Sharp and soft
Rough-Fruited Fairybells / Prosartes trachycarpa
Purplish Fritillary / Boloria chariclea
"Eyebrows" to match the Canola bokeh
Exploring Timber Ridge, Porcupine Hills
Thank goodness for the Kubota
Yesterday's highlight : )
The art of nature - Lecidea tessellata
A view from Timber Ridge Conservation Area
Surprised to see us
Gairdner’s Yampah (Yampa) / Perideridia gairdneri,…
Droplets of sap on Limber Pine cones
European Skipper on Red Clover
Limber Pine on Timber Ridge
The stare
Pretty shade of Paintbrush
After the rain
Calliope Hummingbird
Too hard to resist
Barely visible
Down by the pond
Fluffed up Pine Siskin
Unidentified fungus
Young male Red-breasted Grosbeak?
Welcoming the sun
Maclean Pond, Kananaskis
Eastern Kingbird
Pink Monkeyflower / mimulus lewisii
St Francis with the birds of the forest
Hoof fungus / Fomes fomentarius
Cameron Lake, Waterton Lakes National Park
Before the final split
Beauty in old age
Evening Grosbeak male
Harebell
Fritillary sp.
Looking towards our beautiful mountains
Dainty little parasol
Police Car Moth / Gnophaela vermiculata
Three out of four ain't bad
The elegance of a Thistle
Sweet donkeys
Coprinus sp.
Fireweed / Chamerion angustifolium
Fungus in the forest
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
167 visits
Colourful pollution at Weed Lake - NOT GOOD!


Note: this photo is NOT my "main" (i.e. very last to be uploaded) photo out of the three I've posted this morning. I uploaded this and the next shot first and then uploaded the main image (Globe Thistle flower) separately, to see if that makes any difference. I did try doing it a couple of times this way weeks ago and seem to remember that there was something I didn't like with the result, but can't for the life of me remember what it was, ha. Hopefully, Flickr (or something else) won't change the order of the way you see my photos displayed! I did it this way yesterday, and it did work OK for a friend.
On this day, 26 July 2015, 22 of us drove out to Marsland Basin, E of Calgary. Part of this beautiful wetland belongs to our friend, Lyn, and her partner - they have a house and yard that overlooks the wetland. This was the second time that I had visited the area, the first being on 28 June 2015. Each time, we have to sign a small guestbook. Also, everyone who can is asked to please submit a list of species seen to eBird. The birds on the water are very distant, so you need binoculars (which I don't have) and even better, a spotting scope. Really, they are too far away for photos, though I can get a distant shot with my point-and-shoot camera set at 48x zoom and then cropped.
Like last time, I took a long look over the lake and then wandered round Lyn's property, this time finding a mushroom or two, a beautiful moth, a Thistle or two, their two donkeys, a House Wren, an Eastern Kingbird, a Mourning Dove, and a family of Western Kingbirds (that were just about impossible to see as they flitted in amongst the high branches.
The highlight of the visit for many of us was seeing a very, very distant family of American Badgers that were in a neighbour's field (so, private land), digging for prey (probably the nearby Richardson's Ground Squirrels). There are four family members, though some of us only saw three. I think I have only ever seen a Badger three times before in 37 years, the last one being on 11 June 2012, on one of Don Stiles' annual Mountain Bluebird outings.
The General Status of the American Badger in Alberta is Sensitive. More detailed Status is "Data Deficient" - not enough current information to determine its status.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_badger
After our visit to the Marsland Basin, friends Dorothy and Stephen drove two of us back to Calgary again, travelling the roads slowly so that we could see a number of perched Swainson's Hawks, and a Meadowlark with mouth full of insects to feed to her babies. We also called in briefly at Weed Lake, closer to Calgary, which is where this photo of pollution was taken. I wonder if it could be caused by a natural bacteria decomposition process? Thanks so much, Stephen, for the safe ride there and back. As always, hugely appreciated!
For a list of the 53 species of bird that were seen yesterday morning, look under the Badger family photo.
flic.kr/p/wygV8B
On this day, 26 July 2015, 22 of us drove out to Marsland Basin, E of Calgary. Part of this beautiful wetland belongs to our friend, Lyn, and her partner - they have a house and yard that overlooks the wetland. This was the second time that I had visited the area, the first being on 28 June 2015. Each time, we have to sign a small guestbook. Also, everyone who can is asked to please submit a list of species seen to eBird. The birds on the water are very distant, so you need binoculars (which I don't have) and even better, a spotting scope. Really, they are too far away for photos, though I can get a distant shot with my point-and-shoot camera set at 48x zoom and then cropped.
Like last time, I took a long look over the lake and then wandered round Lyn's property, this time finding a mushroom or two, a beautiful moth, a Thistle or two, their two donkeys, a House Wren, an Eastern Kingbird, a Mourning Dove, and a family of Western Kingbirds (that were just about impossible to see as they flitted in amongst the high branches.
The highlight of the visit for many of us was seeing a very, very distant family of American Badgers that were in a neighbour's field (so, private land), digging for prey (probably the nearby Richardson's Ground Squirrels). There are four family members, though some of us only saw three. I think I have only ever seen a Badger three times before in 37 years, the last one being on 11 June 2012, on one of Don Stiles' annual Mountain Bluebird outings.
The General Status of the American Badger in Alberta is Sensitive. More detailed Status is "Data Deficient" - not enough current information to determine its status.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_badger
After our visit to the Marsland Basin, friends Dorothy and Stephen drove two of us back to Calgary again, travelling the roads slowly so that we could see a number of perched Swainson's Hawks, and a Meadowlark with mouth full of insects to feed to her babies. We also called in briefly at Weed Lake, closer to Calgary, which is where this photo of pollution was taken. I wonder if it could be caused by a natural bacteria decomposition process? Thanks so much, Stephen, for the safe ride there and back. As always, hugely appreciated!
For a list of the 53 species of bird that were seen yesterday morning, look under the Badger family photo.
flic.kr/p/wygV8B
Le rêveur de Léon Régel has particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.