Beautiful wings of a female Mountain Bluebird
Tattered and torn - and still beautiful
A distant Bobolink
Chilean Flamingo
Brown-headed Cowbird / Molothrus ater
Iris at Olds College Botanical Gardens and Wetland…
My first Bald Eagle on a fence post
Red River Hog / Potamochoerus porcus
It's the Bobolink again
Just a little stretch
Forest refractions on a wet Dandelion : )
Wild Rose in the rain
Bobolink male / Dolichonyx oryzivorus
A forest find
A second's rest, together
Great Gray Owl in late-morning sun
False Dandelion / Hypochaeris radicata
Hike on Erik Butters' beautiful land
I like the post as much as the bird
Yellow Warbler male
Yellow lady's-slipper
One of my favourite views
Raindrop refractions
Red-winged Blackbird female with bokeh
A closer view - male Bobolink
Clay-colored Sparrow / Spizella pallida
Female Bobolink / Dolichonyx oryzivorus
Such an elegant bird
Sleeping down at the pond
Grasshopper Sparrow / Ammodramus savannarum - OR i…
Couldn't have chosen a better perch myself : )
Red-edged petals
Such good parents
There WAS a fence between us
Spotted Coralroot / Corallorhiza maculata
Meadow Creek area, Benchlands
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Why this bird is called a Grosbeak
Northern Shoveler pair
I think he caught a beautiful Tiger Moth : )
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Needed a change of colour
Eastern Kingbird
Along a country back road
Almost ready to fledge
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Ornamental Spurge / Euphorbia polychroma (Cushion Spurge)


On 27 April 2016, I had a volunteer shift and afterwards, as the sun was peeping through the clouds, I decided to call in at the Reader Rock Garden. There was a reasonable number of plants in bloom. I wasn't sure if I was going to be too early or too late for Tulips, especially as this year has so far been most unusual, weatherwise. There was also a bush of gorgeous pink Hellebore flowers, hanging their heads as they tend to do. The Ornamental Spurge was in bloom, attractive as always. So different rfrom the Leafy Spurge that has taken over so many of our natural areas. There was enough colour and variety of plants to make this visit worthwhile.
"Spurges belong to the quite large Euphorbia genus of plants that contains 2,000 different species, some of which are highly ornamental, and some of which are weeds with little cultivated value. They all, however, are characterized by a lack of true flower petals or sepals, but have instead brightly colored modified leaves known as bracts, which look just like flowers. The most well-known member of this group is the poinsettia, whose red "flowers" are in fact the showy bracts of an ornamental spurge."
www.chicagobotanic.org/plantinfo/spurge
"Spurges belong to the quite large Euphorbia genus of plants that contains 2,000 different species, some of which are highly ornamental, and some of which are weeds with little cultivated value. They all, however, are characterized by a lack of true flower petals or sepals, but have instead brightly colored modified leaves known as bracts, which look just like flowers. The most well-known member of this group is the poinsettia, whose red "flowers" are in fact the showy bracts of an ornamental spurge."
www.chicagobotanic.org/plantinfo/spurge
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