Golden Columbine / Aquilegia chrysantha
A backwards glance
A closer view
Pileated Woodpecker making a cavity
Wild and cute
Purple-flowering Raspberry
Popcan-sized cutie
A handful for Mum and Dad
Hairy Woodpecker
Leopard Lacewing / Cethosia cyane
Licking salt off its lips
Common Goldeneye
Safe with Mom
Turquoise
Female Pileated Woodpecker
Old and new
Baby Barred Owl
Dad on guard duty
Old farmyard windmill
Eyes like Licorice Allsorts
"Two (owlets) out of three ain't bad"
The windmill from yesterday
Red-winged Blackbird
A young male Moose
Old homestead with texture
A different Great Horned Owl
Mountain splendour
Northern Pygmy-owl
White Baneberry berries
Himalayan Blue Poppy
Moose portrait
Love those legs
The Poser - Spotted Sandiper
Mule Deer at dusk
Love those big ears and big feet
Roller coaster roads in winter
A prairie homestead
Northern Pygmy-owl
Red-winged Blackbird displaying
Moss Phlox
Black Tern
Sunshine on a mighty peak
Ravens on a cold, shingle roof
Such a cute little thing
Looks a long way down from up here
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Enjoying seeds and sunshine


On 8 February 2015, I decided that I would join a group of friends for a morning birding walk in Fish Creek Park. I tend to miss most of the walks, so felt it was OK to go a second time this week. We started at Shannon Terrace, covering a good part of the area, and then the group started heading eastwards, towards Bebo Grove. At that point, my body was telling me that I had done enough walking, so I left my friends and made my way back to the parking lot. We had seen a beautiful Pileated Woodpecker, which was perhaps the highlight of the walk. The light was not good as the Woodpecker was quite deep within the trees. I timed my return walk well, as I saw a pair of these spectacular birds out in the open. I also stopped to take a few photos of this little Red Squirrel, busily feeding on some seeds that someone had obviously left for the birds in this cold weather.
On the way home, I called in at the area of the park where the tiny Northern Pygmy-owl had been seen on many days for the last few weeks. However, when I was at that location yesterday, no one there had seen the owl at all, apparently making it the fifth day in a row that it had not been seen.
Shortly after I arrived there, a friend drove into the parking lot and we got chatting about the extremely confusing system of the way roads outside the city limits are numbered. Roads can have two different numbers - a Range Rd/Township Rd number plus a street or avenue number. All the maps that I have seen give the RR/TWP number only, so it's very difficult to find a location given in St. or Ave. numbers. The reason for this chat was that some of us were unable to find on a map the locations for Wild Turkeys and Northern Hawk Owls that have been reported recently. My friend told me to hop in and we'd go looking for turkeys : )! He already knew this whole area SW of the city, but I had never driven that part. Even though we were unlucky with finding any of the birds, it was extremely helpful to me to just see what the area looked like - more hilly than I had imagined. An area where I know I could very easily get totally lost, especially given the confusing mess of road numbering! Many thanks, Phil, for this unexpected and very helpful trip!! I really appreciated it!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_red_squirrel
www.arkive.org/american-red-squirrel/tamiasciurus-hudsoni...
On the way home, I called in at the area of the park where the tiny Northern Pygmy-owl had been seen on many days for the last few weeks. However, when I was at that location yesterday, no one there had seen the owl at all, apparently making it the fifth day in a row that it had not been seen.
Shortly after I arrived there, a friend drove into the parking lot and we got chatting about the extremely confusing system of the way roads outside the city limits are numbered. Roads can have two different numbers - a Range Rd/Township Rd number plus a street or avenue number. All the maps that I have seen give the RR/TWP number only, so it's very difficult to find a location given in St. or Ave. numbers. The reason for this chat was that some of us were unable to find on a map the locations for Wild Turkeys and Northern Hawk Owls that have been reported recently. My friend told me to hop in and we'd go looking for turkeys : )! He already knew this whole area SW of the city, but I had never driven that part. Even though we were unlucky with finding any of the birds, it was extremely helpful to me to just see what the area looked like - more hilly than I had imagined. An area where I know I could very easily get totally lost, especially given the confusing mess of road numbering! Many thanks, Phil, for this unexpected and very helpful trip!! I really appreciated it!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_red_squirrel
www.arkive.org/american-red-squirrel/tamiasciurus-hudsoni...
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