Snow in the forecast - need colour
Fond memories of a popcan-sized owl
Mystery rock
Pine Grosbeak
Follow the fence line
A winter day in southern Alberta
Short-eared Owl
A sweet face
Spikes of ice
Clark's Nutcracker / Nucifraga columbiana
Now THIS is winter!
Pine Grosbeak / Pinicola enucleator
Sheltering in the trees
Painted Tongue / Salpiglosis
Winter walk at Beaverdam Flats
"Canoe with three warriors", by Team Sakha from Ru…
Clark's Nutcracker
Modern charm
Pine Grosbeak / Pinicola enucleator
One of yesterday's treats
Persian Cornflower / Centaurea dealbata?
Just in time
Snow, snow and more snow
High wire act
Find the owl
Fenced in
Triple treat
Remembering the warmth of summer
A new find on a bitterly cold day
A friendly visitor
Cosy little birdhouse
Avenue of trees at Baker Park
White beauty
Rusty Blackbird
Farm cat watching for farm mice
Reflection through the fog
A different style
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A tiny owl from the past
Shoo Fly / Nicandra physalodes
Red-breasted Merganser, juvenile male
Pine Grosbeak in pretty light
Old barns in heavy frost
Christmas remnants
Get well, Rachel
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Carnivorous Sundew


All three photos posted this morning are from my archives. Our forecast is for snow today, so I thought I would post photos with colour.
I couldn't believe the sights seen when looking at a carnivorous Sundew plant through a macro lens! The complete plant is only very small and each leaf is tiny. This is just the tip of one of those leaves, seen with a few of the red stalked mucilaginous glands (like little round, red glass beads) with which the plant lures and digests insects. Isn't nature amazing?
I could spend hours macro photographing this tiny plant! Unfortunately, I've only seen it when we've been on private land at Elkton Bog, north west of the city, near Cremona. We've only been lucky enough to botanize the bog area three or four times. It's definitely a very wet experience, as parts of you sink partly under water, lol! This photo was taken on 30 July 2010.
"The carnivorous sundew plant, botanical name Drosera, has about 130 species. All of the species of the sundew plant are beautiful and many look like fireworks, but they are deadly to the insects that fly near to them. One thing that all carnivorous sundew plants do have is the gel-like substance at the tips of the tentacles that cover the leaves. This gel is a sticky substance that the insects that fly too near the plant get stuck on. The plant can then eat it. The many species of the sundew plant can be found all around the world, on every single continent. This is unusual for a plant because most carnivorous plants are found only in one or two regions of the world because of the different climates that they must live in. The plant is called sundew because of the gel like substance on the tentacles. The gel makes the plants look as if they have morning dew on them all day long, especially when it glistens in the sun." From www.carnivorous--plants.com/sundew-plant.html
I couldn't believe the sights seen when looking at a carnivorous Sundew plant through a macro lens! The complete plant is only very small and each leaf is tiny. This is just the tip of one of those leaves, seen with a few of the red stalked mucilaginous glands (like little round, red glass beads) with which the plant lures and digests insects. Isn't nature amazing?
I could spend hours macro photographing this tiny plant! Unfortunately, I've only seen it when we've been on private land at Elkton Bog, north west of the city, near Cremona. We've only been lucky enough to botanize the bog area three or four times. It's definitely a very wet experience, as parts of you sink partly under water, lol! This photo was taken on 30 July 2010.
"The carnivorous sundew plant, botanical name Drosera, has about 130 species. All of the species of the sundew plant are beautiful and many look like fireworks, but they are deadly to the insects that fly near to them. One thing that all carnivorous sundew plants do have is the gel-like substance at the tips of the tentacles that cover the leaves. This gel is a sticky substance that the insects that fly too near the plant get stuck on. The plant can then eat it. The many species of the sundew plant can be found all around the world, on every single continent. This is unusual for a plant because most carnivorous plants are found only in one or two regions of the world because of the different climates that they must live in. The plant is called sundew because of the gel like substance on the tentacles. The gel makes the plants look as if they have morning dew on them all day long, especially when it glistens in the sun." From www.carnivorous--plants.com/sundew-plant.html
Jan Klimczak has particularly liked this photo
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