Small Blue sp.
Bleeding hearts
Lichen from the Whaleback hills
A touch of England
Red-winged Blackbird female
Western Tent Caterpillar - one of many
Convergent Ladybug / Hippodamia convergens
Love these little guys
Snack time for baby Coot
Shades of orange
When black isn't really black
Coyote in a field of dandelions
A little blossom flower
Collecting supper for her babies
Well, hello, little Chickadee
Spiny Rose Gall
A lovely splash of colour
Fritillary
American Goldfinch female with Sunflower seed
Clouds and Dandelions
Western Tent Caterpillars
Pasqueflower / Pulsatilla vulgaris
Eared Grebe / Podiceps nigricollis
Franklins and the farmer
Before and after the petals fall
House Wren
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Sunflower beauty
Black-billed Magpie
Western Tent caterpillars - a tight community
At the start of our climb
Arrowleaf Balsamroot with Crab Spider
Impressive view at the Whaleback
Young Richardson's Ground Squirrel
Moth and lichen
Evening Grosbeak male
Purple Iris
Nearing its end
Showing off his colours
Delicate blossom
Cemetery wildlife
American Goldfinch
Sunlit moss
American Avocet
One of three
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Eastern Kingbird


The sun was shining two afternoons ago, so I decided to take a short drive SW of the city and see if I could find Mountain Bluebirds and Wilson's Snipe. These are two of my favourite birds to photograph and I was lucky with both. Didn't see much else, other than Blue-winged Teal, a Clay-coloured Sparrow, Red-winged Backbirds, Tree Swallows and this Eastern Kingbird.
"With dark gray upperparts and a neat white tip to the tail, the Eastern Kingbird looks like it’s wearing a business suit. And this big-headed, broad-shouldered bird does mean business—just watch one harassing crows, Red-tailed Hawks, Great Blue Herons, and other birds that pass over its territory. Eastern Kingbirds often perch on wires in open areas and either sally out for flying insects or flutter slowly over the tops of grasses. They spend winters in South American forests, where they eat mainly fruit." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Eastern_Kingbird/id
"With dark gray upperparts and a neat white tip to the tail, the Eastern Kingbird looks like it’s wearing a business suit. And this big-headed, broad-shouldered bird does mean business—just watch one harassing crows, Red-tailed Hawks, Great Blue Herons, and other birds that pass over its territory. Eastern Kingbirds often perch on wires in open areas and either sally out for flying insects or flutter slowly over the tops of grasses. They spend winters in South American forests, where they eat mainly fruit." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Eastern_Kingbird/id
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