Rusty Gilled Polypore / Gloeophyllum sepiarium
Merlin on the hunt
Glorious colours of fall
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Finn, a friend's dog
Autumn colours at the stormwater pond
Owl sculpture at Silver Springs Botanical Gardens
Larch in fall colour
As fall colours come to an end
Passion Flowers
Astilbe
Merlin eating a dragonfly
Katydid on Common Tansy
Coyote on the hunt
When winter comes to the mountains
Fall colours at Silver Springs Botanical Gardens
Trusting Red-breasted Nuthatch
Bark colour after the rain
The Wall Garden - October is Breast Cancer Awarene…
Chocolate bunny
Leisurely swim
Aging beauties
An endless feast for a Ladybug
A splash of different colour
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A colourful walk through the woods
The second owl
Growing on a tree trunk
Snake's head fritillary, Fritillaria meleagris
A birder's first time
Dark chocolate bunny with milk chocolate eyes
Feather finery of a female Mallard
Merlin
Yesterday's find
Yellow-rumped Warbler
American Kestrel, Falco sparverius
The arrival of fall
Sowthistle
Gathering in the forest
Mom and her spotted twins
Breaking through the storm clouds
Sainfoin / Onobrychis viciifolia
Yellow-rumped Warbler
A fun find
Lovage / Levisticum officinale
A cute little cluster
Cream and wine-coloured
Swainson's Hawk female, dark-phase
Swainson's Hawk male, light phase
Popular with the flies
Don't call me 'Gopher'
Beauty in the forest
Loved by Monarch butterflies
Osprey family in the city
Shakin' all over
Juvenile Swainson's Hawk
They can't see me
Bold and beautiful
Blue Lettuce / Lactuca tatarica
Hawk in Fish Creek Park - juvenile Northern Goshaw…
Ladybug larva on Showy Milkweed
Southern Bald Ibis / Geronticus calvus
Showy Milkweed / Asclepias speciosa
Egyptian Walking Onion
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Chinook arch over Calgary
This photo was taken two days ago, on Monday, 26 September 2016, and I wasn’t going to post it. However, I noticed an article on the weather network website and saw a few other photos taken of this rather spectacular Chinook arch, so thought I would add it to my photostream after all. I was walking down at Bebo Grove in Fish Creek Park, near the creek, and this solid band of cloud felt quite strange.
“A 'Chinook arch' was widely photographed across Alberta on Monday as temperatures peaked in the mid to high 20s, even record breaking for some.
The warming Chinook winds that descended over the mountain ranges helped to create a band of stationary stratus clouds. Chinook winds are those down sloping winds and when sinking air goes down to the mountain, that suppresses the cloud and you get this arch and line of beautiful clouds, explains The Weather Network's Chris Murphy. They can look kind of ominous if you're not familiar with Chinook winds, but they rarely produce any rain or snow." From the weather network.
www.theweathernetwork.com/news/articles/stunning-chinook-...
I had planned to join a group of friends for a birding walk at Bebo Grove, Fish Creek Park. By the time I had had breakfast, I was feeling somewhat queasy and thought I had better not go on the walk after all. Felt a bit better later in the morning and decided to go to the Park after all, getting there about noon. Met a delightful young man standing on the bridge over the creek, pointing out to me a perched bird of prey. My first thought was Merlin, but it seemed to be too big to be a Merlin. It took a while to decide just what it was - helped by excellent birder, Nimali, who happened to come along the path. In the end, we decided it was a Cooper's Hawk ('C' for curved edge of tail tip and 'C' for Cooper's). Looking at my photos later that evening, I was still not sure that we had made the right decision. Several Flickr people let me know that my photo was of a Merlin - much appreciated!
This bird stayed around for ages and gave some nice opportunities for photos, including of it 'mantling' (spreading out its wings to form a cloak) when it captured a large dragonfly and returned to the same branch. When two of us were first standing on the bridge, this bird flew down right over our heads two or three times - maybe because we were attracting insects around us? We noticed a second similar bird, too, and we wondered if they were maybe juveniles, especially as the main one was very comfortable with us standing nearby. Made my day : )
I even spotted several mushrooms, including a colourful Rusty Gilled Polypore earlier in my walk. I had planned on just a short walk, but ended up in the park for about five hours (not all walking)! A very enjoyable walk - glad to have your company, Nimali, and that of the very knowledgeable young man we had just met.
“A 'Chinook arch' was widely photographed across Alberta on Monday as temperatures peaked in the mid to high 20s, even record breaking for some.
The warming Chinook winds that descended over the mountain ranges helped to create a band of stationary stratus clouds. Chinook winds are those down sloping winds and when sinking air goes down to the mountain, that suppresses the cloud and you get this arch and line of beautiful clouds, explains The Weather Network's Chris Murphy. They can look kind of ominous if you're not familiar with Chinook winds, but they rarely produce any rain or snow." From the weather network.
www.theweathernetwork.com/news/articles/stunning-chinook-...
I had planned to join a group of friends for a birding walk at Bebo Grove, Fish Creek Park. By the time I had had breakfast, I was feeling somewhat queasy and thought I had better not go on the walk after all. Felt a bit better later in the morning and decided to go to the Park after all, getting there about noon. Met a delightful young man standing on the bridge over the creek, pointing out to me a perched bird of prey. My first thought was Merlin, but it seemed to be too big to be a Merlin. It took a while to decide just what it was - helped by excellent birder, Nimali, who happened to come along the path. In the end, we decided it was a Cooper's Hawk ('C' for curved edge of tail tip and 'C' for Cooper's). Looking at my photos later that evening, I was still not sure that we had made the right decision. Several Flickr people let me know that my photo was of a Merlin - much appreciated!
This bird stayed around for ages and gave some nice opportunities for photos, including of it 'mantling' (spreading out its wings to form a cloak) when it captured a large dragonfly and returned to the same branch. When two of us were first standing on the bridge, this bird flew down right over our heads two or three times - maybe because we were attracting insects around us? We noticed a second similar bird, too, and we wondered if they were maybe juveniles, especially as the main one was very comfortable with us standing nearby. Made my day : )
I even spotted several mushrooms, including a colourful Rusty Gilled Polypore earlier in my walk. I had planned on just a short walk, but ended up in the park for about five hours (not all walking)! A very enjoyable walk - glad to have your company, Nimali, and that of the very knowledgeable young man we had just met.
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