The look that says: "Please feed me"
Red-winged Blackbird male
Yellow-headed Blackbird male
Frank Lake bird blind
Ruddy Duck male
American Coot
Red-winged Blackbird male
Ruddy Duck male
Helmeted Guineafowl / Numida meleagris
Little country church
Ruddy Duck female
No longer a home
Yesterday's barn
A wild Sunflower from a gravel road
Out in the middle of nowhere
Bison with smoke haze
The Saskatoon Farm
Time for a cat nap
Bees, bees and more bees
Helmeted Guineafowl
Busy little bee
Lasting beauty
Looper Moth sp.
Rooster, Saskatoon Farm
Colours
Old red tractor at the Saskatoon Farm
Sunflower and visitors
Kangaroo Apple flowers / Solanum aviculare (?)
Happy Thanksgiving!
Artichoke flower with different bee species
Remembering summer colour
A touch of Halloween
International Loadstar 1600
Eared Grebe
Hey, lady, I said NO photos!
Trying to impress the ladies
Artichoke, Saskatoon Farm
Ageless beauty
A potful of owls
02 Bald Eagle in late afternoon sun
Always glad to see a Snowy
Greenish sky beneath a Chinook Arch
Typically Western
Colour from Ornamental Cabbages
With a little filtered help
Snowy Owl along the fenceline
Lying on a bed of hoarfrost
Unidentified fruit
Filtered
Winter on the prairies
Eared Grebe
An old, red beauty
Snow turns something ordinary into beautiful
'Barn' Owl, alias Great Horned Owl
Happy Christmas, everyone!
Beauty in the final stage
Can you see what I see?
One of my favourite barns
Snowy Owl harassed by Snow Buntings
Little country church at Dinton
A bunch of Christmas owls
Grain storage in Heronton
Seedpod of Datura sp.?
Hanging on till the final fall
Black-necked Stilt
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Springtime colour
Most unusual for me, I was so desperately tired two evenings ago, that I couldn't even stay awake to find and edit three photos to post to Flickr yesterday morning! It was a long day of birding on 28 May 2017, for the May Species Count, and it completely knocked me out for the following day. Tiredness seems to be my constant companion, but not so tired that I can't fight it. So, no photos from me yesterday!
I always love to see the hairy bud of a Poppy revealing the beauty within. This one was blooming in a greenhouse at the Saskatoon Farm.
Yesterday, 30 May 2017, I was out for the day south of the city with my Daughter (a belated day out for my birthday and Mother's Day), to Nanton and a few roads nearby, then making our way north to Frank Lake and finally ending up at the Saskatoon Farm, where we were just in time to have a meal. A hot day, but nice and sunny.
It takes about 45 minutes to drive south to the town of Nanton. Though I had been quite a few times over the years when carpooling with various friends, I had never driven quite that far south and through the town. My daughter wanted to walk round two or three of the antique shops there and we both wanted to take a few photos of the grain elevators.
Once that was all done, we drove westwards from the town. Though the scenery is beautiful, we did not enjoy being on a main road with no shoulder to pull over to. We did stop once in a small pull-off, to get a few scenic shots. This was where we saw the metal cut-out of a cowboy riding his horse, with a bird perched on top of his hat (third photo I posted today). I can't decide if the distant bird is a Common Grackle or a Brewer's Blackbird, or something else?
We decided to turn around and cross over to the other side of the main highway (#2) and drive north to Frank Lake, hoping to find a few things to photograph along the backroads. A handful of barns and a very few distant birds were enough to make the drive worthwhile.
Frank Lake was deserted when we arrived there, though a couple of other people turned up shortly. Not many bird species, either. The water was quite choppy thanks to the wind, and there was just one Coot, a pair of Ruddy Ducks, a Barn Swallow and one Eared Grebe. I managed to get just the one shot (posted this morning) of the latter. Saw two American Avocets, a Killdeer and a pair of Phalaropes. Franklin's Gulls were their usual noisy selves. Not a single White-faced Ibis to be seen, and only one or two Red-winged and Yellow-headed Blackbirds. When we had been on the road south of the lake, we had seen a Black-crowned Night-Heron perched on a distant fence, being harassed by several smaller birds - Brown-headed Cowbirds? I was so happy to see the Heron, as I so rarely see them. We had also seen a shorebird in a field of stubble and I need to check if this was a Long-billed Curlew.
On our way home, we called in at the Saskatoon Farm and were just in time to order a meal before they closed. A quick wander round gave me the chance to grab a shot or two of a very loud Rooster and the male Wild Turkey. My favourite kind of day, so thank you, Rachel, as always!!
I always love to see the hairy bud of a Poppy revealing the beauty within. This one was blooming in a greenhouse at the Saskatoon Farm.
Yesterday, 30 May 2017, I was out for the day south of the city with my Daughter (a belated day out for my birthday and Mother's Day), to Nanton and a few roads nearby, then making our way north to Frank Lake and finally ending up at the Saskatoon Farm, where we were just in time to have a meal. A hot day, but nice and sunny.
It takes about 45 minutes to drive south to the town of Nanton. Though I had been quite a few times over the years when carpooling with various friends, I had never driven quite that far south and through the town. My daughter wanted to walk round two or three of the antique shops there and we both wanted to take a few photos of the grain elevators.
Once that was all done, we drove westwards from the town. Though the scenery is beautiful, we did not enjoy being on a main road with no shoulder to pull over to. We did stop once in a small pull-off, to get a few scenic shots. This was where we saw the metal cut-out of a cowboy riding his horse, with a bird perched on top of his hat (third photo I posted today). I can't decide if the distant bird is a Common Grackle or a Brewer's Blackbird, or something else?
We decided to turn around and cross over to the other side of the main highway (#2) and drive north to Frank Lake, hoping to find a few things to photograph along the backroads. A handful of barns and a very few distant birds were enough to make the drive worthwhile.
Frank Lake was deserted when we arrived there, though a couple of other people turned up shortly. Not many bird species, either. The water was quite choppy thanks to the wind, and there was just one Coot, a pair of Ruddy Ducks, a Barn Swallow and one Eared Grebe. I managed to get just the one shot (posted this morning) of the latter. Saw two American Avocets, a Killdeer and a pair of Phalaropes. Franklin's Gulls were their usual noisy selves. Not a single White-faced Ibis to be seen, and only one or two Red-winged and Yellow-headed Blackbirds. When we had been on the road south of the lake, we had seen a Black-crowned Night-Heron perched on a distant fence, being harassed by several smaller birds - Brown-headed Cowbirds? I was so happy to see the Heron, as I so rarely see them. We had also seen a shorebird in a field of stubble and I need to check if this was a Long-billed Curlew.
On our way home, we called in at the Saskatoon Farm and were just in time to order a meal before they closed. A quick wander round gave me the chance to grab a shot or two of a very loud Rooster and the male Wild Turkey. My favourite kind of day, so thank you, Rachel, as always!!
Antje P., @ngélique ❤️, , and 10 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Belated Happy Birthday too Anne !
Anne Elliott club has replied to Puzzler4879Seen in:EXPLORE
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