American Tree Sparrow / Spizelloides arborea
Couple of Coots / Fulica americana
Shadows
One of a pair
Common Redpolls / Acanthis flammea
Barn Owl
Swainson's Hawk juvenile
Canada Geese on ice at Pine Coulee Reservoir
Popcan-sized Northern Pygmy-owl, from January 2015
Another surprise on another gloomy day
Common Redpoll / Acanthis flammea
It's the little guy/gal again
Evening Grosbeaks, male and female
Purple Honeycreeper male
Northern Shrike
White-tailed Ptarmigan
White-tailed Ptarmigan camouflage
A change from a world of white
Time to rest
Wilson's Snipe
House Sparrow at the Saskatoon Farm
Ruddy Turnstone, Tobago
White-necked Jacobin, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Where countryside and civilization meet
Once was wild
White Pheasant
Wild Turkey
Licorice Allsorts eyes
Wild Turkey at the Cochrane Ecological Institute
I spy with my little eye
"Just" a little House Sparrow
Common Redpoll
A welcome addition to our Christmas Bird Count
Feeding frenzy - is the top right bird a Hoary Red…
Common Redpoll with an orange spot
Always a treat
Pine Grosbeaks
Mountain Chickadee / Poecile gambeli
Pine Grosbeak female
Common Redpoll
Handsome Pine Grosbeak male
On a brutally cold New Year's Day Count
An upside-down kind of life
Northern Pygmy-owl
Immature White-necked Jacobin
Silver-beaked Tanager female, Trinidad
Visit to the Oilbird cave, Trinidad
Oilbird, Asa Wright Nature Centre, Trinidad
Purple Honeycreeper male, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Hooded Merganser male
Townsend's Solitaire / Myadestes townsendi
Crested Oropendola / Psarocolius decumanus, Trinid…
Bananaquit / Coereba flaveola, Trinidad
White-necked Jacobin, Asa Wright, Trinidad
White-necked Jacobin female, Trinidad
A most welcome find
Snowy Owl number 5
Two male Snowy Owls in the same field
Bananaquit, Trinidad
You never know where you'll see a Snowy Owl
Common Redpoll in falling snow
Pine Grosbeak male feeding on berries
A rare glimpse of a Steller's Jay
At the Saskatoon Farm
The ever-friendly Black-capped Chickadee
And down(y) he flew
Rufous-vented chachalaca, Blue Waters Inn, Tobago
Double-crested Cormorants / Phalacrocorax auritus
After a busy night of hunting
Ruddy Turnstone, Blue Waters Inn, Tobago
Evening Grosbeak female
Swainson's Hawk
Wood Duck male
Pam and friend
Yesterday's Bald Eagle
Bald Eagle / Haliaeetus leucocephalus
Merlin
Oilbird / Steatornis caripensis, Trinidad
At the Oilbird (Steatornis caripensis) cave, Trini…
Ring-billed Gull / Larus delawarensis
Great Horned Owl juvenile
Great Blue Heron, fishing
Yellow Oriole, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Friendly visitor
Yesterday's Great Horned Owl
Great Horned Owl on a fence post
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Happy Thanksgiving!
I'm tiny - and BLUE
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Pretty little Hummer, Asa Wright, Trinidad - immat…
Red-tailed Hawk?
Eurasian Collared-Dove / Streptopelia decaocto
Three years later ....
Sweet young owl
Purple Honeycreeper female, Asa Wright
American Goldfinch
Helmeted Guineafowl
Swainson's Hawk
Juvenile American Coot
Palm Tanager, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Wood Duck juvenile
Juvenile Swainson's Hawk
Wood Ducks
Hybrid Mourning Dove-Eurasian Collared Dove
Green-winged Teal and Black-bellied Plover
American Goldfinch eating Sunflower seeds
Swainson's Hawk juvenile
Killdeer / Charadrius vociferus
Yellowlegs
Canada Warbler / Cardellina canadensis
Swainson's Hawk juvenile
Green Honeycreeper female, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Semipalmated Plover / Charadrius semipalmatus?
You looking at me, lady?
Blue-gray Tanager / Thraupis episcopus, Asa Wright…
Handsome Wood Ducks
Sleepy Short-eared Owl
Short-eared Owl
Spiked hairdo
Barn Owl
Talk about baby fluff!
Crested Oropendola, Asa Wright Nature Centre, Trin…
Flight training with a Red-tailed Hawk
Cooling down
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Yesterday's absolute treat - the size of your fist!
Such an awful quality image, taken in really bad light and in the woods, and close to being a black silhouette - but still so cute and precious. I rescued it the best I could, but thank goodness I have an album full of much better photos of Northern Pygmy-owls. It was, of course, amazing just to see this one yesterday, during a long walk in Fish Creek Park - longer than it should have been, due to our destination area being closed with yellow warning tape because there was a Black Bear in the area. Makes me smile, as I know Bears can't read and can walk, so who knows what part of the park it was in yesterday. I don't know how someone spotted this tiny owl when it was first seen, far away and through the trees. We took a few photos, feeling grateful to be looking at this tiny, fist or popcan-sized predator, and then, suddenly, it flew towards us and landed closer. If only the sun had been shining.
"The Northern Pygmy-Owl may be tiny, but it’s a ferocious hunter with a taste for songbirds. These owls are mostly dark brown and white, with long tails, smoothly rounded heads, and piercing yellow eyes. They hunt during the day by sitting quietly and surprising their prey. As a defensive measure, songbirds often gather to mob sitting owls until they fly away. Mobbing songbirds can help you find these unobtrusive owls, as can listening for their call, a high-pitched series of toots." From AllAboutBirds. They also love Meadow Voles.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Northern_Pygmy-Owl/id
"This Northern Pygmy-Owl appears to have eyes in the back of its head. But why? One theory is that large false eyes may create the illusion that the owl is much bigger than its 6 and 3/4-inch size. A more current theory is that the false eyes help protect the pygmy-owl's true eyes. Small birds will mob this diurnal owl, even striking it, directing some attacks at its eyes. If the large false eyes can take the brunt of these attacks, little harm will come to the Pygmy-Owl's vulnerable true eyes." From birdnote.org.
birdnote.org/show/pygmy-owls-false-eyes
The last Northern Pygmy-owl that I saw (actually, two of them) was on 27 December 2016, after a group of us had finished a day of birding for the annual Audubon Sheep River/Priddis/Turner Valley Christmas Bird Count. Was able to get much better photos on that occasion.
I'm glad I went on yesterday's walk, as it snowed again last night and it is another dreary day today, 10 November 2017. The temperature is a balmy -1C.
"The Northern Pygmy-Owl may be tiny, but it’s a ferocious hunter with a taste for songbirds. These owls are mostly dark brown and white, with long tails, smoothly rounded heads, and piercing yellow eyes. They hunt during the day by sitting quietly and surprising their prey. As a defensive measure, songbirds often gather to mob sitting owls until they fly away. Mobbing songbirds can help you find these unobtrusive owls, as can listening for their call, a high-pitched series of toots." From AllAboutBirds. They also love Meadow Voles.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Northern_Pygmy-Owl/id
"This Northern Pygmy-Owl appears to have eyes in the back of its head. But why? One theory is that large false eyes may create the illusion that the owl is much bigger than its 6 and 3/4-inch size. A more current theory is that the false eyes help protect the pygmy-owl's true eyes. Small birds will mob this diurnal owl, even striking it, directing some attacks at its eyes. If the large false eyes can take the brunt of these attacks, little harm will come to the Pygmy-Owl's vulnerable true eyes." From birdnote.org.
birdnote.org/show/pygmy-owls-false-eyes
The last Northern Pygmy-owl that I saw (actually, two of them) was on 27 December 2016, after a group of us had finished a day of birding for the annual Audubon Sheep River/Priddis/Turner Valley Christmas Bird Count. Was able to get much better photos on that occasion.
I'm glad I went on yesterday's walk, as it snowed again last night and it is another dreary day today, 10 November 2017. The temperature is a balmy -1C.
, Peter Van Lom, * ઇઉ *, neira-Dan and 3 other people have particularly liked this photo
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