Goat's-beard with visitor
The Sickener / Russula emetica?
Decorating the base of a tree
Seedhead wisps
Just needed colour
Heart of a Snowdrop
Chocolate Pansy / Chocolate Soldier / Junonia iphi…
Colour among the mosses and lichens
Bark patterns on a cut log
Wild Bergamot
Showing off its gills
Invasive Goat's-beard and Baby's breath
Chocolate chip lichen / Solorina crocea
Pinedrops
Crab on the pier at Blue Waters Inn, Tobago
Allamanda, Blue Waters Inn, Tobago
Giant seedpod of the Flame Tree, Blue Waters Inn,…
Cutie on the beach - Atlantic ghost crab / Ocypode…
Ixora
Splash of colour
Tropical shell
It's hard work, but someone's got to do it
Aphelandra sp. (Aphelandra pulcherrima?), Little T…
Torch Ginger / Etlingera eliator, Trinidad
Cacao tree (chocolate!), on way to Brasso Seco, Tr…
Artichoke, Saskatoon Farm
Splash of colour, Trinidad
Powder Puff flower / Calliandra, Trinidad
Ant on Kohleria tubiflora, Trinidad
Lotus seedpod, Nariva Swamp afternoon, Trinidad
Vervain / Stachytarpheta jamaicensis, Asa Wright N…
American Robin's egg on the ground
Aphelandra sinclairiana, Asa Wright Nature Centre,…
Springtime colour
Shooting stars / Dodecatheon sp. (and Dandelions)
Tall Lungwort
One of many
Wild and wonderful Lupines
Dandelion perfection
Meadow Goat's-beard / Tragopogon pratensis
Indian Breadroot / Pediomelum esculentum
Striped Coralroot / Corallorhiza striata
Unidentified plant - Milkvetch?
A splash of much-needed colour
Red Baneberry, Waterton Lakes National Park
Gaillardia
Bear Grass starting to open
Yellow Angelica / Angelica dawsonii
Lilium martagon - the beauty of a Lily
Glacier Lily
Thistle
Yellow Prairie Coneflower / Ratibida columnifera
Gaillardia
Pink Monkeyflower
Orange False Dandelion / Agoseris aurantiaca
Pinedrops
Hearts at the Rusty Bucket Ranch
Purple/Water Avens seedhead / Geum rivale
Indian Paintbrush
Ruby-throated Hummingbird female
Greenish-flowered Wintergreen / Pyrola chlorantha
Western Wood Lily
Nodding/Musk Thistle / Carduus nutans
Unidentified fruit
Cheery sunflower
A splash of fall colour
Snowman who loves Amanitas
Remembering summer colours
The droplet
Beginning to burst
Like floral flames for a deep-freeze day
Small fungi growing among the mosses
Fall colour
A bright splash of colour
Seedpod of Datura sp.?
Showy Milkweed with bee
Oak leaf and insect gall
False Morel fungus
Colour for a snowy day
Narcissus
Raindrops
Clematis after the rain
Simplicity
Hiding in the shadows
Shingled/Scaly Hedgehog fungus / Sarcodon imbricat…
Peregrine Falcon talons
A beauty from mushroom season
Snake's head fritillary, Fritillaria meleagris
Growing on a tree trunk
A splash of different colour
Mariposa Lily
Colours and textures
Turquoise fungi / Blue Stain / Chlorociboria aerug…
A big splash of colour
Aging beauties
Fungi goblets
Deadly duo - Amanita muscaria
Katydid on Common Tansy
Sunflower going to seed
Alpine Harebell
Astilbe
Ice crystals on a mountain top
As fall colours come to an end
Larch in fall colour
Brightness on a cloudy day
Puffballs on Plateau Mountain
False Dandelion / Agoseris glauca
A fine network of cells - maybe Arcyria obvelata?
Rusty Gilled Polypore / Gloeophyllum sepiarium
Yesterday's find
Autumn berries
Three insect species on a single flower
Strap/Coral Club / Clavariadelphus ligula
Reindeer lichen
Look into my eyes
Fungus on a log
Highbush cranberry / Viburnum opulus var. american…
Growing amongst the mosses
Dragonfly in Southern Alberta - a Flame Skimmer?
Why I would never eat wild mushrooms : )
Gathering in the forest
An odd colour in nature
False Morel fungus
Texture
Sainfoin / Onobrychis viciifolia
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Keywords
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203 visits
Summer colour
Flickr is acting up again, 31 January 2017 - a problem today (for others as well as myself) with views and stats. Some people's images are not being seen, and consequently a much smaller number of views under each photo. There is always something not working correctly! It is being looked into by Flickr staff, apparently.
On 30 June 2016, I just made it in time for a botany visit to our main naturalist leader's home and garden. He and his wife have an amazing double-lot garden, full of so many kinds of flowers, including a good variety of native plants. One of my favourites is Showy Milkweed - love the cluster of individual flowers and buds growing on a rounded head. These plants have spread over a lot of the front garden. All they need now is for Monarch butterflies to fly a bit further north than they usually do and discover this little bit of butterfly heaven.
In 2012, though, it was very unusual, as people were seeing a few of these amazing butterflies in Alberta, including in Calgary. I even got to see and photograph a couple of Monarch caterpillars in this garden in July 2012, for the very first and last time. Milkweed does not normally grow in Calgary, though we have seen a plant or two growing in the wild at one location in the city.
Our leader also has a large vegetable garden. One thing that always fascinates me is the Egyptian Walking Onion. Each one seems to take on its own artistic shape and I love to photograph these - both fascinating and quite beautiful.
In the afternoon of this day, we experienced a huge rain and hail storm. Fortunately, it cleared up in time to go on Don Stiles' annual evening Bluebird route trip. I always look forward to going with Don on his nest box route, checking on a few of the boxes and finding either Bluebird or Tree Swallow eggs or babies. Don records all the information about numbers and dates, and also demonstrates how he carefully bands the young birds. Thanks, as always, Don, for an enjoyable evening outing and thank you for all the many, many years (must be somewhere around 35?) you have spent helping to preserve our beautiful Bluebirds. We all enjoyed seeing the various other bird species during the evening, too.
On 30 June 2016, I just made it in time for a botany visit to our main naturalist leader's home and garden. He and his wife have an amazing double-lot garden, full of so many kinds of flowers, including a good variety of native plants. One of my favourites is Showy Milkweed - love the cluster of individual flowers and buds growing on a rounded head. These plants have spread over a lot of the front garden. All they need now is for Monarch butterflies to fly a bit further north than they usually do and discover this little bit of butterfly heaven.
In 2012, though, it was very unusual, as people were seeing a few of these amazing butterflies in Alberta, including in Calgary. I even got to see and photograph a couple of Monarch caterpillars in this garden in July 2012, for the very first and last time. Milkweed does not normally grow in Calgary, though we have seen a plant or two growing in the wild at one location in the city.
Our leader also has a large vegetable garden. One thing that always fascinates me is the Egyptian Walking Onion. Each one seems to take on its own artistic shape and I love to photograph these - both fascinating and quite beautiful.
In the afternoon of this day, we experienced a huge rain and hail storm. Fortunately, it cleared up in time to go on Don Stiles' annual evening Bluebird route trip. I always look forward to going with Don on his nest box route, checking on a few of the boxes and finding either Bluebird or Tree Swallow eggs or babies. Don records all the information about numbers and dates, and also demonstrates how he carefully bands the young birds. Thanks, as always, Don, for an enjoyable evening outing and thank you for all the many, many years (must be somewhere around 35?) you have spent helping to preserve our beautiful Bluebirds. We all enjoyed seeing the various other bird species during the evening, too.
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