Cornflower
Morning awakes
With thoughts of nesting
Sunlight on the low cloud
Licking the salt
Fancy 'Cat's Cradle'
Three-toed Woodpecker
Christmas colours in July
Summer Iris display
Baby Coot
Mariposa Lily / Calochortus apiculatus
Colour for a snowy morning
Early morning fog and hoar frost
Beware!
A beautiful old Ford
A clash of colour
Frosted Cattails
So far away, but better than nothing
A frosty view from Frank Lake blind
A foggy, frosty sunrise
New roof and a fresh coat of paint
Through the frost to the bird blind
One of 9 Great Horned Owls
Elegant beauty
Lesser Scaup
Face to the sun
Well, hello there
Pink or Showy lady's-slipper / Cypripedium reginae
White-winged Crossbill / Loxia leucoptera
Sparkling in the sunlight
Why birds are sometimes hard to find
Ibis iridescence
Giant Scabius / Cephalaria gigantea
Travelling the Cobble Flats road
Datura
You can always count on a Chickadee
A favourite old barn
Louisiana Broomrape / Orobanche ludoviciana
Time to reveal
Livingston House, Heritage Park
Someone just couldn't resist : )
Creature of the forest
Give it time to age
Grain elevator with a difference
Backward glance
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Being a good mother


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. Not the greatest shot, but I don't usually see Coots this close, and it gives a reasonable view of a young one's head. Baby Coots are such ugly little things that they are cute, ha. Love the way they flap their 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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