Preening White-faced Ibis
"Eyebrows" to match the Canola bokeh
Young Brown-headed Cowbirds
Memories of Canola
All decked out
Love the style
Let the sun shine
Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!
Helmeted Guineafowl / Numida meleagris
At the Saskatoon Farm
Colour for a snowy morning
Early morning fog and hoar frost
A beautiful old Ford
A clash of colour
Frosted Cattails
So far away, but better than nothing
A frosty view from Frank Lake blind
A foggy, frosty sunrise
New roof and a fresh coat of paint
Through the frost to the bird blind
One of 9 Great Horned Owls
Old-aged matching colours
A frosty prairie view
The only one
A favourite little country church
Tea, anyone?
Textures of an old homestead
Old homestead and barn
Christmas is a fun time for a kitten
Long-billed ice bird
With a view of the mountains and the prairies
Ice is nice
Little red barn on the prairie
Yay, it's Canola time!
Yellow-headed Blackbird female
Eared Grebe
Brant grain elevator
Eared Grebe / Podiceps nigricollis
Red-winged Blackbird female
Sunflower beauty
Female Red-winged Blackbird / Agelaius phoeniceus
A turn of the head
Long-billed Curlew / Numenius americanus
Horned Lark in April snow
One of my favourite barns
The elegant American Avocet
American Avocet
A good start to yesterday
Black-necked Stilt
On golden pond
Button-eyes
Fields of golden stubble
Ruddy Duck in choppy waters
Curious Mule Deer
Cinnamon Teal
Grebes with the red "button" eyes
A fine day for birding
Little more than black silhouettes
Western Meadowlark
American Coot
Deep inside a dark barn
Clouds over a prairie farm
A close look at a Coot
The exotic White-faced Ibis
The golds and blues at Frank Lake
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
151 visits
Iridescence
One of the places where these White-faced Ibis can be seen fairly locally is Frank Lake or, as in this photo, at a slough a short drive from Frank Lake.
Yesterday, 6 July 2015, the weather forecast looked good for that area. However, when I got there, the sky was overcast, the distant Rocky Mountains had completely disappeared, and the light was not good for taking photos. For some reason, all the birds, including the Ibis, were unusually active, which didn't help!
There were three things that I thought I would try and photograph - yellow Canola fields, any kind of bird sitting on a fence post with Canola behind it, and an Eared Grebe with young ones on her back. Managed the first two, but there was just the one Grebe near the blind but too far to really photograph when she had a single baby on her back. I was lucky, though, to find several close White-faced Ibis at a slough NE of Frank Lake, one of which is seen in this photo. Caught this one through my rolled-down car window and just managed to catch the light shining on those gorgeous, iridescent feathers.
"A dark wading bird with a long, down-curved bill, the White-faced Ibis is a western replacement for the Glossy Ibis. Similar in appearance and habits, the two species can be distinguished only by slight differences in coloring of the face and legs. From AllAboutBirds.
In the book, "Birds of Alberta" by Fisher & Acorn, it says that, in Alberta, White-faced Ibis are very rare from May to September. Length is 22-25" (56-64 cm), wingspan 3'1" (94 cm).
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-faced_ibis
Yesterday, 6 July 2015, the weather forecast looked good for that area. However, when I got there, the sky was overcast, the distant Rocky Mountains had completely disappeared, and the light was not good for taking photos. For some reason, all the birds, including the Ibis, were unusually active, which didn't help!
There were three things that I thought I would try and photograph - yellow Canola fields, any kind of bird sitting on a fence post with Canola behind it, and an Eared Grebe with young ones on her back. Managed the first two, but there was just the one Grebe near the blind but too far to really photograph when she had a single baby on her back. I was lucky, though, to find several close White-faced Ibis at a slough NE of Frank Lake, one of which is seen in this photo. Caught this one through my rolled-down car window and just managed to catch the light shining on those gorgeous, iridescent feathers.
"A dark wading bird with a long, down-curved bill, the White-faced Ibis is a western replacement for the Glossy Ibis. Similar in appearance and habits, the two species can be distinguished only by slight differences in coloring of the face and legs. From AllAboutBirds.
In the book, "Birds of Alberta" by Fisher & Acorn, it says that, in Alberta, White-faced Ibis are very rare from May to September. Length is 22-25" (56-64 cm), wingspan 3'1" (94 cm).
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-faced_ibis
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.