Sunrise colour over the mountain peaks
Lilium martagon - the beauty of a Lily
Let the light shine in
Happy Thanksgivng, everyone!
Merry Christmas, everyone!
Day 6, Golden-fronted Woodpecker male / Melanerpes…
Full of light
Little treasures on a log
Golden
Releasing light
A light shines within
Clouds over Weed Lake
Backlit simplicity
Welcoming the sun
Like the sun on a grey, gloomy, rainy day
Hoar frost on barbed-wire
Sunset over Great Falls, US
The mountains at sunrise
When the mountains turn pink
Clasped
Beautiful Sacred Lotus
Winter sunrise.jpg
Sensuous curves of snow
Perfectly textured
Glowing leaves of Mountain Ash
Greeting the sun
I'm on a roll
In mushroom paradise
Orange Star
Strawflower
Out of the darkness comes light... in memory of 11…
Goldenrod
Skeleton trees
Multi-coloured
A real character
Silver Maple
When the sun shines down
Happy Thanksgiving
In the light
Daisy
Let the light shine through
Promise of spring
Floral pink
White on black
Eye-catching
Glowing
A great pick-me-up
Glowing from within
Mountain light
Footsteps
Can't beat a red barn
Bowing their frosty heads
As the weeks fly by ..
Beauty on beauty
Pink and pretty
Sunset over the Grand Tetons
Spider's delight
Glorious sunset over Great Falls, Montana
If you go down to the woods today...
Colour for a rainy day
Deep in the dark forest
Majestic
.
Doug, may your spirit always be free to roam
The only time I look tall and slim, ha
Queen of the Lily Pad
Almost as good as a warm, sunny day
The jaws of death
Fall, last year
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Great Horned Owl - posting just for the record
This photo was taken yesterday at the Inglewood Bird Sanctuary. It was yet another cold, very overcast day and I almost didn't go. However, I had not been out of the house for several days in a row and just needed to get out somewhere. The lighting was atrocious, and this photo is really bad quality, but I wanted to post it just for the record. I hadn't seen the owl at the Sanctuary for a long time.
"With its long, earlike tufts, intimidating yellow-eyed stare, and deep hooting voice, the Great Horned Owl is the quintessential owl of storybooks. This powerful predator can take down birds and mammals even larger than itself, but it also dines on daintier fare such as tiny scorpions, mice, and frogs. It’s one of the most common owls in North America, equally at home in deserts, wetlands, forests, grasslands, backyards, cities, and almost any other semi-open habitat between the Arctic and the tropics.
Great Horned Owls are nocturnal. You may see them at dusk sitting on fence posts or tree limbs at the edges of open areas, or flying across roads or fields with stiff, deep beats of their rounded wings. Their call is a deep, stuttering series of four to five hoots." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Great_Horned_Owl/id
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_horned_owl
Many thanks for the morning walk, Janet and Bernie, and for lunch at the Blackfoot Diner/Truckstop. Just what was needed after a cold walk. I will add their final list of species in a comment box below.
"With its long, earlike tufts, intimidating yellow-eyed stare, and deep hooting voice, the Great Horned Owl is the quintessential owl of storybooks. This powerful predator can take down birds and mammals even larger than itself, but it also dines on daintier fare such as tiny scorpions, mice, and frogs. It’s one of the most common owls in North America, equally at home in deserts, wetlands, forests, grasslands, backyards, cities, and almost any other semi-open habitat between the Arctic and the tropics.
Great Horned Owls are nocturnal. You may see them at dusk sitting on fence posts or tree limbs at the edges of open areas, or flying across roads or fields with stiff, deep beats of their rounded wings. Their call is a deep, stuttering series of four to five hoots." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Great_Horned_Owl/id
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_horned_owl
Many thanks for the morning walk, Janet and Bernie, and for lunch at the Blackfoot Diner/Truckstop. Just what was needed after a cold walk. I will add their final list of species in a comment box below.
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