Checking me out
The start of a great day
Young and innocent
White-tailed Deer through the snow
Cute and curious
Back-lit White-tailed Deer
Young White-tailed Deer
Sweet White-tailed doe
White-tailed Deer
White-tailed Deer family
Mom and her spotted twins
Looking beautiful
The reward for getting up early
Mom and her new baby
Hoping for food
One of five White-tailed Deer
Elegant innocence
White-tailed Deer at Akamina Lake, Waterton
Peace and late evening sun
White-tailed Deer
White-tailed doe in sunlight
Watching us watching them
White-tailed doe in late fall
So much snow everywhere
Cautious mother of twins
The twins' Mom
One of two little fawns
Handsome male
So handsome
Little cutie
Supper in the park
White-tailed Deer
Curious White-tailed Deer
The face of gentleness
Young White-tailed buck
Time with the Deer
White-tailed buck in a winter wonderland
Tenderness
White-tailed fawn and doe
Master of the woodlands
White-tailed Deer
Cutely curious
Surviving the frigid temperatures
Woodland encounter
Watchers in the woods
The local gang
A gentle winter scene
White-tailed Deer
Watchful mother
Little innocent
Curiosity
Sunny October evening
Checking us out
A lesson in posture
White-tailed Deer
White-tailed Deer
White-tailed Deer
Mother of twins
Gentleness and grace
White-tailed Deer
White-tailed Deer
Distraction
This gentle creature
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142 visits
Spooked by a barking dog
Kind of an accidental shot : )
It was a fairly quiet afternoon at Carburn Park yesterday, 9 September 2018. Only 26 species of bird were seen, compared to the groups who went on the morning walk and saw 60 bird species. As usual, mornings are a better time to go and look for birds. However, I was content with seeing a group of American White Pelicans out on a gravel bar in the river and, further along the path, quite a few Double-crested Cormorants perched, flying or swimming.
At one of our stops, we looked down the embankment and watched a busy and hungry Muskrat. I always think they have the cutest little hands. Others in the small group saw a Mink, but it was out of view from where I was standing.
On our return walk back to our cars, we stopped to watch a beautiful deer, busily feeding in the tall grasses and plants. A bright yellow Sowthistle flower was just one of the food items I saw disappear. The deer was just a few feet away from the path, until a man on his bike with a large dog on leash came by and stopped to watch. The dog started barking, disturbing this creature who had been so peacefully feeding.
Also on the way back to the parking lot, I spotted what I thought was a white golf ball at the base of a tree. When I took a somewhat closer look, I realized it was a beautiful Inkcap fungus! Hadn't seen one of these for a long time. Took a couple of quick shots and then hurried to catch up with my friends.
It was a fairly quiet afternoon at Carburn Park yesterday, 9 September 2018. Only 26 species of bird were seen, compared to the groups who went on the morning walk and saw 60 bird species. As usual, mornings are a better time to go and look for birds. However, I was content with seeing a group of American White Pelicans out on a gravel bar in the river and, further along the path, quite a few Double-crested Cormorants perched, flying or swimming.
At one of our stops, we looked down the embankment and watched a busy and hungry Muskrat. I always think they have the cutest little hands. Others in the small group saw a Mink, but it was out of view from where I was standing.
On our return walk back to our cars, we stopped to watch a beautiful deer, busily feeding in the tall grasses and plants. A bright yellow Sowthistle flower was just one of the food items I saw disappear. The deer was just a few feet away from the path, until a man on his bike with a large dog on leash came by and stopped to watch. The dog started barking, disturbing this creature who had been so peacefully feeding.
Also on the way back to the parking lot, I spotted what I thought was a white golf ball at the base of a tree. When I took a somewhat closer look, I realized it was a beautiful Inkcap fungus! Hadn't seen one of these for a long time. Took a couple of quick shots and then hurried to catch up with my friends.
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