Smoke + sun = orange
Red-tailed Hawk / Buteo jamaicensis
First the flower, then the bokeh, then the bee
Wood Frog
Yellowjacket
Pink crinkles
It's beginning to look a lot like autumn
You take what you can get
Heading into fall
Between the distant trees
Pinkish
Pink Hollyhock / Alcea
Many-flowered Monkeyflower / Mimulus floribundus
Beauty on a rotting log
Ruby-throated Hummingbird / Archilochus colubris
Yarrow with tiny visitor
A change of subject
Coral fungus
Orange False Dandelion / Agoseris aurantiaca
A view at Marsland Basin
Beauty - flower and bokeh
Comb Tooth fungus / Hericium coralloides
Tiny European Skipper
Small and cute
Thimbleberry / Rubus parviflorus
Young Brown-headed Cowbirds
An attractive little cluster
The beauty of Pinedrops
Mystery flower
Wood Nymph sp.
Gathering at the feeder
Emerald waters
Common Tansy / Tanacetum vulgare
Busy little Muskrat
In a field of bokeh
Canyon Church Camp, Waterton Lakes National Park
Willowherb / Epilobium sp.
Look what I can do!
Decorating a tree
Strawberry Blite / Chenopodium capitatum
Yellow Scabious with bee and bokeh
Doing their best
Insect galls on Rose leaves
Keeping each other company
Bear claw marks on a tree trunk
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Keywords
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174 visits
Milk chocolate curls


I know a lot of people aren't all that interested in fungi, but I loved this one. When I look at it, it looks as if it has been sprinkled with grated milk chocolate with a ring of chocolate curls around the edge of the cap : )
About two and a half weeks ago, on 8 August 2015, I decided to drive SW of the city for a while. It was a Saturday, so I thought I would go and check if there were other people parked at Brown-Lowery Provincial Park. I had more or less stopped going into the forest there by myself, especially the last couple of years, knowing that Cougar and Bears can be seen there. All I have seen - so far! - is a large Moose on a couple of occasions. The place gives me the creeps, so I usually just walk through the trees closest to the parking lot.
Just a minute or two after entering the forest near the parking lot, I flushed a Grouse, which scared the life out of me. They tend to wait, hidden, and then when you are almost by them, they suddenly "explode" out of the bushes, making ones heart beat fast.
The opposite side of the trail, where I usually find a few mushrooms, had pools of water after the two devastating rain and hail storms that we had had recently. With several cars in the small parking lot, I decided to go just a short way into the park, trying to forget that animals can "smell fear". I did come across a few quite nice mushrooms, but with such a dry, hot summer, this will most likely not be a good year for fungi. I'm not 100% sure, but I think this might be a Pholiota? There were two or three clusters of these mushrooms around the base of trees. When I went back to the park on 23 August, there were none of these left.
The second time my heart started beating really fast was when I was trying to focus on a mushroom and I was aware of a deep, huffing kind of sound coming from right behind me. Turning around, dreading what I might see, I discovered it was just a small Red Squirrel, low down on his/her tree, just a couple of feet away from me. I've never ever heard a Squirrel make this kind of sound before! Sounded rather like what I imagine a bear might sound like.
Almost back at the edge of the forest, I was happy as can be to hear quite a commotion that I recognized as being American Three-toed Woodpeckers. There were three of them high up a tree, with at least one of them being a noisy, hungry juvenile that was feeding itself but every now and then would want the adult to feed it. This species is uncommon in Alberta, year round, so it's always a treat to see one - and especially three.
About two and a half weeks ago, on 8 August 2015, I decided to drive SW of the city for a while. It was a Saturday, so I thought I would go and check if there were other people parked at Brown-Lowery Provincial Park. I had more or less stopped going into the forest there by myself, especially the last couple of years, knowing that Cougar and Bears can be seen there. All I have seen - so far! - is a large Moose on a couple of occasions. The place gives me the creeps, so I usually just walk through the trees closest to the parking lot.
Just a minute or two after entering the forest near the parking lot, I flushed a Grouse, which scared the life out of me. They tend to wait, hidden, and then when you are almost by them, they suddenly "explode" out of the bushes, making ones heart beat fast.
The opposite side of the trail, where I usually find a few mushrooms, had pools of water after the two devastating rain and hail storms that we had had recently. With several cars in the small parking lot, I decided to go just a short way into the park, trying to forget that animals can "smell fear". I did come across a few quite nice mushrooms, but with such a dry, hot summer, this will most likely not be a good year for fungi. I'm not 100% sure, but I think this might be a Pholiota? There were two or three clusters of these mushrooms around the base of trees. When I went back to the park on 23 August, there were none of these left.
The second time my heart started beating really fast was when I was trying to focus on a mushroom and I was aware of a deep, huffing kind of sound coming from right behind me. Turning around, dreading what I might see, I discovered it was just a small Red Squirrel, low down on his/her tree, just a couple of feet away from me. I've never ever heard a Squirrel make this kind of sound before! Sounded rather like what I imagine a bear might sound like.
Almost back at the edge of the forest, I was happy as can be to hear quite a commotion that I recognized as being American Three-toed Woodpeckers. There were three of them high up a tree, with at least one of them being a noisy, hungry juvenile that was feeding itself but every now and then would want the adult to feed it. This species is uncommon in Alberta, year round, so it's always a treat to see one - and especially three.
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