American Three-toed Woodpecker
Time for another Pika shot
Mountain Sheep
Touched by the sun
Brown on brown
The wonder of hoar frost
Like finding a needle in a haystack
White Admiral
Purple and white
Stinkhorn fungus / Mutinus elegans
Newly burst Poppy
Irresistibly cute
Mule Deer on the prairies
A fine rural relic
Great Gray Owl in early morning light
Another day closer to spring
It's mine!
Such a fun Moose
Way, way up
Bow River, E end of Fish Creek Park
Handsome Pileated Woodpecker
Blending in
Cormorants and their reflections
"Just" a Mallard
Yesterday's well-earned treat
Coyote relaxing in the sun
Gentle and curious
Temporarily puffed after preening
Delicate hoar frost
Pileated Woodpecker female
How did he get there?
A prairie view
Cold, bleak and frosty
Our mountains in winter
A ferocious hunter, popcan-size
Old barn on the prairie
Northern Pygmy-owl pellet
Ice as far as the eye can see
One sweet, curious female
Red Fox in a mountain location
Long-tailed Weasel
A splash of colour
Do you see what I see? Look very closely at the w…
A tiny, ferocious hunter
Made to feel welcome
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So many of the old wooden barns and homesteads that scatter the prairies are in such a bad state, unfortunately. This one was photographed SE of Calgary, on 14 April 2014, when I went driving the backroads for the day with my youngest daughter. Some of the roads were familiar to me, but others were new territory, which gave us a chance to discover some different abandoned barns. We knew where our destination was going to be (Mossleigh), more or less. It was disappointing that the heat distortion was just too great to get distant, zoomed photos. Unfortunately, it was quite a hazy day, which really didn't help. Once we got really close, the problem usually went away.
This homestead is already leaning, so who knows how long it will remain standing. Who knows why old barns and homesteads are left to crumble? Farmers are very busy people and probably not too concerned about an old, rotting building on their land. Most are no doubt living on a tight budget, too. I'm just happy that I have an occasional chance to photograph a few of these wonderful old barns and homesteads - I can think of at least three that have disappeared since being photographed, which is always a sad feeling, I find.
Off to the right of this homestead is an old barn, and I'll add a previously posted photo of it in a comment box below.
There was a sign by the road that said:
"Buck for Wildlife.
Abandoned Farmstead Project.
This privately owned land is being managed as wildlife habitat by the Landowner, in cooperation with the Alberta Conservation Association.
protecting habitat ....
protects wildlife"
You see so many photos taken inside some old homestead buildings (I never go inside any of them, as they are always on private land and I won't trespass). The wonderful old treasures that are covered in dirt and strewn all over the place are breathtaking. Seems so sad that so many things aren't saved and cared for. What an interesting task that would be!
This homestead is already leaning, so who knows how long it will remain standing. Who knows why old barns and homesteads are left to crumble? Farmers are very busy people and probably not too concerned about an old, rotting building on their land. Most are no doubt living on a tight budget, too. I'm just happy that I have an occasional chance to photograph a few of these wonderful old barns and homesteads - I can think of at least three that have disappeared since being photographed, which is always a sad feeling, I find.
Off to the right of this homestead is an old barn, and I'll add a previously posted photo of it in a comment box below.
There was a sign by the road that said:
"Buck for Wildlife.
Abandoned Farmstead Project.
This privately owned land is being managed as wildlife habitat by the Landowner, in cooperation with the Alberta Conservation Association.
protecting habitat ....
protects wildlife"
You see so many photos taken inside some old homestead buildings (I never go inside any of them, as they are always on private land and I won't trespass). The wonderful old treasures that are covered in dirt and strewn all over the place are breathtaking. Seems so sad that so many things aren't saved and cared for. What an interesting task that would be!
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