Happy Christmas Eve!
Beautiful and, oh, so cute
Not quite Santa's reindeer
A simple, natural Christmas
The final stage of an Artichoke
Back-lit White-tailed Deer
Barn with the fallen cupola
A welcome splash of colour
Pine Grosbeaks
Glorious scenery for a Christmas Bird Count!
Mountain Chickadee / Poecile gambeli
Pine Grosbeak female
Trudging through the snow
Last night's snow .... and -29°C (windchill -38°C)
Common Redpoll
Love a Llama
Red barn in winter
Jackrabbit, seen in my car headlights
Handsome Pine Grosbeak male
On a Christmas Bird Count, -23C
An old dog named Fang
Happy New Year, everyone!
On a brutally cold New Year's Day Count
On a New Year's Day Bird Count
Pretty in the sunshine
In memory of my daughter
A glimpse through the trees
Cute and curious
An upside-down kind of life
Northern Pygmy-owl
Rural decay
A rural Christmas
The Bow River at Carburn Park
Hooded Merganser male
Winter walk in the park
Joy
Townsend's Solitaire / Myadestes townsendi
A most welcome find
Snowy Owl number 5
Two male Snowy Owls in the same field
You never know where you'll see a Snowy Owl
The end of an Artichoke
Common Redpoll in falling snow
Old barns in winter
Miniature horses in a winter playground
Yesterday's walk in Fish Creek Park
Pine Grosbeak male feeding on berries
A rare glimpse of a Steller's Jay
An old, abandoned Chevrolet
Pine Grosbeak female or juvenile
Silky Scorpionweed / Phacelia sericea, Pocaterra C…
Old and the new
Janet and a tiny friend
Barn of an unusual shape
Before winter arrived
A cute, young face
Yet another snowstorm
Boreal Chickadee, caught just in time
Hairy Woodpecker
Hairy Woodpecker / Picoides villosus
Old wagon in winter
Bald Eagle after a cooling hosepipe shower
A beautiful sign of winter
Always a treat
Common Redpoll with an orange spot
Hungry Moose
King of silos
The birding blind at Frank Lake
Feeding frenzy - is the top right bird a Hoary Red…
A welcome addition to our Christmas Bird Count
In search of an owl - with permission
Birders on an Audubon Christmas Bird Count
Common Redpoll
Here comes the snow
Unexpected, and very welcome, Moose
The difference four days make
Farm cat
Under a Chinook arch
Handsome Mulie buck
A sunrise sky that lasted till sunset
"Just" a little House Sparrow
Fine old house
When the land turns white
I spy with my little eye
Little country church
Looking across the prairie
Young White-tailed Deer
Before the next snowfall
One of my favourite barns
Handsome - Norwegian Fjord Horse?
Wild Turkey at the Cochrane Ecological Institute
Blacksmith at work, Cochrane Ecological Institute
Colourful shed at the Cochrane Ecological Institut…
Licorice Allsorts eyes
Handsome buck
Bison/Buffalo
The sweetest little thing
Wild Turkey
White Pheasant
Once was wild
Rural decay on the prairie
Where countryside and civilization meet
The fun times are over
Dazzling sunlight on distant peaks
Part of an abandoned mining camp
Old tractor at Pioneer Acres
Old country church
House Sparrow at the Saskatoon Farm
Modern barn
Aging Echinacea
Wild Edible Mushrooms of British Columbia
Model Mamod Steam Tractor, Pioneer Acres
Memories of colour
Standing at the edge of the storm
She can't see me
Wilson's Snipe
A happy find
Sculpture at Granary Road
Time to rest
A white world
A change from a world of white
A patch of blue
White-tailed Ptarmigan camouflage
Behind the tangled branches
White-tailed Ptarmigan
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
155 visits
Snow-capped
With a lot of snow forecast for 8 of the following 10 days, I feel very lucky that my daughter and I had such a beautiful day on 17 December 2017, for our Christmas get-together. Since then, we have had so much snow and, at the moment, temperatures have plunged. For tomorrow, Christmas morning, the temperature is forecast to be -24C (windchill -30C). For two upcoming, out-of-city Christmas Bird Counts, the temperature is supposed to be -18C (windchill -25C) and -21C (windchill -28C)!
It was such weird weather on the day my daughter and I went off for the day, as the colour of the sunrise sky lasted all day, till we left just before sunset. A gorgeous Chinook Arch crossed the sky, staying the whole day. Some of the fields were bare, and others had a light dusting of snow on them.
The day started with breakfast at the Saskatoon Farm - always enjoyable. They do close from the end of the day on 23 December and open again in the morning of 17 January. A well-earned break for everyone who works there. As always, we walked around the grounds to look for things to photograph and, as usual, we were in luck - snow-capped dead flowers, cats, dogs, and the many little House Sparrows that were in and out of one of the greenhouses.
From there, we continued south to the area east of High River and drove some of the usual back roads; ones that I had driven just four days earlier. Of course, we were hoping that we might find a Snowy Owl, though I knew not to get our hopes up. Before too long, my daughter spotted our first Snowy Owl of the season - the tiniest speck of white that I could barely see with the naked eye, but it was a Snowy and that was all that mattered. Later in the day, she somehow spotted a second one; again, the tiniest speck perched on a very distant fence post.
A few minutes before this second sighting, my daughter spotted two handsome Mule Deer bucks - looked like father and son - lying down next to a metal grain silo, near the edge of the road. They stayed there for a while, which was surprising, as males tend to be far more skittish. Eventually, they stood up and walked off into the field.
Of course, we couldn't resist taking shots of any old barns, sheds and houses that we came across. Altogether, a great day that was much enjoyed. Thank you so much, Rachel, for spending the day with me, and doing something that we both love! These are my absolute favourite days in the year.
It was such weird weather on the day my daughter and I went off for the day, as the colour of the sunrise sky lasted all day, till we left just before sunset. A gorgeous Chinook Arch crossed the sky, staying the whole day. Some of the fields were bare, and others had a light dusting of snow on them.
The day started with breakfast at the Saskatoon Farm - always enjoyable. They do close from the end of the day on 23 December and open again in the morning of 17 January. A well-earned break for everyone who works there. As always, we walked around the grounds to look for things to photograph and, as usual, we were in luck - snow-capped dead flowers, cats, dogs, and the many little House Sparrows that were in and out of one of the greenhouses.
From there, we continued south to the area east of High River and drove some of the usual back roads; ones that I had driven just four days earlier. Of course, we were hoping that we might find a Snowy Owl, though I knew not to get our hopes up. Before too long, my daughter spotted our first Snowy Owl of the season - the tiniest speck of white that I could barely see with the naked eye, but it was a Snowy and that was all that mattered. Later in the day, she somehow spotted a second one; again, the tiniest speck perched on a very distant fence post.
A few minutes before this second sighting, my daughter spotted two handsome Mule Deer bucks - looked like father and son - lying down next to a metal grain silo, near the edge of the road. They stayed there for a while, which was surprising, as males tend to be far more skittish. Eventually, they stood up and walked off into the field.
Of course, we couldn't resist taking shots of any old barns, sheds and houses that we came across. Altogether, a great day that was much enjoyed. Thank you so much, Rachel, for spending the day with me, and doing something that we both love! These are my absolute favourite days in the year.
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.