You can always count on a Chickadee
Pine Grosbeak / Pinicola enucleator
Pine Grosbeaks adding colour to our winter
Pine Grosbeak female
So pretty against the snow
Pine Grosbeak / Pinicola enucleator
Downy Woodpecker
A bird in the hand is worth many in the bush
On a frosty morning
Downy Woodpecker
Least Chipmunk
Trusting Red-breasted Nuthatch
Lotus seedpod, Nariva Swamp afternoon, Trinidad
Bee on Sunflower
Lasting beauty
September flowers
Evening Grosbeaks, male and female
Hairy Woodpecker
Hairy Woodpecker / Picoides villosus
Chipping Sparrow, Tadoussac, Quebec
Purple Finch male, Tadoussac, Quebec
White-throated Sparrow, Tadoussac, Quebec
American Goldfinch male, Tadoussac, Quebec
White-breasted Nuthatch, Day 2, Rondeau PP, Ontari…
Day 2, White-breasted Nuthatch, Rondeau PP Visitor…
Beauty in old age
For the birds
Day 10, American Goldfinch male, Tadoussac
Day 10, American Goldfinch female, Tadoussac
Day 10, White-throated Sparrow, Tadoussac
Day 7, Red Squirrel eating the bird food, Tadoussa…
Day 10, White-throated Sparrow, Tadoussac
Day 10, American Goldfinch male
Day 10, American Goldfinch female
Day 10, White-throated Sparrow
Western Tanager / Piranga ludoviciana
American Goldfinch collecting Thistle seeds
American Goldfinch collecting Thistle seeds
Hot Wings Maple
Dark-eyed Junco / Junco hyemalis
Water colour version
Yellow False Dandelion seedhead
Seeds of Showy Milkweed / Asclepias speciosa
Peony seedpods
Heritage Peony gone to seed
Downy Woodpecker
Enjoying seeds and sunshine
Love the sparkle of those tiny diamonds
Tiny Bishop's Cap seeds
A touch of sacredness
Hungry Pine Siskin
The electric shock look : )
Goldenrod
Green for the Irish
Little seed muncher
A warm place to land
Black Bear scat
Naked Mitrewort / Mitella nuda
Boreal Chickadee
Snow-covered tresses
Dreamy Dent-de-lion
Black-capped Chickadee
White-breasted Nuthatch
And away they go ...
Naked Mitrewort / Mitella nuda
Western Stoneseed seeds / Lithospermum ruderale
Townsendia seedheads
Hello, little guy
On a windy day
Little cutie
Braving the cold
Nuthatch with a mohawk
Two-faced
Hanging on
Red-seeded Dandelion
A light breeze
Blowing in the wind
Silver threads
Milkweed seedpod
Freedom
Nature's firework display
Goat's-beard
Purple-flowering Raspberry
Snow-covered tresses
Plants of Alberta Set, page 3
In the quiet of winter
Feeding the birds?
Golf, anyone?
Western Pasque Flower seedhead
Yellow Mountain Avens seeds
Black Henbane seedpods
Clematis
Goat's-beard
See also...
Keywords
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231 visits
Someone just couldn't resist : )
On 12 September 2015, I drove further than I've ever driven before - a total of 410 km (254 miles). I met my daughter at 9:00 am and we headed northwards, with our main destination being the Bowden Sunflower Maze. She was feeling well enough after her recent hospital stay, to get out for a day trip.
The quickest route from Calgary is a distance of 96 km (60 miles), but I needed to avoid the main, busy route. Also, the backroads are more pleasant to drive - less traffic and, if one is lucky, the occasional old barn. There was one barn in particular that I had seen last year, that I really wanted to show my daughter and this took us a little out of our way.
We drove through the town of Olds, stopping briefly to take a couple of photos of the bright orange grain elevator. Going north, we drove the roads to the west of the main Highway 2, and on our return trip we drove the roads to the east of Highway 2. I think this trip really convinced my daughter, more strongly than ever, that sadly she has a mother with almost zero sense of direction!
"A young sunflower's flower head faces the sun to receive the sunlight it needs for photosynthesis. Heliotropism is the term for a plant's ability to follow the sun. That ability allows a sunflower to move with the sun as it arcs across the sky from east to west; the sunflower's bloom always faces the sun.
When the sunflower plant matures, the neck of its stem no longer grows, and tracking of the sun's arc ceases. The blooms of most mature sunflowers face east, but some face other directions." From homeguides.
homeguides.sfgate.com/sunflower-move-73855.html
A very short time lapse video showing how Sunflowers move to face the sun:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8mr0R3ibPU
This was the first time I had ever been to Bowden and the Sunflower Maze. For years, I had wished we had a field of Sunflowers somewhere within reach, as I had seen so many gorgeous photos taken by other people in various parts of the world. I certainly didn't get photos like those, but I was happy to get the shots I did get. Noticed four or five seedheads that had been turned into a smiling face. The flowers in my photos seem to be facing every possible way, giving a rather messy look! Maybe that's what always happens when the flowers are past their prime? Apparently, this weekend is going to be the last chance to really see the flowers, so we were just in time. This maze at Eagle Creek Farm is apparently the only Sunflower Maze in Canada. There is also an adjoining Corn Maze, but neither of us wanted to walk through that one, thanks to remembering the horror movie, "Children of the Corn"! The farm also has U-pick vegetables and flowers.
www.sunmaze.ca/
Thanks, Rachel, for spending the day with me - and for all your directions getting us there and back to the city! Lucky we went when we did, as it rained the next few days.
The quickest route from Calgary is a distance of 96 km (60 miles), but I needed to avoid the main, busy route. Also, the backroads are more pleasant to drive - less traffic and, if one is lucky, the occasional old barn. There was one barn in particular that I had seen last year, that I really wanted to show my daughter and this took us a little out of our way.
We drove through the town of Olds, stopping briefly to take a couple of photos of the bright orange grain elevator. Going north, we drove the roads to the west of the main Highway 2, and on our return trip we drove the roads to the east of Highway 2. I think this trip really convinced my daughter, more strongly than ever, that sadly she has a mother with almost zero sense of direction!
"A young sunflower's flower head faces the sun to receive the sunlight it needs for photosynthesis. Heliotropism is the term for a plant's ability to follow the sun. That ability allows a sunflower to move with the sun as it arcs across the sky from east to west; the sunflower's bloom always faces the sun.
When the sunflower plant matures, the neck of its stem no longer grows, and tracking of the sun's arc ceases. The blooms of most mature sunflowers face east, but some face other directions." From homeguides.
homeguides.sfgate.com/sunflower-move-73855.html
A very short time lapse video showing how Sunflowers move to face the sun:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8mr0R3ibPU
This was the first time I had ever been to Bowden and the Sunflower Maze. For years, I had wished we had a field of Sunflowers somewhere within reach, as I had seen so many gorgeous photos taken by other people in various parts of the world. I certainly didn't get photos like those, but I was happy to get the shots I did get. Noticed four or five seedheads that had been turned into a smiling face. The flowers in my photos seem to be facing every possible way, giving a rather messy look! Maybe that's what always happens when the flowers are past their prime? Apparently, this weekend is going to be the last chance to really see the flowers, so we were just in time. This maze at Eagle Creek Farm is apparently the only Sunflower Maze in Canada. There is also an adjoining Corn Maze, but neither of us wanted to walk through that one, thanks to remembering the horror movie, "Children of the Corn"! The farm also has U-pick vegetables and flowers.
www.sunmaze.ca/
Thanks, Rachel, for spending the day with me - and for all your directions getting us there and back to the city! Lucky we went when we did, as it rained the next few days.
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