Remembering winter
Tadoussac, Quebec, Canada
A favourite view, Waterton Lakes National Park
Bow Lake, Alberta
Bow Lake
Friends at Bow Lake
Beautiful Peyto Lake
Disappearing
Reflected peaks
Bow Lake on a cloudy day
Glorious Canola
Impressive creature
Smokey Eagle Lake
Beginning to look like fall
Me and my dad
Yesterday's Chinook Arch
On a cold summer day with mist and drizzle
Photo-bombed by Blackbirds
Our majestic mountains
Fall colours near the Highwood River
Heading into the mountains
Early fall, looking (and feeling) like winter
Forgetmenot Pond, Elbow Falls Trail
Tundra Swans in flight
Clouds over Chain Lakes
Two of my favourite things
Clouds over Chain Lakes
Into the sun at Pine Coulee Reservoir
Rural decay down south
On the way to Chain Lakes
A view from Chain Lakes
Beauty of winter (well, late fall)
Day 6, part of Tadoussac, seen from up on the clif…
Disappearing into nothingness
Hoar frost tree and vanishing fields
Peace in the countryside
Kananaskis, through the windshield
Gravel and dust - a favourite road
Old, red barn
The yellow has bloomed!
Badlands near Drumheller on a hazy day
Still standing, tall and proud
Two old churches in an almost-ghost-town
Hoodoos everywhere
Very old grain elevator in the Badlands valley
Little old Catholic church in the Badlands
The remaining three
Light over the Canola fields
Fall colour in Kananaskis
Kananaskis on a mixed-weather day
September snow in Kananaskis
Late September in Kananaskis, 2019
A favourite view in Kananaskis
Wedge Pond, Kananaskis, Alberta
Buller Pond, Kananaskis
Forgetmenot Pond, Kananaskis
Forgetmenot Pond
Beautiful Alberta - prairie, foothills and mountai…
Kananaskis 'winter'
Wedge Pond in fading fall colours
Kananaskis
Wedge Pond, Kananaskis
Sheep River Provincial Park
They call this spring?
A rural "winter" scene
Old barn in spring snow
Standing up well
Evening mist in the rainforest
A memory of Waterton from before the fire
Ghost Reservoir
When the world turns white
Donkey guardians of the old schoolhouse
On the way to Canmore - seven Swans a-swimming :)
Winter beauty
Twice the beauty
Prairie life in winter
Caught in a mesocyclone
Rolling hills from the Whaleback
A scene in the Whaleback area
A beautiful day in Weaselhead
With more big storms to come
Coyote crossing the frozen Elbow River
A view from yesterday
Winter's beauty
Old barns in the foothills
Deer on the horizon
A white world
Country scene in winter
Whites and blues of winter
Red barn in winter
The beauty of winter
Rainforest of the Arima Valley, Trinidad
Before winter arrived
White-tailed Deer through the snow
Yesterday's COLD walk
Winter beauty
Yesterday's local walk
Old and the new
Yesterday's walk in Fish Creek Park
The Bow River at Carburn Park
On a Christmas Bird Count, -23C
Trudging through the snow
Glorious scenery for a Christmas Bird Count!
King of silos
Under a Chinook arch
A sunrise sky that lasted till sunset
Fine old house
When the land turns white
Looking across the prairie
Before the next snowfall
The fun times are over
Dazzling sunlight on distant peaks
Part of an abandoned mining camp
Modern barn
A white world
A patch of blue
Behind the tangled branches
Walking in a winter wonderland
Autumn in Alberta
A peaceful winter scene
New "barn", Granary Road
Down on the farm
The beauty of erosion
Old, see-through barn
The new "Famous Five" at Granary Road
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196 visits
Goodbye, winter - so glad you are gone!
On 17 February 2018, a small group of us headed way SW of the city - and into yet another snow storm. I kept checking to see if the trip was going to be cancelled, but fortunately, our leader had only read about the "few flurries" for the day. I had read further detail that said that a huge snow storm was moving into the area, bringing up to 25 cm of fresh snow, poor visibility, white-outs, treacherous roads! I knew taking photos was going to be a challenge, and seeing anything in the first place was going to be an even bigger challenge. So glad we went, though - even more so, that I wasn't driving, other than to our local meeting place in the city.
The main reason for the trip was to look for Golden Eagles, though of course we were happy to see anything else, too. Last year, we saw five, but this time we couldn't find any. With such poor visibility, they could easily still have been out there.
We did see Bald Eagles, though, and quite a few (mainly very distant) Sharp-tailed Grouse. At one location, they were on the road way ahead of us. They are such beautiful birds. I thought we might see some small birds during the day, but we saw no Snow Buntings or Horned Larks. A very distant Great Horned Owl was seen in the yard at one of the places that some of us always used to call in at when we were doing the annual Christmas Bird Count for the area. Also spotted a distant Merlin perched in a bare-branched tree.
Three Moose were seen - one on its own and two others together at a different location. The one on its own had been standing but took a few steps and lay down in the deep snow. The other two were spotted when we were almost at the top of a steep, snow-covered back road. Our leader slowed down and, though I normally don't ask someone if they would stop for something, I did so this time. Oops, sorry, Tony, lol! We were stuck, unable to continue our climb to the top of the steep hill. Luckily, Tony is really good at reversing (and trying again)! There were also many Mule Deer to be seen, especially along the coulee.
I love the landscape in this whole area and always enjoy photographing it. On this day, the weather was so bad that much of the landscape was just a faint shape in the distance, or else had completely vanished. Sometimes, it was difficult to tell if the distant shapes were actually hills or clouds!
A great day, despite the weather. Thanks so much, Tony, for the ride and for another most enjoyable day!
The main reason for the trip was to look for Golden Eagles, though of course we were happy to see anything else, too. Last year, we saw five, but this time we couldn't find any. With such poor visibility, they could easily still have been out there.
We did see Bald Eagles, though, and quite a few (mainly very distant) Sharp-tailed Grouse. At one location, they were on the road way ahead of us. They are such beautiful birds. I thought we might see some small birds during the day, but we saw no Snow Buntings or Horned Larks. A very distant Great Horned Owl was seen in the yard at one of the places that some of us always used to call in at when we were doing the annual Christmas Bird Count for the area. Also spotted a distant Merlin perched in a bare-branched tree.
Three Moose were seen - one on its own and two others together at a different location. The one on its own had been standing but took a few steps and lay down in the deep snow. The other two were spotted when we were almost at the top of a steep, snow-covered back road. Our leader slowed down and, though I normally don't ask someone if they would stop for something, I did so this time. Oops, sorry, Tony, lol! We were stuck, unable to continue our climb to the top of the steep hill. Luckily, Tony is really good at reversing (and trying again)! There were also many Mule Deer to be seen, especially along the coulee.
I love the landscape in this whole area and always enjoy photographing it. On this day, the weather was so bad that much of the landscape was just a faint shape in the distance, or else had completely vanished. Sometimes, it was difficult to tell if the distant shapes were actually hills or clouds!
A great day, despite the weather. Thanks so much, Tony, for the ride and for another most enjoyable day!
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