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
Robert Bateman - Life Sketches - a Memoir
Marsland Basin
Moving into fall
It tickles!
Pennycress seedpods
Taking a closer look at the fish
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
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Feeding time excitement


A photo from 7 July 2015, taken at a wetland area in SW Calgary, when I called in for just an hour after a doctor's appointment. Baby Coots are such ugly little things that they are cute, ha. Love the way they flap those tiny wings when they are being fed. I don't know if this is Mom or Dad, but s/he was doing a great job of collecting water plants to feed to the babies.
"The waterborne American Coot is one good reminder that not everything that floats is a duck. A close look at a coot—that small head, those scrawny legs—reveals a different kind of bird entirely. Their dark bodies and white faces are common sights in nearly any open water across the continent, and they often mix with ducks. But they’re closer relatives of the gangly Sandhill Crane and the nearly invisible rails than of Mallards or teal." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/American_Coot/id
"The waterborne American Coot is one good reminder that not everything that floats is a duck. A close look at a coot—that small head, those scrawny legs—reveals a different kind of bird entirely. Their dark bodies and white faces are common sights in nearly any open water across the continent, and they often mix with ducks. But they’re closer relatives of the gangly Sandhill Crane and the nearly invisible rails than of Mallards or teal." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/American_Coot/id
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