"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
Common Loon in emerald waters
Black-necked Stilt
Gas Plant / Dictamnus albus 'Purpureus'
The favourite
Fall reflections at Carburn Park
Thoughts and prayers for Paris
Painted Daisy / Chrysanthemum coccineum
Long-billed Dowitchers / Limnodromus scolopaceus
Canada Violet / Viola canadensis
White-winged Crossbill / Loxia leucoptera
Time to rest awhile
Should I stay or should I go?
Water colour version
Elegant innocence
Pine Grosbeak male / Pinicola enucleator
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Delicate Pinedrops / Pterospora andromedea
Deep pink Peony
Up close and personal
Clustered Broomrape / Orobanche fasciculata
How I love Alberta!
One of Santa's reindeer
Complete with tiny rooster weather vane
Leopard Lacewing / Cethosia cyane
Tasty damselfly and skipper
Making the most of a rotting log
Mule Deer buck
Harebell / Campanula rotundifolia
Peking Cotoneaster / Cotoneaster acutifolia
Feeding time excitement
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 : )
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Lest we forget


Most of us have so much to be thankful for, even in difficult times, and it is so important to remember the reason we can be thankful. So many men and women have died (or suffered major injury, both mental and physical) in so many wars, so that the rest of us can live in peace, in freedom. So many people will continue to lose their life, fighting for this freedom. I thank them, and their families, who willingly pay the price in all sorts of ways. They deserve our thanks, not just on November 11th each year, but each and every day.
"Remembrance Day is observed on 11 November to recall the official end of World War I on that date in 1918, as the major hostilities of World War I were formally ended "at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month" of 1918 with the German signing of the Armistice.
The day was specifically dedicated by King George V, on 7 November 1919, to the observance of members of the armed forces who were killed during World War I.
The red poppy has become a familiar emblem of Remembrance Day due to the poem In Flanders Fields. These poppies bloomed across some of the worst battlefields of Flanders in World War I, their brilliant red colour an appropriate symbol for the blood spilt in the war."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remembrance_Day
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_Flanders_Fields
Photo taken at the Reader Rock Garden on 24 June 2015.
"Remembrance Day is observed on 11 November to recall the official end of World War I on that date in 1918, as the major hostilities of World War I were formally ended "at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month" of 1918 with the German signing of the Armistice.
The day was specifically dedicated by King George V, on 7 November 1919, to the observance of members of the armed forces who were killed during World War I.
The red poppy has become a familiar emblem of Remembrance Day due to the poem In Flanders Fields. These poppies bloomed across some of the worst battlefields of Flanders in World War I, their brilliant red colour an appropriate symbol for the blood spilt in the war."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remembrance_Day
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_Flanders_Fields
Photo taken at the Reader Rock Garden on 24 June 2015.
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