Colourful lichen on a bridge railing
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Audubon's)
A real treat from the weekend
Mountain Sheep
Wonders of the forest
The intelligent Common Raven
Through a fancy window
Lavendula
Here one minute, gone the next
Through the Rocky Mountains
Moth on a washroom window
Happiness is ... playing in a puddle
Metal and stone
So handsome
Majestic Castle Mountain
Not dressed in their Sunday best
Added for colour
Happily feeding
A happy sign of spring
Columbian Ground Squirrel
Reflected beauty
Totally at home
A disappearing act
A sky bursting with clouds
Dad, awake for a few minutes
Wind-ruffled feathers
Ornamental Rhubarb / Rheum palmatum
Five Swans a-swimming
Paper Kite
One of three grain elevators at Mossleigh
Birders, doing what they do best
Happy Mother's Day
A different kind of perch
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Thinking about the big leap
Baby cone of a Larch tree
Iridescence
A matching stripe
Hiding in the shadows
Drip ... drip ...drip ...
The balance of land and sky
To brighten my photostream
Mallard with reflections
Great Mormon / Papilio memno
Held in an icy grip
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Keeping an eye on those pesky Tree Swallows


Mountain Bluebirds are back, and I was so happy to see this colourful male, perched near a nesting box, SW of the city, on 8 May 2014. There were several Tree Swallows circling over and around a nearby nest box and the Bluebird was keeping an eye on them. I thought this might be the same male that used this nest box last year, but I noticed that this one has not been banded.
In Bluebirds, the blue colour is produced by the structure of the feather - there is no blue pigment. "Tiny air pockets in the barbs of feathers can scatter incoming light, resulting in a specific, non-iridescent color. Blue colors in feathers are almost always produced in this manner. Examples include the blue feathers of Bluebirds, Indigo Buntings, Blue Jay's and Steller's Jays."
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Mountain_Bluebird/id
www.jstor.org/discover/pgs/index?id=10.2307/4077277&i...
In Bluebirds, the blue colour is produced by the structure of the feather - there is no blue pigment. "Tiny air pockets in the barbs of feathers can scatter incoming light, resulting in a specific, non-iridescent color. Blue colors in feathers are almost always produced in this manner. Examples include the blue feathers of Bluebirds, Indigo Buntings, Blue Jay's and Steller's Jays."
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Mountain_Bluebird/id
www.jstor.org/discover/pgs/index?id=10.2307/4077277&i...
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