Marbled Godwit / Limosa fedoa
Layers of colour
Once a family home
Landscape colours
Black-crowned Night-heron
Beautiful old house in the hills
Yellow and blue
Bear Grass / Xerophyllum tenax
Juvenile Horned Lark
Roadside wild sunflowers
Kirkpatrick elevator, near Drumheller
Brown-headed Cowbird juvenile
Thimbleberry / Rubus parviflorus
Swainson's Hawk
Little mystery bird - juvenile Yellow-rumped Warbl…
02 Colourful Dock sp.
01 Middle Lake, Bow Valley Provincial Park
Hiding in the Canola field
Bright and cheery in its old age
Upland Sandpiper
American Kestrel
Mariposa Lily
Swainson's Hawk
They can't see me
Bold and beautiful
Time to feed the kids
The Grad Barn 2016
Upland Sandpiper / Bartramia longicauda
Black-crowned Night-heron
Sticky Purple Geranium / Geranium viscosissimum
Checkerspot sp.
American Kestrel - just for the record
Mountain Bluebird fledgling
Blue Lettuce / Lactuca tatarica
Hawk in Fish Creek Park - juvenile Northern Goshaw…
The difference the sun makes
White-crowned Sparrow / Zonotrichia leucophrys
Orange False Dandelion / Agoseris aurantiaca
Columbian Ground Squirrel collecting nest material
Prince of Wales hotel, Waterton
Bracted Honeysuckle / Lonicera involucrata
The reward for getting up early
Paintbush, with a visiting Crab Spider
Lazuli Bunting - just for the record
Challenges of a photographer
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Is this what I think it is? Yes, a Ferruginous Hawk!


Lol, that's exactly what I was thinking, Mike Borle! Thanks so much for giving the ID, way before I started on the description for the day. I was almost 100% sure this was a Ferruginous Hawk - couldn't think what else it could be, yet it seemed just too good to be true : ) According to the 'Birds of Alberta' book by Fisher and Acorn, the Ferruginous Hawk is rare to uncommon, from April to September in Alberta. This individual was standing on a mound high above the side of a main road and I stopped the car and rapidly took three or four shots, hoping that no vehicles would suddenly appear round the bend. About a minute's drive later, I spotted two very distant birds of prey, standing together on top of a huge pile of earth and again stopped long enough to take three or four rapid shots. They, too, looked very white, and I wondered if I had been fortunate enough to see Ferruginous Hawks! When I checked on Google Earth last night, I noticed that there was a very rough track that I could have driven along to get closer - but you just don't do that with Ferruginous Hawks!! Recently, I've been seeing photos from two or three people, showing very close shots of a nest and nestlings of this species - totally against birding ethics for these Hawks! No idea how they got such close captures. Anyway, I feel VERY privileged to have seen these special birds. This is the second day this week that I have been amazingly lucky with bird sightings, the first day being a day out NE of Calgary with my daughter on 18 July.
"Found in prairies, deserts, and open range of the West, the regal Ferruginous Hawk hunts from a lone tree, rock outcrop, or from high in the sky. This largest of North American hawks really is regal—its species name is regalis—with a unique gray head, rich, rusty (ferruginous) shoulders and legs, and gleaming white underparts. A rarer dark-morph is reddish-chocolate in color. Ferruginous Hawks eat a diet of small mammals, sometimes standing above prairie dog or ground squirrel burrows to wait for prey to emerge." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Ferruginous_Hawk/id
Later: I eventually left home yesterday at 11:00 am, a good couple of hours later than I had intended. I wasn't sure how long it was going to take me to get to where I wanted to get, so had wanted to allow plenty of hours for this journey. I had been on the road for about three hours by the time I got there, but did stop at various places en route. The first part of my drive was along familiar roads - called in at Frank Lake just to check the gravel road leading to the gate. An Eastern Kingbird was the only species I saw.
From there, I kept driving east on h'way 23, stopping briefly to photograph one of my favourite old houses. This highway eventually bends southwards and leads to Vulcan. I had only ever once driven as far as Vulcan, and that was on 30 March 2015. I had to stop again, like last year, and take a few photos of the cluster of old sheds, barn and house, before continuing on my way. From here until I reached my destination, was all new to me. Exciting and anxiety-causing, all at the same time. I drove further east and then turned south and found myself in a different kind of landscape, with a few interesting birds and plants to see and photograph, including a Ferruginous Hawk (three, actually) and wild sunflowers. I was in tall wind turbine country - which told me how far south I had come. The colours of some of the fields were unusual, too. Along one road, I had a Swainson's Hawk who perched nicely on a fence post at first and then circled overhead and followed my vehicle further down the road. Think it may have been a juvenile, screeching for its parents to come and feed it. Also saw a Mourning Dove on a fence post and what I think must have been a juvenile Horned Lark. Actually, there were a lot of Horned Larks yesterday. I tend to forget that we can see them in summer time.
After travelling westwards and then north and west again, I found myself back at Frank Lake. It was still daylight, so I decided to try one more time along the gravel road leading to the gate. Here, I had another nice sighting - friend, Debbie : ) Good to see you and have a nice, long chat. A great day with an enjoyable ending.
"Found in prairies, deserts, and open range of the West, the regal Ferruginous Hawk hunts from a lone tree, rock outcrop, or from high in the sky. This largest of North American hawks really is regal—its species name is regalis—with a unique gray head, rich, rusty (ferruginous) shoulders and legs, and gleaming white underparts. A rarer dark-morph is reddish-chocolate in color. Ferruginous Hawks eat a diet of small mammals, sometimes standing above prairie dog or ground squirrel burrows to wait for prey to emerge." From AllAboutBirds.
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Ferruginous_Hawk/id
Later: I eventually left home yesterday at 11:00 am, a good couple of hours later than I had intended. I wasn't sure how long it was going to take me to get to where I wanted to get, so had wanted to allow plenty of hours for this journey. I had been on the road for about three hours by the time I got there, but did stop at various places en route. The first part of my drive was along familiar roads - called in at Frank Lake just to check the gravel road leading to the gate. An Eastern Kingbird was the only species I saw.
From there, I kept driving east on h'way 23, stopping briefly to photograph one of my favourite old houses. This highway eventually bends southwards and leads to Vulcan. I had only ever once driven as far as Vulcan, and that was on 30 March 2015. I had to stop again, like last year, and take a few photos of the cluster of old sheds, barn and house, before continuing on my way. From here until I reached my destination, was all new to me. Exciting and anxiety-causing, all at the same time. I drove further east and then turned south and found myself in a different kind of landscape, with a few interesting birds and plants to see and photograph, including a Ferruginous Hawk (three, actually) and wild sunflowers. I was in tall wind turbine country - which told me how far south I had come. The colours of some of the fields were unusual, too. Along one road, I had a Swainson's Hawk who perched nicely on a fence post at first and then circled overhead and followed my vehicle further down the road. Think it may have been a juvenile, screeching for its parents to come and feed it. Also saw a Mourning Dove on a fence post and what I think must have been a juvenile Horned Lark. Actually, there were a lot of Horned Larks yesterday. I tend to forget that we can see them in summer time.
After travelling westwards and then north and west again, I found myself back at Frank Lake. It was still daylight, so I decided to try one more time along the gravel road leading to the gate. Here, I had another nice sighting - friend, Debbie : ) Good to see you and have a nice, long chat. A great day with an enjoyable ending.
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