with an empty memory card, lol. It was then that a familiar looking vehicle came down the road - it was friends Ron and Trish. They had been unlucky with finding birds further south and were on their way to see if they could find the Evening Grosbeak that had been seen recently. I followed them, but we were out of luck. We did hear a very distant call of either a Northern pygmy-owl or a Northern Saw-whet Owl.
After parting ways with my friends, I drove home via familiar roads, thinking of two spots I would stop at to take a scenic shot or two. Both were on fairly steep hills but had a pull-off big enough for one vehicle. There was a vehicle parked in each, so no scenic shots. Further on, I stopped to take a couple of photos of this barn and of the "famous" row of five, red, wooden granaries. Very rapid shots, as I found myself surrounded by bees as soon as I got out of the car by the row of granaries! Too bad they weren't all inside the row of covered beehives that are in front of the granaries. The enormous field that these sheds are on has been changed by the new owners. Instead of just an open, bare field, there are now several scattered clusters of coniferous trees, making me wonder what the plan is.
Once I was back in the city, I decided to call in at Fish Creek Park on the way home, to see if any photographers were in sight. Not a single one, but the parking areas were packed with people who had come to enjoy the beautiful weather. Smoke from barbeques was rising into the air and you could hear kids having fun. I asked myself how much wildlife might be seen on such a busy, noisy day, a Sunday - and decided to go straight home!
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