With a little filtered help
Old prairie barn
A mix of textures
Well-protected
Blue Waters Inn, Tobago
Blue Waters Inn, Tobago
Steps from my cabin to main building, Asa Wright
Pine Coulee Reservoir trip
One of Nanton's grain elevators
Two of the Nanton grain elevators
I LOVE Canola
Old demonstration farm
Old barn in a field of canola
Little country church
Splash of colour
No longer a home
Treasures in the yellow strip
Yesterday's barn
An old red barn
Four in a row
Farm in the foothills
Beauty of an old barn, Alberta
Walker House, Inglewood Bird Sanctuary
Four in a row
The Long house, Pioneer Acres, Alberta, Canada
A favourite old barn
A digital setting capture of the Laing house, Albe…
An old grain elevator with character
A fine old barn
A popular row of old granaries
Pine Coulee Reservoir, Alberta
A new-to-me old barn
Part of an old miners' camp
Common Raven keeping watch
The charred remains of McDougall Memorial United C…
Another favourite Alberta barn
Blackened remains of McDougall Memorial United Chu…
Old homestead, Alberta
Side by side
Old barn
Complete with little red birdhouse
Once a home
A new-to-me old barn
Old granaries on the prairie
A fine old barn
A favourite subject with photographers
Rural decay
Finally, the search is over
Beauty in old age
Autumn Stripes
Fragile and leaning
In fairly good condition
Old barns in late afternoon sun
The red barn
The difference 10 days make
Beyond repair
In winter time
Old house on the prairie
A beauty of a barn
Old weathered shed
Weathered wood
Old house next to metal silo
Christmas Market
Filtered
Modern - but I like it
An old, red beauty
Snow turns something ordinary into beautiful
Can you see what I see?
One of my favourite barns
Little country church at Dinton
Winter on the farm
Old barn at the Ellis Bird Farm
Sharples grain elevator
Hanging on till the final fall
Exshaw Legion memorial
Under a stormy sky
An old favourite
A few of the bird houses at Ellis Bird Farm
Grain elevator at Barons
An old barn with character
Tea, anyone?
McDougall Memorial United Church
Homestead remnants
Mossleigh grain elevators
Little red cabin
Rural decay
Old glass doorknob
Old cabin on Gottlob Schmidt's (Schmitty's) land
Weathered and patched
Bright and cheery in its old age
Kirkpatrick elevator, near Drumheller
Beautiful old house in the hills
Once a family home
The Grad Barn 2016
Prince of Wales hotel, Waterton
Love those Canola fields
This old house
And then there were only THREE!
Farm seed elevator, Ellis Bird Farm, Alberta
The old barn at the Ellis Bird Farm
McDougall Memorial United Church
Still standing
An old barn in winter
Charcoal effect
Roof shingles galore
Old barn in winter
Weathered and patched
Tucked away near the creek
Window box at Reader Rock Garden
Little red barn with green roof
Built with love
A life left behind
One of my favourite barns
Davisburg Community Church, Alberta
Farmyard scene on the prairie
McDougall Memorial United Church
A cluster of red barns
McDougall Memorial United Church
Little church in the valley
A fine old barn
Davisburg Community Church, Alberta
Old barn with a different style
Davisburg Community Church, Alberta
Aging gracefully
Little country church
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The peace of a prairie farm - my main photo today
![The peace of a prairie farm - my main photo today The peace of a prairie farm - my main photo today](https://cdn.ipernity.com/200/84/76/44258476.b7515ddd.640.jpg?r2)
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This photo and the next one (a distant Snowy Owl) were taken yesterday, 21 January 2017. The previous evening, I had been out at a get-together/meeting with various birding people. Friend, Pam, and I made plans to meet the following morning and then I would follow her in my own car to a planned destination. It was a drive that I had never dared to do before and, though I had been to this location several times over the years, it was always by carpooling. I was so grateful to be able to follow someone, and see how to get there.
Once we reached our destination, we found out that the bird we had hoped to see, was not there. So many people have been to see this Long-eared Owl, but this was the first time I had been. Various people came and went, but no-one was having any luck. Some accounts were saying that 50 or 75 people had been seen on such and such day, and that some people were stressing out the bird by getting too close. This always happens, with news spreading like wildfire, and some people go day after day. While most photographers are respectful, there are always a few who will do anything to get "the" photo - closer and better than anyone else's. I should add that there was also a Great Horned Owl in the area, so I guess it's possible that that is keeping the Long-eared Owl further away or more carefully hidden.
After a short while, Pam and I decided to drive round a few other roads, taking my car. The hope was to maybe find a Snowy Owl or a Short-eared Owl somewhere. Totally out of luck, except for one very distant Snowy Owl, seen in my next photo, that Pam spotted. It was gleaming white in the sunshine. So beautiful to see and so much appreciated.
Of course, no drive is complete unless I see a beautiful old barn, and we found two or three that made us stop and take a shot or two. I really liked this one - difficult to tell if it's a fairly new one or an old one that has been renovated. I suspect the latter. As you can see, we had such beautiful weather this day.
On the way home, we called in briefly at the first owl location again, just to check if it had been seen while we were driving other roads, but no one had had any luck. After leaving, I followed Pam part of the way home, not realizing that she was going to turn off on to Deerfoot Trail - a road I always avoid, as it's a dangerous road. I hadn't seen the sign that said Deerfoot, so there I was, heading home along this fast-moving highway. All turned out well, though.
Once we reached our destination, we found out that the bird we had hoped to see, was not there. So many people have been to see this Long-eared Owl, but this was the first time I had been. Various people came and went, but no-one was having any luck. Some accounts were saying that 50 or 75 people had been seen on such and such day, and that some people were stressing out the bird by getting too close. This always happens, with news spreading like wildfire, and some people go day after day. While most photographers are respectful, there are always a few who will do anything to get "the" photo - closer and better than anyone else's. I should add that there was also a Great Horned Owl in the area, so I guess it's possible that that is keeping the Long-eared Owl further away or more carefully hidden.
After a short while, Pam and I decided to drive round a few other roads, taking my car. The hope was to maybe find a Snowy Owl or a Short-eared Owl somewhere. Totally out of luck, except for one very distant Snowy Owl, seen in my next photo, that Pam spotted. It was gleaming white in the sunshine. So beautiful to see and so much appreciated.
Of course, no drive is complete unless I see a beautiful old barn, and we found two or three that made us stop and take a shot or two. I really liked this one - difficult to tell if it's a fairly new one or an old one that has been renovated. I suspect the latter. As you can see, we had such beautiful weather this day.
On the way home, we called in briefly at the first owl location again, just to check if it had been seen while we were driving other roads, but no one had had any luck. After leaving, I followed Pam part of the way home, not realizing that she was going to turn off on to Deerfoot Trail - a road I always avoid, as it's a dangerous road. I hadn't seen the sign that said Deerfoot, so there I was, heading home along this fast-moving highway. All turned out well, though.
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