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
So far away, but better than nothing
A frosty view from Frank Lake blind
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
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
Little red barn on the prairie
White beauty
A winter day in southern Alberta
Now THIS is winter!
Modern charm
Snow, snow and more snow
A winter walk
Emerald Lake
Emerald Lake, British Columbia, Canada
The old and the new
Winter on the prairies
The beauty of Lake Louise
A fence without an owl
Rent a canoe at Emerald Lake
Taking the quieter road
A friendly greeting
When the clouds roll in
Fancy silo with stairs
When winter really was winter
Old barn with a different style
Snowy Owl - just close enough
A fine old barn
Narrow strip of light
Little church in the valley
McDougall Memorial United Church
A cluster of red barns
Sunlight on distant peaks
And they call this winter (in Alberta)?
McDougall Memorial United Church
A narrow strip of light
Fence line in the fall
Peace in the Jumpingpound area
CL Ranches, Alberta
Along the Bow River in fall
Jazzed-up silos
Maskinonge Lake, Waterton Lakes National Park
The joy of peace and quiet
Forgetmenot Pond
Farmland of the Alberta foothills
Sunflowers and a red barn
Greater White-fronted Geese, Marsland Basin
Autumn's glory
A double dose of clouds
Our foothills in Impressive Art
Dark clouds rolling in, yesterday
A view at Marsland Basin
Canyon Church Camp, Waterton Lakes National Park
View looking west towards the Rockies
Time to relax
Down by the pond
Too hard to resist
Limber Pine on Timber Ridge
A view from Timber Ridge Conservation Area
Exploring Timber Ridge, Porcupine Hills
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
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
Pine Coulee Reservoir last November
The golds and blues at Frank Lake
Rural decay in winter
Dwarfed by the vast expanse of clouds
Bebo Grove, Fish Creek Park
Driving in a winter wonderland
Old and new
Mountain splendour
Roller coaster roads in winter
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Along the Irrigation Canal
This photo was taken on 8 October 2015. Friend Sandy had asked if I wanted to go with her to join friends down at the Irrigation Canal in the city, for a birding walk. This was a long walk - three and a half hours - along both sides of the canal. As you can see in this image, it was a beautiful fall day with a lovely blue sky. Also, enough trees were still dressed in gold to give some colourful reflections in parts f the canal. The water level was very low, creating just a narrow strip of water with a wide mud bank on either side, that had attracted a number of Greater Yellowlegs and a single American Golden-plover juvenile. The latter was a new bird for me and, though I could only get a very distant, poor shot, I did post it on Flickr. To me, a juvenile American Golden Plover looks so similar to a juvenile Black-bellied Plover (from photos I've seen), but the ID for the bird we saw was given as American Golden-plover. Much of the time, there were pale, dead grasses in the background and this bird was almost invisible. Great camouflage.
We also saw several Hooded Mergansers there. I don't often see Hooded Mergansers and, when I do see one, it's always a long way away. They are quite spectacular ducks, especially the males, who have a crest at the back of their head and can raise this black and white "hood" or lower it.
The list of the 31 bird species seen (not all by me) from our leaders, Dan and David:
1. Canada Goose - 60+
2. Mallard - 150+
3. Northern Shoveler - 1
4. Green-winged Teal - 2
5. Hooded Merganser - 3 males
6. Common Merganser - 20+
7. Double-crested Cormorant - 4
8. Bald Eagle - 1, immature
9. Red-tailed Hawk - 1 (Harlan’s subspecies)
10. Rough-legged Hawk - 5 (4 dark phase, 1 light phase)
11. AMERICAN GOLDEN-PLOVER
12. Killdeer - 1
13. Greater Yellowlegs - 38+
14. Long-billed Dowitcher - 11
15. Ring-billed Gull - 400+
16. Herring Gull - 2
17. Rock Pigeon - 32+
18. Downy Woodpecker - 1
19. Hairy Woodpecker - 2
20. Northern Flicker - 2
21. Merlin - 2
22. Black-billed Magpie - 15+
23. American Crow - 6
24. Common Raven - 2
25. Black-capped Chickadee - 7
26. White-breasted Nuthatch - 1
27. American Robin - 8
28. European Starling - 18+
29. Yellow-rumped Warbler - 2
30. American Tree Sparrow - 1
31. House Finch - 1
We also saw several Hooded Mergansers there. I don't often see Hooded Mergansers and, when I do see one, it's always a long way away. They are quite spectacular ducks, especially the males, who have a crest at the back of their head and can raise this black and white "hood" or lower it.
The list of the 31 bird species seen (not all by me) from our leaders, Dan and David:
1. Canada Goose - 60+
2. Mallard - 150+
3. Northern Shoveler - 1
4. Green-winged Teal - 2
5. Hooded Merganser - 3 males
6. Common Merganser - 20+
7. Double-crested Cormorant - 4
8. Bald Eagle - 1, immature
9. Red-tailed Hawk - 1 (Harlan’s subspecies)
10. Rough-legged Hawk - 5 (4 dark phase, 1 light phase)
11. AMERICAN GOLDEN-PLOVER
12. Killdeer - 1
13. Greater Yellowlegs - 38+
14. Long-billed Dowitcher - 11
15. Ring-billed Gull - 400+
16. Herring Gull - 2
17. Rock Pigeon - 32+
18. Downy Woodpecker - 1
19. Hairy Woodpecker - 2
20. Northern Flicker - 2
21. Merlin - 2
22. Black-billed Magpie - 15+
23. American Crow - 6
24. Common Raven - 2
25. Black-capped Chickadee - 7
26. White-breasted Nuthatch - 1
27. American Robin - 8
28. European Starling - 18+
29. Yellow-rumped Warbler - 2
30. American Tree Sparrow - 1
31. House Finch - 1
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