Pennycress seedpods
It tickles!
Feeding time excitement
Peking Cotoneaster / Cotoneaster acutifolia
Harebell / Campanula rotundifolia
Mule Deer buck
Making the most of a rotting log
Tasty damselfly and skipper
Leopard Lacewing / Cethosia cyane
Complete with tiny rooster weather vane
One of Santa's reindeer
How I love Alberta!
Clustered Broomrape / Orobanche fasciculata
Up close and personal
Deep pink Peony
Delicate Pinedrops / Pterospora andromedea
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Lest we forget
"Just" a little House Sparrow
Brugmansia or Datura?
Wonder what she's thinking
Six old granaries
Overflowing with colour
Elegance
Leucistic Red-breasted Nuthatch
One of my favourite flowers to photograph
We ignored the warning : )
Rough-fruited Fairybells / Prosartes trachycarpa
Julia Heliconian / Dryas iulia
Eurasian Lynx
I'm blurry, but I'm cute
Resting in the meadow
Stinkhorns from 2012
The challenge of bird photography
Eastern Kingbird at Marsland Basin
Sparkles on Forgetmenot Pond
Yellow False Dandelion seedhead
Halloween colour
White-faced Whistling Duck / Dendrocygna viduata
Poppy seedpod
Trust
Nodding (Musk) Thistle / Carduus nutans
Hibiscus
Changing colour ready for the winter
Coral Fungus
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
229 visits
Taking a closer look at the fish


Late afternoon on 7 October 2015, I decided to call in at Fish Creek Park on the way home from a volunteer shift. The weather was beautiful, and I'm supposed to do lots of walking (which I don't). There was another bird that I would have liked to see, but I was out of luck for that one. However, a young couple mentioned that they had just seen a young Black-crowned Night Heron, and I was so lucky that it was still there. From a distance, the bird was so well-camouflaged against the background. Unfortunately, the background was not photogenic at all, no matter where one stood, but it was so nice to see this beautiful young bird. It stayed in one place and then, just when the light was fading and I needed to leave, the Heron leaned forward and then climbed down into the water. We had been hoping it would catch one of the many fish that we could see, but it didn't. My battery had just died and, for once, I didn't have a spare battery with me. Usually, when I have seen a Black-crowned Night Heron, it has been far, far away except for one occasion, when a young one flew right over my head at the Frank Lake blind, SE of Calgary.
"Black-crowned Night-Herons are stocky birds compared to many of their long-limbed heron relatives. They’re most active at night or at dusk, when you may see their ghostly forms flapping out from daytime roosts to forage in wetlands. In the light of day adults are striking in gray-and-black plumage and long white head plumes. These social birds breed in colonies of stick nests usually built over water. They live in fresh, salt, and brackish wetlands and are the most widespread heron in the world." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Black-crowned_Night-Heron/id
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black-crowned_night_heron
"Black-crowned Night-Herons are stocky birds compared to many of their long-limbed heron relatives. They’re most active at night or at dusk, when you may see their ghostly forms flapping out from daytime roosts to forage in wetlands. In the light of day adults are striking in gray-and-black plumage and long white head plumes. These social birds breed in colonies of stick nests usually built over water. They live in fresh, salt, and brackish wetlands and are the most widespread heron in the world." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Black-crowned_Night-Heron/id
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black-crowned_night_heron
Chrissy 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.