Yellow on gold
Here today, maybe gone tomorrow
Gorgeous Iris
Should I stay or should I go?
Borage in a friend's garden
Gorgeous iridescent feathers
Clasped
Grasshopper details
Lost as the sun sets
Reflected in the eye of an owl
Fireweed - for a change of colour
Avian beauty
Yesterday's excitement
Thankfully, not Mosquitoes
Decorated wall, Saskatoon Farm
Two of a kind!
Before harvest time
Always love a cow skull
So perfect
Thirteen-lined Ground Squirrel
Two small, orange butterflies - Northern Crescents
Gentle or aggressive?
Fake but fun
One-sided Pyrola / Orthilia secunda
Spirit
Showy Milkweed buds
Eastern Phoebe
My favourite Thistle
Lesser Scaup and lines
Venus Flytrap flower
In contrast to pain and suffering
White Campion, male
Mama Ruffed Grouse
An attractive Dragonfly perch
A Black Bear sighting from May
Rust fungus on Western White Clematis
Vibrant pink
Wild European Rabbit
Mating Spotted Asparagus Beetles
Burrowing Owl
Against the cabin wall
Common beauty
Baby Barn Owl : )
White Spiraea, aka Birchleaf Spiraea / Spiraea bet…
Middle Lake, Bow Valley Provincial Park
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Into the great unknown


This young Sora was, I would guess, somewhere between a week and 10 days old? Such a funny little thing - I'd never seen a young one before. Just like its parents, it wasn't easy to photograph in amongst the Cattails and other water plants. Managed to shoot this photo just in time to get the whole bird without any stem across its little body. They move constantly - and fast! Photo taken on 28 July 2014, when I drove SE of the city, mainly to escape from the heat of my house for a few hours. Frank Lake was my first stop and then I drove around the lake and further eastwards. Saw quite a few birds on this trip, including quite a nice look at a single White-faced Ibis in a small slough. It was interesting to watch it feeding in amongst a family of American Avocets. Other birds seen that afternoon/evening included a Western Kingbird (yet again, couldn't get a decent shot), a Western Meadowlark, a couple of Swainson's Hawks perched on tall power lines, Black-necked Stilts too far away, Phalaropes, a couple of Eared Grebes, Barn Swallow, and a Gray Partridge that quickly disappeared into the tall grasses.
"A small, secretive bird of freshwater marshes, the Sora is the most common and widely distributed rail in North America. Its distinctive descending whinny call can be easily heard from the depths of the cattails, but actually seeing the little marsh-walker is much more difficult." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/sora/id
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sora_(bird)
"A small, secretive bird of freshwater marshes, the Sora is the most common and widely distributed rail in North America. Its distinctive descending whinny call can be easily heard from the depths of the cattails, but actually seeing the little marsh-walker is much more difficult." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/sora/id
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sora_(bird)
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