Chunky fungi
Colourful Wood Ducks
Great Blue Heron
Twins
Tiny trio
Dry Island Buffalo Jump Provincial Park
4 x 2 = 8
Spotlight on elegance
Double-crested Cormorant
Scaly/Shingled Hedgehog fungus / Sarcodon imbricat…
Having a bath is so much fun
Beauty on a rotting log
Moraine Lake
Castor Bean
Globe Artichoke
Wood Duck female
Stalk-and-ambush predator
Waterton Lakes National Park, seen from the Prince…
Bison, Yellowstone National Park
Mammoth Hot Springs, Yellowstone National Park
Searching for wildlife
Mountain Lady Beetle / Coccinella monticola
Handsome Elk stag
Look what I unearthed : )
Dry Island Buffalo Jump Provincial Park in the rai…
Tiny Lemon Drops / Bisporella citrina
Basking in the early morning sun
Flat-topped Coral / Clavariadelphus truncatus
Pretty little thing
Anthurium
False Coral fungus
A closer look
Forest goblets
Is this Clavulinopsis laeticolor?
Splash of blue
A sad ending, I suspect
Little orange beauties
I don't have a name yet, other than "beautiful"
Fun in the pool
Cradled
Fungus with veil
Master of the woodlands
Hypomyces luteovirens, syn. Hypomyces tulasneanus
White-winged Crossbill / Loxia leucoptera
Dwarf Powder Puff
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Alpine Bistort / Polygonum viviparum


On 10 July 2012, I drove out west of the city, past Bragg Creek and along Elbow Falls Trail (Highway 66) to Maclean Pond. Found some of these small wildflowers, belonging to the Polygonaceae family, in bloom.
"The flowers are white or pink in the upper part of the spike; lower ones are replaced by bulbils. Flowers rarely produce viable seeds and reproduction is normally by the bulbils, (which fall from the plant). Very often a small leaf develops when the bulbil is still attached to the mother plant. The bulbils are rich in starch and are a preferred food for Rock Ptarmigan.... As with many other alpine plants, Alpine Bistort is slow growing, with an individual leaf or inflorescence taking 3-4 years to reach maturity from the time it is formed." From Wikipedia.
"The flowers are white or pink in the upper part of the spike; lower ones are replaced by bulbils. Flowers rarely produce viable seeds and reproduction is normally by the bulbils, (which fall from the plant). Very often a small leaf develops when the bulbil is still attached to the mother plant. The bulbils are rich in starch and are a preferred food for Rock Ptarmigan.... As with many other alpine plants, Alpine Bistort is slow growing, with an individual leaf or inflorescence taking 3-4 years to reach maturity from the time it is formed." From Wikipedia.
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