Valerian, I think
A friendly hand
Great Gray Owl in the early morning light
Searching for grit
Big .... small
Happy Easter weekend!
Mine!
Textured
Happy Easter!
From three years ago
Fungi and moss
Phantom of the North
Greater Scaup female
Spring is here!
Great Gray Owl #3
Three-leaved Solomon's-seal / Maianthemum trifoliu…
Look closely : )
Before the plunge
Driving the Wildcat Hills
Spring versus yesterday's snow
Great Gray Owl in a snowy setting
In the other direction ....
Jacob's Ladder / Polemonium sp.
Blue for a change
Down in the forest
Flowers and bokeh
Blue-winged Teal
Hungry little Muskrat
Camouflage
Mousing in the snow
Edged in frost
On a cold and windy day
Yellow Mountain-avens / Dryas drummondii
Retirement
Gyrfalcon - what a treat!
Two of a kind
Wolf's Milk slime
Looks can be deceptive
Reflections
Mystery object from the past
A winter sunrise
Fluffy and a little fuzzy
Orange centres, yellow centres
Fake
Cydno Longwing / Heliconius cydno
Location
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250 visits
At the end of the path


A rare black and white image for me. I took a variety of shots of this tiny church that I love to see, but thought I would make this black and white one the first to be uploaded. Have to admit that the only reason I drove as far as this location was that I was totally out of luck that day, as far as seeing any Great Gray Owls was concerned. Didn't want to go home with a completely empty memory card, lol! I also stopped off at the Ghost River Reservoir, which was completey frozen over. A young guy was having great fun speeding around the frozen surface on his motorcross (?) bike. Not the easiest thing to try and photograph, but I might be able to find one shot to post sometime.
A nearby sign had the following words on it:
"The historic church at the end of this pathway was constructed in 1875. At that time, native people were still hunting bison on the prairies. The young nation of Canada was only eight years old; the Canadian Pacific Railway still nine years in the future. And this church would become the heart of a thriving community, Morleyville, and for a time the largest settlement in what would be southern Alberta.
The story of this church is really the story of Rev. George McDougall who moved to western Canada with his family in 1862 to minister to the fur traders and native people. In 1873, the McDougalls established the first mission in the region and built this church. In doing so, they wrote an important chapter of Alberta's settlement history".
After George McDougall's tragic death in a snowstorm, his body was brought back to the church at Morleyville and laid to rest.
www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=8788
A nearby sign had the following words on it:
"The historic church at the end of this pathway was constructed in 1875. At that time, native people were still hunting bison on the prairies. The young nation of Canada was only eight years old; the Canadian Pacific Railway still nine years in the future. And this church would become the heart of a thriving community, Morleyville, and for a time the largest settlement in what would be southern Alberta.
The story of this church is really the story of Rev. George McDougall who moved to western Canada with his family in 1862 to minister to the fur traders and native people. In 1873, the McDougalls established the first mission in the region and built this church. In doing so, they wrote an important chapter of Alberta's settlement history".
After George McDougall's tragic death in a snowstorm, his body was brought back to the church at Morleyville and laid to rest.
www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=8788
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