Sacred Lotus / Nelumbo nucifera
Water Smartweed / Polygonum amphibium
Polypore
Police Car Moth / Gnophaela vermiculata
Bearberry / Arctostaphylos uva-ursi
Beetle
One of my favourite fungi : )
Very large Artist's Conk / Ganoderma applanatum
Two of a kind
Indian Paintbrush / Castilleja rhexiifolia
Harvest is done
Yesterday's treasure : )
Jazzy eyes
Stiff Yellow Paintbrush / Castilleja lutescens
Fancy fungi
Bull Thistle / Cirsium vulgare
Light tricks
Oxeye Daisy bokeh
The beauty of gills
Gorgeous splash of colour
Yellow Mountain-avens / Dryas drummondii
A fungi find
Cherry-faced Meadowhawk
Black footed polypore
Contrasts
Forest floor
Tufted White Prairie Aster / Symphyotrichum ericoi…
Thesium / Thesium arvense
Indian Paintbrush
Clavariadelphus
Always a delight
An unusual find
Yellow Mountain Saxifrage / Saxifraga aizoides
Puffballs
Blue Lettuce / Lactuca tatarica
Alkali Cordgrass / Spartina gracilis
Beauty in the forest
Bird's-foot Trefoil / Lotus corniculatus
Juvenile Swainson's Hawks
Little dancers
Just for the record
Alpine Bistort / Polygonum viviparum
Mayfly on Echinacea
Juvenile Cooper's Hawk / Accipiter cooperii
Kananaskis Lakes
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Bunchberry berries - fall is on its way


This small, low-growing plant, also known as Dwarf Dogwood (Cornus canadensis), adds so much beauty to the forest floor. The plant's single white flower is delightful and when fall is just around the corner, the very tiny, red berries add lots of colour. Photographed (macro) yesterday when I went to Brown-Lowery Provincial Park for the afternoon in the hopes of finding mushrooms everywhere - yeah, right, lol! I did manage to find a few, some photogenic and others definitely not, but nothing like the abundance of the last two or three years. I'm laughing now, but I wasn't laughing just before I entered the the forest. There was a blood-curdling scream way in the distance that stopped me in my tracks. I had visions of someone (the only other car in the parking lot had left just as I was arriving, but maybe they had dropped someone off for a hike) being attacked by a Bear or Cougar. Did I really want to continue??? I can tell you, I almost turned around and went straight back to my car, ha! However, I very cautiously kept going - this place gives me the creeps, as it is, every time I go there, especially when I'm on my own. Maybe 15 minutes later, another scream and then another a short while later. And THEN I realized that maybe this is some kind of machinery, but unlike anything I had ever heard before. No idea if it was from within the forest or maybe from a nearby farm - from time to time, someone does go in there to cut up trees that have blown down across the trail. These trunk pieces are always left to rot there at the side of the path, to give wonderful protection to small creatures of the forest.
Yesterday, I picked up the estimate for building a ground-level, cedar deck to cover the whole of my tiny 16'x18' backyard. It is on a bit of an incline, so that would give extra work of course, plus the plants/shrubs in my two small borders would have to be removed first. However, almost $10,000!! So, I am back to square one again - just as I am with the sale of my brother's house in England, when the buyer backed out a few months after putting in his original offer. The only reason I thought about a wooden ground-level deck was that I had been unable to find anyone who would come and remove all plants/shrubs and put down netting and wood chips, as I just can't cope with a garden, even a small one. It seems no one wants a one-time-only piece of work - they all seem to want a job that is weekly or at least monthly ... sigh.
Yesterday, I picked up the estimate for building a ground-level, cedar deck to cover the whole of my tiny 16'x18' backyard. It is on a bit of an incline, so that would give extra work of course, plus the plants/shrubs in my two small borders would have to be removed first. However, almost $10,000!! So, I am back to square one again - just as I am with the sale of my brother's house in England, when the buyer backed out a few months after putting in his original offer. The only reason I thought about a wooden ground-level deck was that I had been unable to find anyone who would come and remove all plants/shrubs and put down netting and wood chips, as I just can't cope with a garden, even a small one. It seems no one wants a one-time-only piece of work - they all seem to want a job that is weekly or at least monthly ... sigh.
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