The Story of Life, Tyrrell Museum
Fine feathers of a female Mallard
Finely iridescent
Feather finery of a female Mallard
Posing nicely
A filtered Poppy
Sunflower detail
Cracker sp.
Globe Thistle / Echinops ritro
Up close and personal
Noxious, but beautiful
Early Yellow Locoweed
A farmyard find
Mushroom magic
Strawflower
Gull
Yep, it's that time of the year again
Brilliant camouflage
A Pyraloid Moth
Tussock Moth caterpillar
Tail and all
Blue Morpho
Patterns in black and white
A real character
Junior, showing off
Orange and yellow
King of the Spruce tree
See my nasal tufts?
Cold stare
Stone-faced
Northern Saw-whet Owl
Majestic
Eyes wide open
Northern Saw-whet Owl / Aegolius acadicus
Happy flower burst - Happy New Year!
Gray Cracker / Hamadryas februa
Face to the sun
One of a kind
Bursting
Glorious autumn colour
Long time no see
Out of the darkness - for the Chilean miners and t…
Stink Bug
Bluer than the sky
Is this a Shield Bug?
Marbled Orbweaver / Araneus marmoreus
Tall Larkspur seed capsules / Delphinium glaucum
Western Toad
Such a cutie
Different!
Young Red-winged Blackbird
Leopard Lacewing
House Sparrow fledgeling
Unfurling
Eastern Kingbird
Tiger Beetle
Barred Owl
American White Pelican
Lily
A fine ambassador
Glorious colour
The power of red
Into the big, wide world
Blue Morpho
Purple elegance
Blue Clipper
Pink Cattleheart, Parides iphidamas
Common Sargeant, Athyma perius
Gray Cracker
Dutchman's Pipe
A touch of white
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193 visits
Mallard female
She's beautiful, even if she is "just" an everyday female Mallard : ) I never get tired of photographing Mallards, or seeing photos of them taken by other photographers. This photo was taken at a wetland in SW Calgary on 7 July 2015, when I called in for just an hour after a doctor's appointment.
"If someone at a park is feeding bread to ducks, chances are there are Mallards in the fray. Perhaps the most familiar of all ducks, Mallards occur throughout North America and Eurasia in ponds and parks as well as wilder wetlands and estuaries. The male’s gleaming green head, gray flanks, and black tail-curl arguably make it the most easily identified duck. Mallards have long been hunted for the table, and almost all domestic ducks come from this species." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Mallard/id
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mallard
"If someone at a park is feeding bread to ducks, chances are there are Mallards in the fray. Perhaps the most familiar of all ducks, Mallards occur throughout North America and Eurasia in ponds and parks as well as wilder wetlands and estuaries. The male’s gleaming green head, gray flanks, and black tail-curl arguably make it the most easily identified duck. Mallards have long been hunted for the table, and almost all domestic ducks come from this species." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Mallard/id
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mallard
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