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
Granary Road
The new "Famous Five" at Granary Road
Old, see-through barn
Down on the farm
New "barn", Granary Road
A country scene
Behind the tangled branches
A happy find
Modern barn
Old country church
Part of an abandoned mining camp
Where countryside and civilization meet
Rural decay on the prairie
Colourful shed at the Cochrane Ecological Institut…
One of my favourite barns
Little country church
Fine old house
A sunrise sky that lasted till sunset
Under a Chinook arch
The difference four days make
Here comes the snow
Happy Christmas Eve!
A simple, natural Christmas
Beauty of an old barn, Alberta
Farm in the foothills
Four in a row
An old red barn
Yesterday's barn
Treasures in the yellow strip
No longer a home
Splash of colour
Little country church
Old barn in a field of canola
Old demonstration farm
I LOVE Canola
Two of the Nanton grain elevators
One of Nanton's grain elevators
Pine Coulee Reservoir trip
Steps from my cabin to main building, Asa Wright
Blue Waters Inn, Tobago
Blue Waters Inn, Tobago
Well-protected
A mix of textures
Old prairie barn
With a little filtered help
The peace of a prairie farm - my main photo today
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
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Walker House, Inglewood Bird Sanctuary
![Walker House, Inglewood Bird Sanctuary Walker House, Inglewood Bird Sanctuary](https://cdn.ipernity.com/200/76/06/45487606.6cf9fd52.640.jpg?r2)
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Yesterday morning, 9 September 2017, I joined several friends for a morning's bird walk at the Inglewood Bird Sanctuary in Calgary. I will add our leader's report in a comment box below. Thanks for a very enjoyable walk, Janet, followed by lunch at the nearby Blackfoot Truckstop Diner!
At the Sanctuary, people must stay on the path. There are various deer trails or places where Beavers have dragged logs to the lagoon. These are not 'paths' for visitors to walk along. Our leader is a steward at the Sanctuary and she explained about staying on the path to a young woman who was ignoring the rules. However, this woman took no notice and stayed where she was, wanting to take photos. Ignorant.
"The Inglewood Bird Sanctuary and Nature Centre have been providing migratory birds with a place to rest their wings since 1929. That's more than 80 years of conservation!
To date, 270 species of birds, 21 species of mammals and 347 species of plants have been recorded at the Sanctuary and Nature Centre by members of the public, volunteers and staff.
In 1883, Colonel James Walker settled the land that is now occupied by the sanctuary. In 1910, the current brick house - then named Inglewood - was built, and the surrounding area was named for the most prominent property in the area.
From 1929 to 1952, several Chinese families leased land from Colonel Walker and established market gardens to serve the needs of a growing city. These highly productive gardens were used to grow vegetables and bedding plants, and represent an early example of urban agriculture and horticulture in the city. As part of the engagement process for Bend in Bow, it was discovered the descendants of one of the families, the Koo family, still reside in Calgary.
Colonel Walker's son, Selby, applied to the Federal government in 1929 to have 59 acres on the west side of the Bow River be designated as a Federal Migratory Bird Sanctuary. His request was granted and the Inglewood Bird Sanctuary was born.
When Selby died in 1953, Ed Jefferies acquired the property and leased it to the Alberta Fish & Game Association. In 1970, The City of Calgary purchased the property and has been managing it as a natural reserve ever since.
The sanctuary's Nature Centre was built in 1996 and grassland restoration projects began in that same year.
The Colonel Walker House is currently used by Parks staff and volunteers as a classroom and office."
www.calgary.ca/CSPS/Parks/Pages/Locations/SE-parks/Inglew...
At the Sanctuary, people must stay on the path. There are various deer trails or places where Beavers have dragged logs to the lagoon. These are not 'paths' for visitors to walk along. Our leader is a steward at the Sanctuary and she explained about staying on the path to a young woman who was ignoring the rules. However, this woman took no notice and stayed where she was, wanting to take photos. Ignorant.
"The Inglewood Bird Sanctuary and Nature Centre have been providing migratory birds with a place to rest their wings since 1929. That's more than 80 years of conservation!
To date, 270 species of birds, 21 species of mammals and 347 species of plants have been recorded at the Sanctuary and Nature Centre by members of the public, volunteers and staff.
In 1883, Colonel James Walker settled the land that is now occupied by the sanctuary. In 1910, the current brick house - then named Inglewood - was built, and the surrounding area was named for the most prominent property in the area.
From 1929 to 1952, several Chinese families leased land from Colonel Walker and established market gardens to serve the needs of a growing city. These highly productive gardens were used to grow vegetables and bedding plants, and represent an early example of urban agriculture and horticulture in the city. As part of the engagement process for Bend in Bow, it was discovered the descendants of one of the families, the Koo family, still reside in Calgary.
Colonel Walker's son, Selby, applied to the Federal government in 1929 to have 59 acres on the west side of the Bow River be designated as a Federal Migratory Bird Sanctuary. His request was granted and the Inglewood Bird Sanctuary was born.
When Selby died in 1953, Ed Jefferies acquired the property and leased it to the Alberta Fish & Game Association. In 1970, The City of Calgary purchased the property and has been managing it as a natural reserve ever since.
The sanctuary's Nature Centre was built in 1996 and grassland restoration projects began in that same year.
The Colonel Walker House is currently used by Parks staff and volunteers as a classroom and office."
www.calgary.ca/CSPS/Parks/Pages/Locations/SE-parks/Inglew...
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