When you're smiling, the whole world smiles with y…
White-winged Crossbill
A sunrise to start our birding day
The only one
A favourite little country church
Tea, anyone?
Sunrise start to a birding day in Calgary
Textures of an old homestead
Lily macro
Bald Eagle in the Badlands of Alberta
Old homestead and barn
The beautiful Badlands of Alberta
Long-billed ice bird
Bohemian Waxwings
White-winged Crossbill
With a view of the mountains and the prairies
Downtown Calgary bathed in sunrise pink
Eurasian Collared-Doves
Ice is nice
Hairy Woodpecker
The rule of red
Lovable, but shy
Remnant of the old days
Little cabin in the woods
A toothy smile
A touch of frost
Winter colours
At the end of the day
Northern Shrike / Lanius excubitor
Fish Creek Park New Year's Day Bird Count
Pine Grosbeak / Pinicola enucleator
One of five White-tailed Deer
Guarding the barn
Each one different from the others
A road less travelled
Pine Grosbeak / Pinicola enucleator
Golden Eagle along the fenceline
Pine Grosbeaks adding colour to our winter
In the bleak midwinter
Keeper of the farmyard
Outlined in frost
Another day closer to spring
A typical pose for the White-breasted Nuthatch
Foothills and mountains
Pine Grosbeak female
Farm friends
So pretty against the snow
The gathering
A fine old barn
Desolate
The donkeys with reflector eyes
A splash of much-needed red
On a bitterly cold, hoar frosty day
Heritage tree from 1907, at Carburn Park
Hoping for food
Enjoying the morning sun
Winter chill
Little red barn on the prairie
Get well, Rachel
Christmas remnants
Old barns in heavy frost
Pine Grosbeak in pretty light
Shoo Fly / Nicandra physalodes
A frosty prairie view
Old-aged matching colours
One of 9 Great Horned Owls
Through the frost to the bird blind
New roof and a fresh coat of paint
A foggy, frosty sunrise
A frosty view from Frank Lake blind
So far away, but better than nothing
Frosted Cattails
A clash of colour
A beautiful old Ford
Beware!
Early morning fog and hoar frost
Colour for a snowy morning
Mariposa Lily / Calochortus apiculatus
Baby Coot
Summer Iris display
Christmas colours in July
Three-toed Woodpecker
Fancy 'Cat's Cradle'
Licking the salt
Sunlight on the low cloud
With thoughts of nesting
Morning awakes
Cornflower
Being a good mother
Elegant beauty
Lesser Scaup
Face to the sun
Well, hello there
Pink or Showy lady's-slipper / Cypripedium reginae
White-winged Crossbill / Loxia leucoptera
Sparkling in the sunlight
Why birds are sometimes hard to find
Ibis iridescence
Giant Scabius / Cephalaria gigantea
Travelling the Cobble Flats road
You can always count on a Chickadee
A favourite old barn
Louisiana Broomrape / Orobanche ludoviciana
Time to reveal
Livingston House, Heritage Park
Someone just couldn't resist : )
Creature of the forest
Give it time to age
Grain elevator with a difference
Backward glance
Himalayan Blue Poppy
November in Weaselhead
Golden
American Three-toed Woodpecker
Pine Siskin
Beetle necklace
Wild Turkeys
Cabbage White butterfly
Great Gray Owl in early morning light
Cute as always
Boreal Chickadee
Ruffed Grouse - from my archives
Orange Hawkweed
White-winged Crossbill
Uncommon American Three-toed Woodpecker
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Himalayan Blue Poppy
![Himalayan Blue Poppy Himalayan Blue Poppy](https://cdn.ipernity.com/200/61/38/40696138.28c15bf4.640.jpg?r2)
![](https://s.ipernity.com/T/L/z.gif)
After posting quite a few cold, wintry images recently, I thought I'd post a photo of a different subject this morning.
It is always a joy to see these Himalayan Blue Poppies growing at Reader Rock Garden, and I was happy to find them in bloom on 24 June 2015.
"Blue Himalayan Poppies are one of the most impressive plants for the shade garden. Plants form a rosette of hairy leaves, bearing large satiny flowers in an amazing shade of true blue. These are not always easy to please, demanding an evenly moist, rich soil and cool woodland conditions. Plants are not long lived, typically flowering in the second or third year, setting seed, then dying out. Gardeners in hot summer climates seldom succeed with these plants, yet they are surprisingly tolerant of cold winter conditions."
www.perennials.com/plants/meconopsis-betonicifolia.html
It is always a joy to see these Himalayan Blue Poppies growing at Reader Rock Garden, and I was happy to find them in bloom on 24 June 2015.
"Blue Himalayan Poppies are one of the most impressive plants for the shade garden. Plants form a rosette of hairy leaves, bearing large satiny flowers in an amazing shade of true blue. These are not always easy to please, demanding an evenly moist, rich soil and cool woodland conditions. Plants are not long lived, typically flowering in the second or third year, setting seed, then dying out. Gardeners in hot summer climates seldom succeed with these plants, yet they are surprisingly tolerant of cold winter conditions."
www.perennials.com/plants/meconopsis-betonicifolia.html
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