Time for an old barn again
When the clouds roll in
Male beauty
Barn-shaped mailbox
A fine old barn
Poppy art
Just a splash of colour
The Famous Five from a distance
Farmyard scene on the prairie
Tropical - cultivar of Tillandsia ionantha?
Little red barn with green roof
Balsam Poplar male catkins
Balsam Poplar male catkins
Balsam Poplar catkins
Gaillardia on red
And then there were only THREE!
Bright and cheery in its old age
Old cabin on Gottlob Schmidt's (Schmitty's) land
Rural decay
Little red cabin
Strawberries and cream fungus / Hydnellum peckii
Strawberries and Cream fungus / Hydnellum peckii
Autumn berries
Hiding between the rocks
Ice crystals on a mountain top
An endless feast for a Ladybug
Red beauty on a scree slope
Fall colour
A welcome splash of red
TV's "Heartland" series location
Red's the best in winter
A splash of colour on a snowy day
Snow turns something ordinary into beautiful
Mailbox or birdhouse?
Modern - but I like it
The peace of a prairie farm - my main photo today
The old-fashioned way
The Sickener / Russula emetica?
Strawberries and cream fungus / Hydnellum peckii
Bananaquit / Coereba flaveola, Tobago
Ixora, Blue Waters Inn, Tobago
Splash of colour
Torch Ginger / Etlingera eliator, Trinidad
Torch Ginger / Etlingera elatior, Asa Wright Natur…
Hot Lips / Psychotria poeppigiana, Asa Wright Natu…
They were gone, but now 'they' are back
Splash of colour, Trinidad
Powder Puff flower / Calliandra, Trinidad
Torch Ginger, Asa Wright Nature Centre, Trinidad
Aphelandra sinclairiana, Asa Wright Nature Centre,…
Splash of colour
A pot full of colour
Jackie's Hummingbird
An old red barn
Farm in the foothills
Beauty of an old barn, Alberta
Red Dodge, Pioneer Acres, Alberta
Grass in bloom
A fine old barn
Old red tractor at the Saskatoon Farm
Cockshutt tractor, Pioneer Acres
A fine old barn
Beauty in old age
Home of the Snowshoe Hare
Pine Grosbeak / Pinicola enucleator
Modern charm
Painted Tongue / Salpiglosis
Fenced in
A new find on a bitterly cold day
Christmas remnants
Little red barn on the prairie
A splash of much-needed red
A fine old barn
So pretty against the snow
Pine Grosbeaks adding colour to our winter
Pine Grosbeak / Pinicola enucleator
Remnant of the old days
The rule of red
With a view of the mountains and the prairies
Old-aged matching colours
New roof and a fresh coat of paint
A clash of colour
A beautiful old Ford
Colour for a snowy morning
Christmas colours in July
White-winged Crossbill / Loxia leucoptera
A favourite old barn
White-winged Crossbill
White-winged Crossbill
White-winged Crossbill / Loxia leucoptera
Moving into fall
Cone paradise
Mountain Ash berries
CL Ranches, Alberta
Jamaican Poinsettia / Euphorbia punicea
All decked out
Coffee Bean tree / Coffea
Indian Clock Vine / Thunbergia mysorensis
One of these things is not like the others
A splash of red
One of my favourite barns
European Mountain Ash / Sorbus aucuparia
A change of subject
It's beginning to look a lot like autumn
Strawberry Blite / Chenopodium capitatum
Red Baneberry / Actaea rubra, red berries
Too hard to resist
Unusual purple Striped coralroot / Corallorhiza st…
Canoes at Cameron Lake, Waterton
Utah Honeysuckle / Lonicera utahensis
Diabolo Ninebark
Summer colour
Red Rock Canyon, Waterton Lakes National Park
Red Rock Canyon, Waterton Lakes National Park
Clouds and Dandelions
Spiny Rose Gall
A touch of England
The Famous Five
A splash of red
One of my favourite barns
Little red barn on Mother's Day
A welcome splash of red
Red wagon by Bow Valley Ranch
Balsam or Hybrid Poplar catkins
Red barn in a beautiful setting
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The best colour to see in winter
![The best colour to see in winter The best colour to see in winter](https://cdn.ipernity.com/200/95/64/41039564.ff3936e1.640.jpg?r2)
![](https://s.ipernity.com/T/L/z.gif)
On 25 January 2016, after staying away from the Short-eared Owls for a week, I decided I would go back and see if one of them might just happen to land on something a little bit closer. Also, the weather forecast for the day was for sunshine and cloud, but the forecast for later in the week was for more snow.
I had somewhat better luck, but the owls were still some distance away, so I had to fully zoom (48x), which resulted in less than sharp photos. Needless to say, though, I was thrilled to get a few better looks at these beautiful owls. This does seem to be a good winter for this species, which is exciting. Even so, a tremendous amount of patience is needed.
While on my travels, I photographed this lovely old barn again. I love seeing red barns, especially in winter, contrasting with the surrounding snow. Always so sad to see beautiful structures falling into a bad state of repair, but I'm sure many farmers have more urgent things on which to spend their money and time.
An interesting link, with the information below, that answers the question: "WHY ARE BARNS USUALLY PAINTED RED?"
home.howstuffworks.com/question635.htm
"If you've ever driven through a rural area, it's likely that you've seen the red barns that speckle the farming landscape. There are several theories as to why barns are painted red.
Centuries ago, European farmers would seal the wood on their barns with an oil, often linseed oil -- a tawny-colored oil derived from the seed of the flax plant. They would paint their barns with a linseed-oil mixture, often consisting of additions such as milk and lime. The combination produced a long-lasting paint that dried and hardened quickly. (Today, linseed oil is sold in most home-improvement stores as a wood sealant). Now, where does the red come from?
In historically accurate terms, "barn red" is not the bright, fire-engine red that we often see today, but more of a burnt-orange red. As to how the oil mixture became traditionally red, there are two predominant theories. One is that wealthy farmers added blood from a recent slaughter to the oil mixture. As the paint dried, it turned from a bright red to a darker, burnt red. The other is that farmers added ferrous oxide, otherwise known as rust, to the oil mixture. Rust was plentiful on farms and is a poison to many fungi, including mold and moss, which were known to grown on barns. These fungi would trap moisture in the wood, increasing decay.
Regardless of how the farmer tinted his paint, having a red barn became a fashionable thing. They were a sharp contrast to the traditional white farmhouse. As European settlers crossed over to America, they brought with them the tradition of red barns. In the mid to late 1800s, as paints began to be produced with chemical pigments, red paint was the most inexpensive to buy. Red was the color of favor until whitewash became cheaper, at which point white barns began to spring up. Today, the color of barns can vary, often depending on how the barns are used."
I had somewhat better luck, but the owls were still some distance away, so I had to fully zoom (48x), which resulted in less than sharp photos. Needless to say, though, I was thrilled to get a few better looks at these beautiful owls. This does seem to be a good winter for this species, which is exciting. Even so, a tremendous amount of patience is needed.
While on my travels, I photographed this lovely old barn again. I love seeing red barns, especially in winter, contrasting with the surrounding snow. Always so sad to see beautiful structures falling into a bad state of repair, but I'm sure many farmers have more urgent things on which to spend their money and time.
An interesting link, with the information below, that answers the question: "WHY ARE BARNS USUALLY PAINTED RED?"
home.howstuffworks.com/question635.htm
"If you've ever driven through a rural area, it's likely that you've seen the red barns that speckle the farming landscape. There are several theories as to why barns are painted red.
Centuries ago, European farmers would seal the wood on their barns with an oil, often linseed oil -- a tawny-colored oil derived from the seed of the flax plant. They would paint their barns with a linseed-oil mixture, often consisting of additions such as milk and lime. The combination produced a long-lasting paint that dried and hardened quickly. (Today, linseed oil is sold in most home-improvement stores as a wood sealant). Now, where does the red come from?
In historically accurate terms, "barn red" is not the bright, fire-engine red that we often see today, but more of a burnt-orange red. As to how the oil mixture became traditionally red, there are two predominant theories. One is that wealthy farmers added blood from a recent slaughter to the oil mixture. As the paint dried, it turned from a bright red to a darker, burnt red. The other is that farmers added ferrous oxide, otherwise known as rust, to the oil mixture. Rust was plentiful on farms and is a poison to many fungi, including mold and moss, which were known to grown on barns. These fungi would trap moisture in the wood, increasing decay.
Regardless of how the farmer tinted his paint, having a red barn became a fashionable thing. They were a sharp contrast to the traditional white farmhouse. As European settlers crossed over to America, they brought with them the tradition of red barns. In the mid to late 1800s, as paints began to be produced with chemical pigments, red paint was the most inexpensive to buy. Red was the color of favor until whitewash became cheaper, at which point white barns began to spring up. Today, the color of barns can vary, often depending on how the barns are used."
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