Gentle or aggressive?
Fake but fun
Sunset over Weaselhead
Pretty spectacular
Western Meadowlark
Moth on Creeping Thistle
I'm ready to eat you
Here comes the rain
In need of preservation
Individual flower of Showy Milkweed
Baby Coots are so cute
Dwarf Dogwood
Found when I was lost
A little Pholiota cluster
For a complete change of colour
A look of intelligence
Deer in Foxtails
The Avocet stretch
Police Car Moth and Skipper
Juvenile Wilson's Phalarope
Chokecherry / Prunus virginiana
The Wilson's Snipe - such a fine bird
A fancy fungus
Thirteen-lined Ground Squirrel
So perfect
Always love a cow skull
Before harvest time
Two of a kind!
Decorated wall, Saskatoon Farm
Thankfully, not Mosquitoes
Yesterday's excitement
Avian beauty
Fireweed - for a change of colour
Reflected in the eye of an owl
Lost as the sun sets
Grasshopper details
Clasped
Gorgeous iridescent feathers
Borage in a friend's garden
Should I stay or should I go?
Gorgeous Iris
Here today, maybe gone tomorrow
Yellow on gold
Into the great unknown
One-sided Pyrola / Orthilia secunda
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Two small, orange butterflies - Northern Crescents


On 20 July 2014, I plucked up courage to do a drive that I’d never done before. I had been that particular route once before that I can think of, when I carpooled with others. A good part of the drive was in familiar territory, but I’d never driven the last part of the journey myself. I had met my daughter at 9:00 a.m. and we were both eager to see a display of birds of prey that had been brought up from the Coaldale Birds of Prey Centre.
This year, there was no Short-eared Owl or Turkey Vulture, but it was great to see any at all. There was a Burrowing Owl, a Barn Owl, a Great Horned Owl, and a Golden Eagle. Another real treat that was an amusing one, was seeing a baby Barn Owl that was just 45 days old! This little ball of fluff was acting as a great ambassador, letting young kids get a close view and ask questions, and fall in love with it – and to hopefully, in the future, do everything they can as adults to protect our precious wildlife. The enjoyment of seeing these birds up close reminds one that the reason these birds are not free to live in the wild, is because of some kind of interaction with humans – such as permanent injuries from being hit by a vehicle, pesticide use, or even worse, being shot by a human! This is what happened to “Spirit”, the magnificent Golden Eagle, shot and blinded by someone.
This exhibit was our first destination in the park, though on the drive from Calgary, we had stopped at the small McDougall Church at Morley. After seeing and photographing the birds of prey, we then drove to Middle Lake that’s in a different part of the park. We walked the very short distance to the edge of the lake, but didn't walk around it. From there, we drove to Many Springs Trail and did a very slow walk around the lake, stopping to look at different flowers and photograph a few butterflies including these Northern Crescents. I don't know if one is male and the other female? Though slow, it was still further than I should have walked. Certain wildflowers were already finished, including various Orchid species, but there were still plenty of other species to see and enjoy. Even the weather cooperated, though the forecast had been for isolated showers. Not too hot, nice clouds in the sky and lovely to have my daughter’s company for the day.
Thanks so much to the people down at the Coaldale Bird of Prey Centre (near Lethbridge, down towards the Canada/US border) for bringing your gorgeous birds of prey for us to see! I have been south to the Centre three times I think, and always long to go back again, but it's not somewhere I can drive to, so this was a much-appreciated treat!
I was back in the park again on 2 August 2014, with birding friends. We saw a Black Bear crossing the road we had just driven down, when we were all out of the cars at Many Springs Trail parking lot. Further along the Trail, people shouted out to us that there was a mother Black Bear and her two cubs on the Trail between where we were and the people were. At that point, we chose to turn around and return the way we had come!
This year, there was no Short-eared Owl or Turkey Vulture, but it was great to see any at all. There was a Burrowing Owl, a Barn Owl, a Great Horned Owl, and a Golden Eagle. Another real treat that was an amusing one, was seeing a baby Barn Owl that was just 45 days old! This little ball of fluff was acting as a great ambassador, letting young kids get a close view and ask questions, and fall in love with it – and to hopefully, in the future, do everything they can as adults to protect our precious wildlife. The enjoyment of seeing these birds up close reminds one that the reason these birds are not free to live in the wild, is because of some kind of interaction with humans – such as permanent injuries from being hit by a vehicle, pesticide use, or even worse, being shot by a human! This is what happened to “Spirit”, the magnificent Golden Eagle, shot and blinded by someone.
This exhibit was our first destination in the park, though on the drive from Calgary, we had stopped at the small McDougall Church at Morley. After seeing and photographing the birds of prey, we then drove to Middle Lake that’s in a different part of the park. We walked the very short distance to the edge of the lake, but didn't walk around it. From there, we drove to Many Springs Trail and did a very slow walk around the lake, stopping to look at different flowers and photograph a few butterflies including these Northern Crescents. I don't know if one is male and the other female? Though slow, it was still further than I should have walked. Certain wildflowers were already finished, including various Orchid species, but there were still plenty of other species to see and enjoy. Even the weather cooperated, though the forecast had been for isolated showers. Not too hot, nice clouds in the sky and lovely to have my daughter’s company for the day.
Thanks so much to the people down at the Coaldale Bird of Prey Centre (near Lethbridge, down towards the Canada/US border) for bringing your gorgeous birds of prey for us to see! I have been south to the Centre three times I think, and always long to go back again, but it's not somewhere I can drive to, so this was a much-appreciated treat!
I was back in the park again on 2 August 2014, with birding friends. We saw a Black Bear crossing the road we had just driven down, when we were all out of the cars at Many Springs Trail parking lot. Further along the Trail, people shouted out to us that there was a mother Black Bear and her two cubs on the Trail between where we were and the people were. At that point, we chose to turn around and return the way we had come!
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