A view from Timber Ridge Conservation Area
Limber Pine on Timber Ridge
Too hard to resist
Down by the pond
Buddha surveying the Peony garden
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
Along the Irrigation Canal
Colonel Walker House, Inglewood Bird Sanctuary
Deciduous yellow
Sparkles on Forgetmenot Pond
We ignored the warning : )
How I love Alberta!
Six old granaries
Marsland Basin
Fall reflections at Carburn Park
Before the land turned white
Yesterday's adventure
The whites and blues of winter
Yesterday's walk along the Bow River
Rockyview General Hospital, reflected
November in Weaselhead
Travelling the Cobble Flats road
Morning awakes
Sunlight on the low cloud
Early morning fog and hoar frost
So far away, but better than nothing
A frosty view from Frank Lake blind
A foggy, frosty sunrise
Through the frost to the bird blind
A frosty prairie view
A sunrise to start our birding day
Sunrise start to a birding day in Calgary
Old homestead and barn
The beautiful Badlands of Alberta
With a view of the mountains and the prairies
Downtown Calgary bathed in sunrise pink
Remnant of the old days
Winter colours
Fish Creek Park New Year's Day Bird Count
A road less travelled
Golden Eagle along the fenceline
In the bleak midwinter
Foothills and mountains
Desolate
Maclean Pond, Kananaskis
Cameron Lake, Waterton Lakes National Park
Looking towards our beautiful mountains
Foothills and distant mountains
Cameron Lake, Waterton Lakes National Park
Beautiful Waterton Lakes National Park
Emerald Lake, British Columbia
Emerald Lake - a little gem of the Rockies
Waterton town, from Bertha Lake Trail
A beautiful property, SW of Calgary
Red Rock Canyon, Waterton Lakes National Park
Imagine waking up to this each morning
A touch of sunset
View across the valley
Citadel Peak, Waterton Lakes National Park
Red Rock (Canyon) Parkway, Waterton Lakes National…
Three days in Waterton Lakes National Park
A scene from the past
Clouds and Dandelions
At the start of our climb
Impressive view at the Whaleback
The joy of Dandelions
My favourite view in Bow Valley Provincial Park
The Famous Five
Changes by new owners in "The Famous Five" field
One of my favourite barns
Fields of golden stubble
Pine Coulee Reservoir, November 2013
Clouds over a prairie farm
A quick, drive-by shot
Red barn in a beautiful setting
Pine Coulee Reservoir last November
The golds and blues at Frank Lake
Rural decay in winter
Simple but bright
Dwarfed by the vast expanse of clouds
Strong winds on the prairies
Red barn in a field of gold
Bebo Grove, Fish Creek Park
Driving in a winter wonderland
Old, abandoned farm
The windmill from yesterday
Old and new
Turquoise
A closer view
Old homestead with texture
Mountain splendour
Roller coaster roads in winter
A prairie homestead
Sunshine on a mighty peak
There once was an owl
Snowy Owl with mountain bokeh
A favourite tree
The Famous Five again
Our beautiful Foothills
Barn on a hoarfrosty day
Old Catholic Church, Dorothy
Weird and wonderful Badland erosion
The old and the new
A barn to be proud of
A smudge stick sky
Mammoth Hot Springs, Yellowstone N P
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
185 visits
Exploring Timber Ridge, Porcupine Hills
The first words in an article from 3 October 2014, in The Western Producer, are as follows:
"High in southern Alberta’s Porcupine Hills, where west winds wrestle the golden leaves of water birch and tickle the limber pines, water trickles from hidden springs into troughs at the Timber Ridge Conservation Site.
That’s where the bears bathe."
Well, we found out yesterday, 3 August 2015, that the bathing bears was so very true, even if the bathing /swimming was not in the usual place, lol! We had seen no sign of large wildlife all day, so the sighting of a Black Bear at the end of the day was a real treat. This 640 acre site is located approximately 20 km southwest of Nanton. Other wildlife that can be seen include "moose, elk, white-tailed and mule deer, grizzly and black bear, cougar, grouse and a variety of small mammals and songbirds."
I had never been to the Porcupine Hills, but had read and heard about this area for a number of years. Lying south of Calgary and roughly SW of Nanton, it is an area of beautiful, rolling hills. This is where Glen and Kelly Hall "have a co-tenancy agreement with the Alberta Conservation Association (ACA), the first one ever established between that organization and private landholders. They own 68 percent of the site and the ACA owns the balance."
"“We have a ranching operation right smack in the middle of a pretty important watershed. Our cows are our tools in order to look after the grass, which looks after the land, which looks after the watershed.”
The drive from Calgary took maybe an hour and a half (?), with rain falling on the way there, and we were greeted with a warm welcome at the lowest level. They suggested we make our way straight up to the highest point and then to take our time coming back down. The first part of that journey was travelling in something new and fun to all of us - in a horse trailer! How DO horses make such a mess over every inch, lol?! After that, we climbed higher and higher, sometimes with the aid of an amazing little vehicle - a Kubota. I was in awe at how this tough little machine was able to travel over the roughest of land - rocks, ruts, uphill, downhill. We had some of the curious cattle follow us in places -several different breeds, and all looking beautiful and so healthy.
The rain stopped by the time we first arrived, but the mountains were hidden in haze (from the weather and possibly from forest fires). Far from ideal conditions for taking scenic shots of the surrounding hills and valleys, unfortunately. Wonderful views in every direction. By the afternoon, the temperature had risen to 31°C (about 88°F)!
Glen and Kelly, a delightful, enthusiastic couple, plan to conserve the site, but they don’t plan to keep it to themselves.
“Ultimately, one day, we want yellow school buses at the gates and we want kids here in numbers and we want them to learn where their water is, where the food is created,” said Kelly.
“We want them to learn about the trees and the grass because we have a lot of native species on this land that haven’t been interfered with.”
Thank you so much, both of you, for making this day so enjoyable and a great learning experience. We have a great deal of respect for what you are doing and how you are doing it. With all the exciting plans that you have for this amazing area, we know you will do well. Thank you for letting us do a bio-inventory of the living things on the 640 acre Timber Ridge Conservation Site!
There is just so much I could write about this special place, but will add several links below for further information in case anyone is interested to learn more.
www.producer.com/2014/10/landowners-eager-to-share-piece-...
www.albertaefp.com/news/96-ranchers-passion-drives-a-thou...
www.albertadiscoverguide.com/site.cfm?grid=F3&number=36
www.westernranchlands.ca/company-overview/advisory-board/...
guddling.tumblr.com/post/61370115303/we-were-given-a-tour...
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are under a Severe Thunderstorm Watch this afternoon, 4 August 2015:
"Conditions are favourable for the development of dangerous thunderstorms that may be capable of producing damaging wind gusts and damaging hail. A upper level system moving into southern Alberta has the potential to initiate severe thunderstorms this afternoon and evening."
"High in southern Alberta’s Porcupine Hills, where west winds wrestle the golden leaves of water birch and tickle the limber pines, water trickles from hidden springs into troughs at the Timber Ridge Conservation Site.
That’s where the bears bathe."
Well, we found out yesterday, 3 August 2015, that the bathing bears was so very true, even if the bathing /swimming was not in the usual place, lol! We had seen no sign of large wildlife all day, so the sighting of a Black Bear at the end of the day was a real treat. This 640 acre site is located approximately 20 km southwest of Nanton. Other wildlife that can be seen include "moose, elk, white-tailed and mule deer, grizzly and black bear, cougar, grouse and a variety of small mammals and songbirds."
I had never been to the Porcupine Hills, but had read and heard about this area for a number of years. Lying south of Calgary and roughly SW of Nanton, it is an area of beautiful, rolling hills. This is where Glen and Kelly Hall "have a co-tenancy agreement with the Alberta Conservation Association (ACA), the first one ever established between that organization and private landholders. They own 68 percent of the site and the ACA owns the balance."
"“We have a ranching operation right smack in the middle of a pretty important watershed. Our cows are our tools in order to look after the grass, which looks after the land, which looks after the watershed.”
The drive from Calgary took maybe an hour and a half (?), with rain falling on the way there, and we were greeted with a warm welcome at the lowest level. They suggested we make our way straight up to the highest point and then to take our time coming back down. The first part of that journey was travelling in something new and fun to all of us - in a horse trailer! How DO horses make such a mess over every inch, lol?! After that, we climbed higher and higher, sometimes with the aid of an amazing little vehicle - a Kubota. I was in awe at how this tough little machine was able to travel over the roughest of land - rocks, ruts, uphill, downhill. We had some of the curious cattle follow us in places -several different breeds, and all looking beautiful and so healthy.
The rain stopped by the time we first arrived, but the mountains were hidden in haze (from the weather and possibly from forest fires). Far from ideal conditions for taking scenic shots of the surrounding hills and valleys, unfortunately. Wonderful views in every direction. By the afternoon, the temperature had risen to 31°C (about 88°F)!
Glen and Kelly, a delightful, enthusiastic couple, plan to conserve the site, but they don’t plan to keep it to themselves.
“Ultimately, one day, we want yellow school buses at the gates and we want kids here in numbers and we want them to learn where their water is, where the food is created,” said Kelly.
“We want them to learn about the trees and the grass because we have a lot of native species on this land that haven’t been interfered with.”
Thank you so much, both of you, for making this day so enjoyable and a great learning experience. We have a great deal of respect for what you are doing and how you are doing it. With all the exciting plans that you have for this amazing area, we know you will do well. Thank you for letting us do a bio-inventory of the living things on the 640 acre Timber Ridge Conservation Site!
There is just so much I could write about this special place, but will add several links below for further information in case anyone is interested to learn more.
www.producer.com/2014/10/landowners-eager-to-share-piece-...
www.albertaefp.com/news/96-ranchers-passion-drives-a-thou...
www.albertadiscoverguide.com/site.cfm?grid=F3&number=36
www.westernranchlands.ca/company-overview/advisory-board/...
guddling.tumblr.com/post/61370115303/we-were-given-a-tour...
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We are under a Severe Thunderstorm Watch this afternoon, 4 August 2015:
"Conditions are favourable for the development of dangerous thunderstorms that may be capable of producing damaging wind gusts and damaging hail. A upper level system moving into southern Alberta has the potential to initiate severe thunderstorms this afternoon and evening."
- 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.