Our foothills in Impressive Art
Coffee Bean tree / Coffea
Like a little flower
Blue and Brown Clipper / Parthenos sylvia
A double dose of clouds
Growing on a fallen leaf
Bees need our help!
European Skipper on Pearly Everlasting / Antennari…
One of few
An ornamental grass
ILLUMINASIA, Lantern & Garden Festival
Bursts of colour
Himalayan monal / Lophophorus impejanus male
Macro puffballs
Golden Eagle juvenile
Nuttall's Sunflower / Helianthus nuttallii
Wood grain, fungus and Harvestman
Fringed Grass-of-Parnassus / Parnassia fimbriata
Tiger Longwing butterfly / Heliconius hecale
American White Pelican - synchronized feeding
Black Henbane
Black Henbane seedpods
Darner dragonfly sp.
Mature Amanita muscaria, I believe?
Hermit Thrush / Catharus guttatus
Indian Clock Vine / Thunbergia mysorensis
Freeze!
Cheery bokeh - Salvia sp.?
One of these things is not like the others
Beginning to crack
Sharp to the touch
A splash of red
Petunias
Sunflower beauty
One of my favourite barns
Looking back with a smile
Reaching for the sun
Olds grain elevator, Alberta
A maze of golden Sunflowers
Tiger Longwing butterfly / Heliconius hecale
Pale grey spider on Common Tansy seedheads
Himalayan monal / Lophophorus impejanus
Remembering 9/11
Anne on a mission .....
European Mountain Ash / Sorbus aucuparia
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198 visits
Pileated Woodpecker female


Yesterday morning, 17 September 2015, I went with friends on a walk that started (after the first heavy frost of the season overnight) at the Bow Valley Ranch area in Fish Creek Park. No sign of the Great Horned Owl pair. We then drove to the end of the park road, to walk in the Boat Launch area. Perhaps the highlight of the morning was seeing this very distant female Pileated Woodpecker, plus 35 American White Pelicans and 20 Double-crested Cormorants and all "the usual".
After the walk, I decided to drive SW of the city and SW of Millarville. A few years ago, after a day of botanizing someone's land, we called in (with permission) at a nearby field to see a wonderful display of Amanita mushrooms. We don't get the red ones (Fly Agaric / Amanita muscaria) with small white spots here, but we have seen bright yellow ones and sometimes even an almost orange one, with small white spots/flecks. I think I have only ever seen these three times - at West Bragg Creek, Rod Handfield's land and this field near to his land, and I think Marsden Creek in Kananaskis. I was so longing to see one again and thought it was worth the drive just to check. Well, I found the field easily, but had forgotten about the sign there that said No Trespassing, No Shooting, Patrol Area. I wasn't sure what Patrol Area meant, but I could almost imagine several Dobermans being released to attack me! I never go anywhere that has a No Trespassing sign, anyway. So, I walked through the trees along the edge of the field and tried to peer into the field, being careful not to catch the barbed-wire fence. I caught sight of a cluster of three fungi that looked like they were Amanitas, though they were fully "opened" and I couldn't see any spots. Got one lousy photo, but I did want to add it to my album and maybe it will be enough for ID confirmation or correction sometime?
It was a lovely, sunny day yesterday, with a high of 15C, and the scenery I drove through was beautiful. Thankfully, the orange Engine Warning light didn't come on in my car at all. Next time it does come on, I have to take the car to be checked again and hopefully they can find a code that will tell them what is causing this problem. They couldn't find any codes when they had my car a few days ago, which is frustrating.
After the walk, I decided to drive SW of the city and SW of Millarville. A few years ago, after a day of botanizing someone's land, we called in (with permission) at a nearby field to see a wonderful display of Amanita mushrooms. We don't get the red ones (Fly Agaric / Amanita muscaria) with small white spots here, but we have seen bright yellow ones and sometimes even an almost orange one, with small white spots/flecks. I think I have only ever seen these three times - at West Bragg Creek, Rod Handfield's land and this field near to his land, and I think Marsden Creek in Kananaskis. I was so longing to see one again and thought it was worth the drive just to check. Well, I found the field easily, but had forgotten about the sign there that said No Trespassing, No Shooting, Patrol Area. I wasn't sure what Patrol Area meant, but I could almost imagine several Dobermans being released to attack me! I never go anywhere that has a No Trespassing sign, anyway. So, I walked through the trees along the edge of the field and tried to peer into the field, being careful not to catch the barbed-wire fence. I caught sight of a cluster of three fungi that looked like they were Amanitas, though they were fully "opened" and I couldn't see any spots. Got one lousy photo, but I did want to add it to my album and maybe it will be enough for ID confirmation or correction sometime?
It was a lovely, sunny day yesterday, with a high of 15C, and the scenery I drove through was beautiful. Thankfully, the orange Engine Warning light didn't come on in my car at all. Next time it does come on, I have to take the car to be checked again and hopefully they can find a code that will tell them what is causing this problem. They couldn't find any codes when they had my car a few days ago, which is frustrating.
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