Marbled Godwit / Limosa fedoa
Red-winged Blackbird
Mountain Bluebird
Mountain Bluebird female
Ruby-throated Hummingbird female
American Robin with food for his babies
Here comes dessert!
Red-winged Blackbird juvenile
Common Nighthawk
Stellar's Jay juvenile
Purple Honeycreeper male, Trinidad
Evening Grosbeak
Swainson's Hawk / Buteo swainsoni
Anyone have a comb?
Who can resist a Burrowing Owl?
I fell in love ....
Time for a nap
Curious
Cooling down
Flight training with a Red-tailed Hawk
Crested Oropendola, Asa Wright Nature Centre, Trin…
Jackie's Hummingbird
Talk about baby fluff!
Barn Owl
Spiked hairdo
Short-eared Owl
Sleepy Short-eared Owl
Handsome Wood Ducks
Blue-gray Tanager / Thraupis episcopus, Asa Wright…
You looking at me, lady?
Semipalmated Plover / Charadrius semipalmatus?
Green Honeycreeper female, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Swainson's Hawk juvenile
Canada Warbler / Cardellina canadensis
Yellowlegs
Killdeer / Charadrius vociferus
Swainson's Hawk juvenile
American Goldfinch eating Sunflower seeds
Green-winged Teal and Black-bellied Plover
Hybrid Mourning Dove-Eurasian Collared Dove
Wood Ducks
Juvenile Swainson's Hawk
Wood Duck juvenile
Palm Tanager, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Juvenile American Coot
Swainson's Hawk
American Goldfinch
Magpies, Wood Ducks and a (Greater?) Yellowlegs
Purple Honeycreeper female, Asa Wright
Sweet young owl
Three years later ....
Pretty little Hummer, Asa Wright, Trinidad - immat…
Red-breasted Nuthatch
I'm tiny - and BLUE
Happy Thanksgiving!
Great Horned Owl on a fence post
Yellow Oriole, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Great Horned Owl juvenile
Ring-billed Gull / Larus delawarensis
At the Oilbird (Steatornis caripensis) cave, Trini…
Oilbird / Steatornis caripensis, Trinidad
Merlin
Bald Eagle / Haliaeetus leucocephalus
A lucky find
Common Nighthawk
Common Nighthawk
Finally!
Blue-gray Tanager, Asa Wright Nature Centre, Trini…
Don Stiles' Bluebird & Tree Swallow route
Common Raven in the sun
Balancing act
Purple Honeycreeper male, Asa Wright Nature Centre…
A touch of blue
Brewer's Blackbird male
Brewer's Blackbird female
Tree Swallow female
Great Horned Owl male
Brewer's Blackbird, collecting food for his babies
One of three young owls
Killdeer / Charadrius vociferus
Killdeer 'nest' and eggs - a telemacro shot
Tree Swallows - time to change places
Watching the watchers
American Coot and 'cootlings'
Who are we?
Brown Thrasher / Toxostoma rufum - a 'lifer'
Wilson's Snipe / Gallinago delicata
Bobolink / Dolichonyx oryzivorus
Mountain Bluebird with food for her babies
Brown-headed Cowbird male
Collecting food for his babies
The innocents
White-crowned Sparrow / Zonotrichia leucophrys
American Dipper / Cinclus mexicanus
Crested Oropendola, Asa Wright Nature Centre, Trin…
Oilbird / Steatornis caripensis, Dunston Cave, Asa…
Yellow Oriole, Asa Wright Nature Centre, Trinidad
The wonderful, tiny Tufted Coquette, Trinidad
Green Honeycreeper male, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Masked Cardinal / Paroaria nigrogenis, Trinidad
American Coot
Showing off all his "bling"
A slight touch of blue
Eared Grebe
Yesterday's treat!
Sweet little Mountain Bluebird
Mom and her babies
Sharp-tailed Grouse
Great Horned Owl and owlet
Sharp-tailed Grouse
American Robin male
Evening Grosbeak male
Hairy Woodpecker / Picoides villosus
American Goldfinch male / Spinus tristis
Rose-breasted Grosbeak male / Pheucticus ludovicia…
Evening Grosbeak male - what a look!
Purple Honeycreeper female preening, Asa Wright Na…
American Robin down by the river
American Robin's egg on the ground
White-lined Tanager, Asa Wright Nature Centre, Tri…
Green Honeycreeper male, Asa Wright Nature Centre,…
Cattle Egret on Water Buffalo, Nariva Swamp aftern…
Yellow Oriole / Icterus nigrogularis, Nariva Swamp…
Pied Water-Tyrant, Nariva Swamp afternoon, Trinida…
Yellow-chinned Spinetail, Nariva Swamp afternoon
See also...
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156 visits
A country scene
Yesterday afternoon, 16 July 2017, I had no choice but to get out for a short drive. My place was like an oven from weeks of heat, and I just couldn't stand it for one more minute. I drove the back roads SW of the city that I so often drive when I only have time or energy for a short drive.
Today is much cooler and now, after having a couple of windows open, my place smells strongly of smoke from the B.C. wildfires and the Banff area. I posted a photo showing how the smoke is affecting Albertans. Best to stay indoors if possible, so I guess I won't be going anywhere for at least the next few days. It makes scenic shots pretty much useless. Then, last night, we had a blackout in my part of the city. Apparently, the outage was due to a motor vehicle damaging ENMAX equipment. I guess that is why two or three firetrucks came rushing down my street around 11:30 pm last night, and ENMAX vehicles were working till almost 2:00 am just down my street, within sight.
Hot and windy are not my favourite conditions, but the air-conditioning in my car felt wonderful! There didn't seem to be all that much to be seen, though I suspect that one Mountain Bluebird pair has a second family to feed now. I was so happy to see the male in his usual place and even more excited when I saw him with a tiny insect in his beak, meaning only one thing - new babies. Usually, there are no cattle to be seen in the field, but yesterday, I had a lot of curious faces watching me carefully.
Other than this Bluebird pair, the only other bird I photographed was an American Robin. No Snipe could be heard and only a couple of Red-winged Blackbirds to be seen. So, I decided to drive to Brown-Lowery Provincial Park, intending to just check the forest around the parking lot, to see if there were any fungi growing. There were four vehicles in the parking lot and I plucked up enough courage to go a short way into the park. This place always gives me the creeps and, usually, I only go a few feet into the actual park. Knowing that bears and cougars have been seen, it's never a good feeling to be there on my own. I've only ever seen a large Moose there on a couple of occasions. A few days ago, a friend told me that she had been told that someone who has an amazing forest for fungi had said that the fungi were at their peak right now. This seemed rather unlikely, as it is still only mid-July, plus the fact that everywhere is so dry. I just had to go to Brown-Lowery to check on the fungi there - absolutely nothing, other than three or four small, shapeless blobs on tree trunks. Hopefully, we will get rain in the next few weeks.
Far more important, I hope that B.C. (British Columbia, the province to our west) gets a heavy amount of rain very, very soon. Maybe a week ago, about 200 wildfires were being reported, causing a lot of devastation and evacuations. Now we have a forest fire here in Alberta, in Banff. Each summer, we get a lot of wildfires, the worst being the one in Fort McMurray that started on 1 May 2016. The fire spread across approximately 590,000 hectares (1,500,000 acres) before it was declared to be under control on July 5, 2016. It was the most expensive natural disaster in Canadian history. My heart goes out to all those affected by the ongoing B.C. fires.
Today is much cooler and now, after having a couple of windows open, my place smells strongly of smoke from the B.C. wildfires and the Banff area. I posted a photo showing how the smoke is affecting Albertans. Best to stay indoors if possible, so I guess I won't be going anywhere for at least the next few days. It makes scenic shots pretty much useless. Then, last night, we had a blackout in my part of the city. Apparently, the outage was due to a motor vehicle damaging ENMAX equipment. I guess that is why two or three firetrucks came rushing down my street around 11:30 pm last night, and ENMAX vehicles were working till almost 2:00 am just down my street, within sight.
Hot and windy are not my favourite conditions, but the air-conditioning in my car felt wonderful! There didn't seem to be all that much to be seen, though I suspect that one Mountain Bluebird pair has a second family to feed now. I was so happy to see the male in his usual place and even more excited when I saw him with a tiny insect in his beak, meaning only one thing - new babies. Usually, there are no cattle to be seen in the field, but yesterday, I had a lot of curious faces watching me carefully.
Other than this Bluebird pair, the only other bird I photographed was an American Robin. No Snipe could be heard and only a couple of Red-winged Blackbirds to be seen. So, I decided to drive to Brown-Lowery Provincial Park, intending to just check the forest around the parking lot, to see if there were any fungi growing. There were four vehicles in the parking lot and I plucked up enough courage to go a short way into the park. This place always gives me the creeps and, usually, I only go a few feet into the actual park. Knowing that bears and cougars have been seen, it's never a good feeling to be there on my own. I've only ever seen a large Moose there on a couple of occasions. A few days ago, a friend told me that she had been told that someone who has an amazing forest for fungi had said that the fungi were at their peak right now. This seemed rather unlikely, as it is still only mid-July, plus the fact that everywhere is so dry. I just had to go to Brown-Lowery to check on the fungi there - absolutely nothing, other than three or four small, shapeless blobs on tree trunks. Hopefully, we will get rain in the next few weeks.
Far more important, I hope that B.C. (British Columbia, the province to our west) gets a heavy amount of rain very, very soon. Maybe a week ago, about 200 wildfires were being reported, causing a lot of devastation and evacuations. Now we have a forest fire here in Alberta, in Banff. Each summer, we get a lot of wildfires, the worst being the one in Fort McMurray that started on 1 May 2016. The fire spread across approximately 590,000 hectares (1,500,000 acres) before it was declared to be under control on July 5, 2016. It was the most expensive natural disaster in Canadian history. My heart goes out to all those affected by the ongoing B.C. fires.
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