Her very first experience
Atlas Moth details
Breathtaking beauty
Cyclanthaceae, Carludovica palmata
My paternal Great Grandmother
White-tailed Jackrabbit / Lepus townsendii
I'm not getting MY feet cold and wet
Fall colour bokeh
Shadows and light on ice
Baby Anne
And up comes the pellet
Sacred Lotus / Nelumbo nucifera
Raymond Nadeau's lichens
Sunlit, distant beauty
Banded Orange / Dryadula phaetusa
Emma Neal and babies, taken in 1914
Male Downy Woodpecker putting on a display
One day less till spring and summer
Common Redpoll
A pleasant memory
Cutely curious
Mid-winter colours
Sun sparkles and ice
Mosquito on a Morel
Northern Saw-whet Owl
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Queen of the Lily Pad
My parents in 1939
Northern Saw-whet Owl / Aegolius acadicus
The only time I look tall and slim, ha
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Markhor
Alice Gladwell Bassindale, my paternal Grandmother…
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Tip of a Tulip stigma
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Talk about amazing camouflage
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Common Redpoll


Managed to get a photo or two of the Common Redpolls when I was at Carburn Park yesterday. There are plenty of these pretty little birds in the city this year. Out for the day today ....
Does anyone know that this is a female Common Redpoll for sure and not a Hoary Redpoll? Guess I should have thought of asking this sooner, not when everyone had already commented!
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Common_Redpoll/lifehistory/ac
I uploaded today's photos really early this morning, before meeting Flickr friends Ron and Trish at Carburn Park. Trish had never seen a tiny Northern Saw-whet Owl, so that was the most important thing to do today! After that was very successfully accomplished, Ron drove us around the beautiful backroads NE and E of the city for a few hours, looking for Snowy Owls! I should mention that on two separate days, he had found a total on each day of 18 of these majestic, breathtaking birds of prey, so I was feeling really confident. Ron did what he does best - finding birds!! Even though I have seen him do this on several occasions, I still don't know how he does it. Anyway, he found a total of 12 Snowy Owls for us today! The forecast was for cloudy periods - well, all we had was cloud all the time, so I really wasn't at all hopeful that my photos would turn out. Amazingly, they seem to be OK, though I haven't looked at them properly. A bit of brightening will no doubt show up all the flaws - but, we'll see : )
I really do want to add something here - I have come across so many people (many of whom I have not met before) the last few days, while standing watching the Northern Saw-whet Owl, who have told me that they look at my photos on Flickr. I can't thank you all individually, but really want to say Thank You! for taking the time to do this. I greatly appreciate it - and it's very humbling.
Later: totally unrelated, but I came across this link for a short video showing some baby Sloths being given a bath at the The Sloth Sanctuary of Costa Rica. The link was posted by gzebear on the HEGPS (Hornby Eagle Group Projects Society) forum website. Talk about cute!!
www.slothsanctuary.com/sloth-rescue/
Does anyone know that this is a female Common Redpoll for sure and not a Hoary Redpoll? Guess I should have thought of asking this sooner, not when everyone had already commented!
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Common_Redpoll/lifehistory/ac
I uploaded today's photos really early this morning, before meeting Flickr friends Ron and Trish at Carburn Park. Trish had never seen a tiny Northern Saw-whet Owl, so that was the most important thing to do today! After that was very successfully accomplished, Ron drove us around the beautiful backroads NE and E of the city for a few hours, looking for Snowy Owls! I should mention that on two separate days, he had found a total on each day of 18 of these majestic, breathtaking birds of prey, so I was feeling really confident. Ron did what he does best - finding birds!! Even though I have seen him do this on several occasions, I still don't know how he does it. Anyway, he found a total of 12 Snowy Owls for us today! The forecast was for cloudy periods - well, all we had was cloud all the time, so I really wasn't at all hopeful that my photos would turn out. Amazingly, they seem to be OK, though I haven't looked at them properly. A bit of brightening will no doubt show up all the flaws - but, we'll see : )
I really do want to add something here - I have come across so many people (many of whom I have not met before) the last few days, while standing watching the Northern Saw-whet Owl, who have told me that they look at my photos on Flickr. I can't thank you all individually, but really want to say Thank You! for taking the time to do this. I greatly appreciate it - and it's very humbling.
Later: totally unrelated, but I came across this link for a short video showing some baby Sloths being given a bath at the The Sloth Sanctuary of Costa Rica. The link was posted by gzebear on the HEGPS (Hornby Eagle Group Projects Society) forum website. Talk about cute!!
www.slothsanctuary.com/sloth-rescue/
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