Oozing excess water
Unusual purple Striped coralroot / Corallorhiza st…
A lovable bundle of fur
Ruffed Grouse
Fungus in the forest
Fireweed / Chamerion angustifolium
Coprinus sp.
Sweet donkeys
The elegance of a Thistle
Three out of four ain't bad
Police Car Moth / Gnophaela vermiculata
Dainty little parasol
Looking towards our beautiful mountains
Fritillary sp.
Harebell
Evening Grosbeak male
Beauty in old age
Before the final split
Cameron Lake, Waterton Lakes National Park
Hoof fungus / Fomes fomentarius
St Francis with the birds of the forest
Pink Monkeyflower / mimulus lewisii
Eastern Kingbird
Foothills and distant mountains
Lorquin's Admiral / Limenitis lorquini
Noxious, but beautiful
Mountain Hollyhock
Pinedrops / Pterospora
Cameron Lake, Waterton Lakes National Park
Brown-headed Cowbird juvenile
Water Hemlock / Cicuta
White-tailed Deer at Akamina Lake, Waterton
Swainson's Thrush / Catharus ustulatus
Canoes at Cameron Lake, Waterton
Pink Monkeyflower / mimulus lewisii
Sandhill Cranes, Waterton
Mule Deer, Mom and baby
Mountain Lady's Slipper / Cypripedium montanum
Barn at Folk Tree Lodge
Preening White-faced Ibis
Beautiful Waterton Lakes National Park
Yellow Columbine / Aquilegia flavescens
The beauty of the Common Loon
Lance-leaved Stonecrop / Sedum lanceolatum
And then there were three
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A delicate shade of Paintbrush


Today, I'm taking a break from posting images taken in Waterton Lakes National Park, and instead adding three photos taken yesterday (23 July 2015), closer to home. Five of us spent the day botanizing the land belonging to Darryl Teskey, SW of Calgary and SW of Millarville (maybe a 40-minute drive from the city). This was the first time I had been there and I'm so glad I went - I would have missed all sorts of things, including a family of Ruffed Grouse and several fungi. Fortunately, the rain stayed away until we started driving back to Calgary. Quite a lot of black clouds, reminding me of the tornado that passed through Calgary just the day before (22 July 2015).
Our walk took us over grassland and through forest, everywhere treacherous with so many fallen logs which were often barely visible. I have never, ever seen so many tiny Skipper butterflies - there must have been hundreds or even thousands of these bright orange beauties that were flying or perched on flowers of every colour. Our purpose, as always, was to find and list everything that we saw - wildflowers, trees, grasses, birds, insects, fungi, etc.. Our leader then compiles an extensive list of our finds and this is later sent to the landowner, along with any photos that we might take. Always a win/win situation, as the landowner then has a much better idea of just what is on his property - and we have a most enjoyable day. This summer, with so many botanizing outings like this, plus two 3-day trips to Waterton Lakes National Park, I am so behind with the photos that I need to edit and e-mail!
"Castilleja, commonly known as Indian paintbrush or prairie-fire, is a genus of about 200 species of annual and perennial herbaceous plants native to the west of the Americas from Alaska south to the Andes, northern Asia, and one species as far west as the Kola Peninsula in northwestern Russia. These plants are classified in the broomrape family, Orobanchaceae (following major rearrangements of the order Lamiales starting around 2001; sources which do not follow these reclassifications may place them in the Scrophulariaceae). They are hemiparasitic on the roots of grasses and forbs. The generic name honors Spanish botanist Domingo Castillejo." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castilleja
Our walk took us over grassland and through forest, everywhere treacherous with so many fallen logs which were often barely visible. I have never, ever seen so many tiny Skipper butterflies - there must have been hundreds or even thousands of these bright orange beauties that were flying or perched on flowers of every colour. Our purpose, as always, was to find and list everything that we saw - wildflowers, trees, grasses, birds, insects, fungi, etc.. Our leader then compiles an extensive list of our finds and this is later sent to the landowner, along with any photos that we might take. Always a win/win situation, as the landowner then has a much better idea of just what is on his property - and we have a most enjoyable day. This summer, with so many botanizing outings like this, plus two 3-day trips to Waterton Lakes National Park, I am so behind with the photos that I need to edit and e-mail!
"Castilleja, commonly known as Indian paintbrush or prairie-fire, is a genus of about 200 species of annual and perennial herbaceous plants native to the west of the Americas from Alaska south to the Andes, northern Asia, and one species as far west as the Kola Peninsula in northwestern Russia. These plants are classified in the broomrape family, Orobanchaceae (following major rearrangements of the order Lamiales starting around 2001; sources which do not follow these reclassifications may place them in the Scrophulariaceae). They are hemiparasitic on the roots of grasses and forbs. The generic name honors Spanish botanist Domingo Castillejo." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castilleja
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