Three insect species on a single flower
Autumn berries
Yesterday's find
Merlin
Chinook arch over Calgary
Rusty Gilled Polypore / Gloeophyllum sepiarium
Spruce Grouse, adult female
A fine network of cells - maybe Arcyria obvelata?
False Dandelion / Agoseris glauca
The long hike down the mountain
Puffballs on Plateau Mountain
Looking towards top of Plateau Mountain
Merlin on the hunt
Bighorn Sheep on Plateau Mountain, 2012
Periglacial feature, Plateau Mountain
Spruce Sawyer
Glorious colours of fall
Tenderness
Brightness on a cloudy day
Finn, a friend's dog
Autumn colours at the stormwater pond
Light-coloured Pika
Owl sculpture at Silver Springs Botanical Gardens
Juvenile White-throated Sparrow / Zonotrichia albi…
Strap/Coral Club / Clavariadelphus ligula
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Our beautiful foothills on an overcast day
The colours of fall
Push!
American Kestrel, Falco sparverius
Barn Owl / Tyto alba
Across the river
A use for old shoes
Tea, anyone?
Helmeted Guineafowl / Numida meleagris
Reindeer lichen
Look into my eyes
Fungus on a log
Highbush cranberry / Viburnum opulus var. american…
Eye contact
Growing amongst the mosses
Bunchberry Meadows, Nature Conservancy of Canada
Merlin
Eyelash fungi
Cladonia lichen
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197 visits
Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk / Buteo jamaicensis


All three photos posted this morning, were taken yesterday, 25 September 2016. It was a day of birding east and south-east of the city, with a group of birding friends. We set out at 8:00 am and our main stopping places were Weed Lake, Marsland Basin and Wyndham-Carseland Provincial Park.
I will add our leader's (Howard Heffler) list of species below. Pretty much the usual sightings - lots of ducks, a number of Hawks including the juvenile Red-tailed Hawk seen in this photo and the juvenile White-throated Sparrow which was seen while walking around in Lynn and Sue's acreage at Marsland Basin. Also, a Merlin that was perched high up on a power pole. The water level at the wetland at Marsland Basin was very high, so there was no sign of the mudflats there, so barely any shorebirds. We did have three small flocks of Greater White-fronted Geese fly high overhead while we were looking out over the water, which was great. As usual, most birds we saw were much too far away for photos.
As usually happens, when birds are too far away for me to see, my camera lens turns to a few other subjects, including the Sowthistle flower in the previous photo, which had three different insects on it. I think the one on the far right is a Hoverfly, but I''m not sure about the other two.
Many thanks for leading this trip, Howard, and thanks, too, to Jim for driving half of us. I always appreciate a trip like this, with people who are all expert birdspotters - and then there's me, lol!
"Eight participants met at Carburn Park at 8:00 AM and spent a beautiful fall day birding three locations east of Calgary. We first stopped at the south end of Weed Lake. Water levels were high so there was almost no shorebird habitat. A highlight was the large numbers of American Pipits. Marsland Basin, thanks to Lynn and Sue, is a wonderful spot for both the wetland and the treed areas. Next we went Wyndham-Carseland Provincial Park. We were not able to pick out a Mew Gull that had been recently reported there among the 100’s of Ring-billed Gulls. Thanks to Nimali Seneviratne for keeping track of species and doing the eBird postings. The combined list for the day was:
Greater White-fronted Goose 108
Canada Goose 36
Gadwall 45
American Wigeon 22
Mallard 325
Northern Shoveler 400
Northern Pintail 80
Green-winged Teal 278
Bufflehead 18
Common Merganser 3
Ruddy Duck 5
Gray Partridge 20
Pied-billed Grebe 1
Eared Grebe 1
Double-crested Cormorant 3
American White Pelican 12
Great Blue Heron 4
White-faced Ibis 1
Bald Eagle 1
Northern Harrier 3
Sharp-shinned Hawk 2
Swainson's Hawk 1
Red-tailed Hawk 6
American Coot 51
Killdeer 4
Long-billed Dowitcher 9
Wilson's Snipe 2
Greater Yellowlegs 4
Franklin's Gull 3
Ring-billed Gull 1,000
Rock Pigeon 2
Eurasian Collared-Dove 1
Belted Kingfisher 2
Northern Flicker 1
Merlin 1
Blue Jay 2
Black-billed Magpie 6
Red-breasted Nuthatch 2
Marsh Wren 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 4
Swainson's Thrush 2
European Starling 34
American Pipit 95
Ovenbird 1
Orange-crowned Warbler 4
Yellow-rumped Warbler 5
Dark-eyed Junco 5
White-throated Sparrow 6
Western Meadowlark 5
Common Grackle 2
House Sparrow 12
Will have to finish off my other descriptions and tags later, as I am running late this morning and have a birding walk to get to.
Later: I ended up not going on my birding walk this morning. By the time I got up early and had breakfast, I was feeling somewhat queasy and thought I had better not go on the walk. Felt a bit better later in the morning and decided to go to the Park after all (Bebo Grove, Fish Creek Park), getting there about noon. Met a delightful young man standing on the bridge over the creek and pointing out to me a perched bird of prey. It took a little while to decide just what it was - helped by excellent birder, Nimali, who happened to come along the path. We decided it was a Cooper's Hawk ('C' for curved edge of tail tip and 'C' for Cooper's). Looking at my photos this evening, I'm still not 100% sure if it was a Cooper's or a Sharp-shinned. In a few of the photos, the tail tip edge looked more straight than curved.
This hawk stayed around for ages and gave some nice opportunities for photos, including of it 'mantling' (spreading out its wings to form a cloak) when it captured a large dragonfly and returned to the same branch. When two of us were first standing on the bridge, this hawk flew down right over our heads two or three times - maybe because we were attracting insects around us? We noticed a second similar hawk, too, and we wondered if they were maybe juveniles, especially as the main one was very comfortable with us standing nearby. Made my day : ) I even spotted several mushrooms earlier in my walk, which was a surprise. Can't believe I was out in the park for about five hours! A very enjoyable walk - glad to have your company, Nimali, and that of the very knowledgeable young man we had just met.
I will add our leader's (Howard Heffler) list of species below. Pretty much the usual sightings - lots of ducks, a number of Hawks including the juvenile Red-tailed Hawk seen in this photo and the juvenile White-throated Sparrow which was seen while walking around in Lynn and Sue's acreage at Marsland Basin. Also, a Merlin that was perched high up on a power pole. The water level at the wetland at Marsland Basin was very high, so there was no sign of the mudflats there, so barely any shorebirds. We did have three small flocks of Greater White-fronted Geese fly high overhead while we were looking out over the water, which was great. As usual, most birds we saw were much too far away for photos.
As usually happens, when birds are too far away for me to see, my camera lens turns to a few other subjects, including the Sowthistle flower in the previous photo, which had three different insects on it. I think the one on the far right is a Hoverfly, but I''m not sure about the other two.
Many thanks for leading this trip, Howard, and thanks, too, to Jim for driving half of us. I always appreciate a trip like this, with people who are all expert birdspotters - and then there's me, lol!
"Eight participants met at Carburn Park at 8:00 AM and spent a beautiful fall day birding three locations east of Calgary. We first stopped at the south end of Weed Lake. Water levels were high so there was almost no shorebird habitat. A highlight was the large numbers of American Pipits. Marsland Basin, thanks to Lynn and Sue, is a wonderful spot for both the wetland and the treed areas. Next we went Wyndham-Carseland Provincial Park. We were not able to pick out a Mew Gull that had been recently reported there among the 100’s of Ring-billed Gulls. Thanks to Nimali Seneviratne for keeping track of species and doing the eBird postings. The combined list for the day was:
Greater White-fronted Goose 108
Canada Goose 36
Gadwall 45
American Wigeon 22
Mallard 325
Northern Shoveler 400
Northern Pintail 80
Green-winged Teal 278
Bufflehead 18
Common Merganser 3
Ruddy Duck 5
Gray Partridge 20
Pied-billed Grebe 1
Eared Grebe 1
Double-crested Cormorant 3
American White Pelican 12
Great Blue Heron 4
White-faced Ibis 1
Bald Eagle 1
Northern Harrier 3
Sharp-shinned Hawk 2
Swainson's Hawk 1
Red-tailed Hawk 6
American Coot 51
Killdeer 4
Long-billed Dowitcher 9
Wilson's Snipe 2
Greater Yellowlegs 4
Franklin's Gull 3
Ring-billed Gull 1,000
Rock Pigeon 2
Eurasian Collared-Dove 1
Belted Kingfisher 2
Northern Flicker 1
Merlin 1
Blue Jay 2
Black-billed Magpie 6
Red-breasted Nuthatch 2
Marsh Wren 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 4
Swainson's Thrush 2
European Starling 34
American Pipit 95
Ovenbird 1
Orange-crowned Warbler 4
Yellow-rumped Warbler 5
Dark-eyed Junco 5
White-throated Sparrow 6
Western Meadowlark 5
Common Grackle 2
House Sparrow 12
Will have to finish off my other descriptions and tags later, as I am running late this morning and have a birding walk to get to.
Later: I ended up not going on my birding walk this morning. By the time I got up early and had breakfast, I was feeling somewhat queasy and thought I had better not go on the walk. Felt a bit better later in the morning and decided to go to the Park after all (Bebo Grove, Fish Creek Park), getting there about noon. Met a delightful young man standing on the bridge over the creek and pointing out to me a perched bird of prey. It took a little while to decide just what it was - helped by excellent birder, Nimali, who happened to come along the path. We decided it was a Cooper's Hawk ('C' for curved edge of tail tip and 'C' for Cooper's). Looking at my photos this evening, I'm still not 100% sure if it was a Cooper's or a Sharp-shinned. In a few of the photos, the tail tip edge looked more straight than curved.
This hawk stayed around for ages and gave some nice opportunities for photos, including of it 'mantling' (spreading out its wings to form a cloak) when it captured a large dragonfly and returned to the same branch. When two of us were first standing on the bridge, this hawk flew down right over our heads two or three times - maybe because we were attracting insects around us? We noticed a second similar hawk, too, and we wondered if they were maybe juveniles, especially as the main one was very comfortable with us standing nearby. Made my day : ) I even spotted several mushrooms earlier in my walk, which was a surprise. Can't believe I was out in the park for about five hours! A very enjoyable walk - glad to have your company, Nimali, and that of the very knowledgeable young man we had just met.
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