Yellowlegs - Lesser or Greater?
Much-needed colour!
Floral Arrangement – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal,…
Beans for Sale – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québ…
Potatoes – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québec, Ca…
Trillium, Day 2, Rondeau PP, Ontario
Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Day 2, Rondeau PP, Ontario
White-breasted Nuthatch, Day 2, Rondeau PP, Ontari…
Day 2, Common Five-lined Skink barn, Rondeau PP
Day 2, Five-lined Skink barn, Rondeau PP
Day 2, reflected 'Geese', Rondeau PP
Day 2, mating snakes, Rondeau PP
Day 2, mating snakes, Rondeau PP
Day 2, Tree Swallow, Rondeau PP
Cukes – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québec, Canad…
Pears and Nectarines – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal…
Pears – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québec, Canad…
The storm rolls in
On its last legs
Harvest time
A favourite barn
Zucchini – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québec, Ca…
Corn Cobs – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québec, C…
Market Mélange – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québ…
Day 2, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Rondeau Provincial…
Day 2, Anglewing butterfly sp., Rondeau PP
Day 2, American Foldfinch, Rondeau PP
Filtered barn
Day 2, yes, another Trillium, Rondeau PP
Day 2, a more typical Trillium, Rondeau PP
Day 2, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Rondeau PP Visitor'…
Day 2, White Trillium, Rondeau PP
Day 2, White-breasted Nuthatch, Rondeau PP Visitor…
Harlequin Duck / Histrionicus histrionicus
Heading into the mountains
After our first major snowstorm
Garlic Bulbs – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québec…
Purple Onions – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québe…
Off the Vines – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québe…
Radishes – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québec, Ca…
Mushrooms – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québec, C…
Mangoes – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québec, Can…
Tomatoes and Peppers – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal…
Pig Farmer – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Québec,…
Black-Eyed Susans – Marché Jean-Talon, Montréal, Q…
Red Panda / Ailurus fulgens
Happy Thanksgiving!
Snow Leopard / Panthera uncia
Happy Thanksgivng, everyone!
Greater White-fronted Geese / Larus glaucoides
Perfectly purple
Not Exactly Health Food – Canadian Tulip Festival,…
Serrated Tulip – Canadian Tulip Festival, Dow’s La…
Happy Gobble Gobble weekend!
Fall colours near the Highwood River
Mushrooms galore
Fun to spend time with
Old and weathered
Pink Showy Cinquefoil
Our majestic mountains
American Pika - such a cutie
Old barn in early fall
Snow Geese & Greater White-fronted Geese
Puffs – Canadian Tulip Festival, Dow’s Lake, Ottaw…
Floral Regression, Take #2 – Canadian Tulip Festiv…
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Early fall, looking (and feeling) like winter
More snow fell last night and it is still snowing very lightly this morning, 9 October 2018. Shortly before noon, our temperature is -4C (windchill -9C). This photo was taken at Elliston Park, with its blanket of snow.
Last night, I finally took another look at the photos I took way back in May, on our two-week trip to Point Pelee (Ontario) and Tadoussac (Quebec). I have only edited and posted photos from the first day there and a few from our second morning. I really need to get busy on this huge task and I think I may have to post far too many photos at a time. Will do this later in a day or at night, when most people are probably off Flickr. Many photos are simply "for the record" shots and not of good quality. I will see how long I can keep this up, though, as editing and posting photos does not help with the inflammation in my shoulder rotator cuffs. Nor does holding up a camera and taking photos!!
On 6 October 2018, I joined a few birding friends for another day out east of the city. The weather was beautiful, and so different from the freezing cold trip that was held about a week earlier. As usual on these birding trips, almost every bird was far, far away.
A bird I was happy to see was a Thayer's Gull. I was thinking that I had never seen one before, or at least not to get a photo. However, I checked my photostream and discovered a photo of a juvenile that I took on 25 March 2018. The Thayer's Gull is now called an Iceland Gull. "The darker-winged “Thayer’s” gull of the west used to be considered a different species; the two were lumped in 2017."
Like many people, I just don't "do" Gulls. A lack of interest in them does seem to be fairly widespread, On this day, however, our leader, Terry Korolyk, who is a Gull expert (along with tremendous knowledge on hybrids and all birds/wildlife), found several huge flocks of various Gulls at different locations, along with other bird species, including a few more Rusty Blackbirds (whose numbers are declining). A delight to see a few distant Swans, a Wilson's Snipe, Greater White-fronted Geese, Yellowlegs and an assortment of other shorebirds and waterfowl.
Thank you, Terry, for yet another enjoyable and interesting trip. Thank you, also, for the ride.
Last night, I finally took another look at the photos I took way back in May, on our two-week trip to Point Pelee (Ontario) and Tadoussac (Quebec). I have only edited and posted photos from the first day there and a few from our second morning. I really need to get busy on this huge task and I think I may have to post far too many photos at a time. Will do this later in a day or at night, when most people are probably off Flickr. Many photos are simply "for the record" shots and not of good quality. I will see how long I can keep this up, though, as editing and posting photos does not help with the inflammation in my shoulder rotator cuffs. Nor does holding up a camera and taking photos!!
On 6 October 2018, I joined a few birding friends for another day out east of the city. The weather was beautiful, and so different from the freezing cold trip that was held about a week earlier. As usual on these birding trips, almost every bird was far, far away.
A bird I was happy to see was a Thayer's Gull. I was thinking that I had never seen one before, or at least not to get a photo. However, I checked my photostream and discovered a photo of a juvenile that I took on 25 March 2018. The Thayer's Gull is now called an Iceland Gull. "The darker-winged “Thayer’s” gull of the west used to be considered a different species; the two were lumped in 2017."
Like many people, I just don't "do" Gulls. A lack of interest in them does seem to be fairly widespread, On this day, however, our leader, Terry Korolyk, who is a Gull expert (along with tremendous knowledge on hybrids and all birds/wildlife), found several huge flocks of various Gulls at different locations, along with other bird species, including a few more Rusty Blackbirds (whose numbers are declining). A delight to see a few distant Swans, a Wilson's Snipe, Greater White-fronted Geese, Yellowlegs and an assortment of other shorebirds and waterfowl.
Thank you, Terry, for yet another enjoyable and interesting trip. Thank you, also, for the ride.
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