Snowy Owl - just close enough
A fine old barn
Little forest muncher
Beautiful bird, but grainy and blurry photo : (
Four more months to wait
Poppy art
Watchful eye
Feasting on cone seeds
Narrow strip of light
Yesterday's treat - a Great Gray Owl
Remembering a cold, frosty bird count
Smiling in the snow
A view through the bushes
Wild Blue Columbine / Aquilegia brevistyla
A few little wrigglers
Springtime colour
Fort Macleod grain elevator, Alberta
Tall Lungwort / Mertensia paniculata
Well camouflaged, except for those eyes
Rough-Fruited Fairybells / Prosartes trachycarpa
Little church in the valley
McDougall Memorial United Church
A cluster of red barns
Davisburg Community Church, Alberta
Northern Pygmy-owl, one year ago
Moose cow looking for salt
Old barn with a different style
Focused, listening, watching
Barn-shaped mailbox
Snow Bunting / Plectrophenax nivalis
Clark's Nutcracker
Downy Woodpecker
Glenmore Dam, Calgary, Alberta
When winter really was winter
Varied Thrush
Common Redpoll on the wire
Male beauty
One of yesterday's Snowy Owls
Fancy silo with stairs
Davisburg Community Church, Alberta
When the clouds roll in
A friendly greeting
Common Redpoll / Carduelis flammea
Aging gracefully
Northern Hawk Owl with Meadow Vole
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A most challenging bird


This photo was taken yesterday, 25 February 2016, when I called in at Fish Creek Park to see if I could get a better photo or two of the beautiful Varied Thrush that has been hanging around the area. The bird was there, but spent pretty much all its time deep within the conifer trees and a tangle of dark undergrowth. If the bird was on the ground and happened to move into slightly better light for a split second, it was mostly hidden by endless tiny branches. Most of the time, the view was far worse than in this photo : ) However, the Thrush did spend a few seconds on one of the mainly hidden fallen trees and two of us were lucky enough to see it without any branches in the way. Managed to get my best photos of this bird and will be posting one of them soon. When I say 'best', I mean that the bird was close and clear, but the light still wasn't good and the photos are rather grainy, unfortunately. Such a gorgeous bird and a real privilege to see it while it is here.
"The Varied Thrush’s simple, ringing song gives a voice to the quiet forests of the Pacific Northwest, with their towering conifers and wet understories of ferns, shrubs, and mosses. Catch a glimpse of this shy bird and you’ll see a handsome thrush with a slaty gray back and breast band set against burnt-orange breast and belly. Common in the Cascades, Northern Rockies, and Pacific Coast, Varied Thrushes forage for insects in summer and switch to berries and seeds in winter.
Varied Thrushes hop on the ground or low in shrubs and trees. They eat mainly insects and other arthropods in the summer and switch to nuts and fruit in fall and winter. On breeding territories, male Varied Thrushes sit on exposed perches to sing their haunting, trilling songs" From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Varied_Thrush/id
"The Varied Thrush’s simple, ringing song gives a voice to the quiet forests of the Pacific Northwest, with their towering conifers and wet understories of ferns, shrubs, and mosses. Catch a glimpse of this shy bird and you’ll see a handsome thrush with a slaty gray back and breast band set against burnt-orange breast and belly. Common in the Cascades, Northern Rockies, and Pacific Coast, Varied Thrushes forage for insects in summer and switch to berries and seeds in winter.
Varied Thrushes hop on the ground or low in shrubs and trees. They eat mainly insects and other arthropods in the summer and switch to nuts and fruit in fall and winter. On breeding territories, male Varied Thrushes sit on exposed perches to sing their haunting, trilling songs" From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Varied_Thrush/id
Daniel Palacin has particularly liked this photo
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