Unidentified plant - Milkvetch?
Brewer's Blackbird male
A splash of much-needed colour
Yellow-headed Blackbird with damselfly
A touch of blue
Ruddy Duck male
Arnica sp.
Purple Honeycreeper male, Asa Wright Nature Centre…
Balancing act
Red canoes at Cameron Lake, Waterton Lakes Nationa…
Red Baneberry, Waterton Lakes National Park
Maskinonge Lake, Waterton Lakes National Park
Common Raven in the sun
Gaillardia
Upper Waterton Lake, seen from the town
Marbled Cobweb Spider / Enoplognatha marmorataon o…
I saw a Sora
Bear Grass starting to open
White Admiral on Cow Parsnip
A different view from Maskinonge lookout, Waterton
Himalayan Blue Poppies
Yellow Angelica / Angelica dawsonii
"Alan, Alan, Alan ...Steve, Steve!"
A great idea for a garbage can!
Tree Swallow female
Great Horned Owl male
Brewer's Blackbird, collecting food for his babies
Brown-headed Cowbird baby
Pineappleweed
One of three young owls
Slough near Eagle Lake
Killdeer / Charadrius vociferus
Killdeer 'nest' and eggs - a telemacro shot
Tree Swallows - time to change places
Watching the watchers
Pale Green Weevil / Polydrusus impressifrons
American Coot and 'cootlings'
Who are we?
Brown Thrasher / Toxostoma rufum - a 'lifer'
Wilson's Snipe / Gallinago delicata
Striped Coralroot / Corallorhiza striata
Indian Breadroot / Pediomelum esculentum
Meadow Goat's-beard / Tragopogon pratensis
Bobolink / Dolichonyx oryzivorus
Forgetmenot Pond, Kananaskis
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Brewer's Blackbird female


This female Brewer's Blackbird was busy flying back and forth with food for its babies that were perched on low branches in one tree. Mixed in with these babies was one that was different - a young Brown-headed Cowbird. Cowbirds lay their eggs in other birds' nests, so maybe this Cowbird was being raised by the pair of Brewer's Blackbirds.
An amazing short video from a videocam by Cornell, showing a female Brown-headed Cowbird actually laying an egg in a Cardinal's nest and removing one of the Cardinal's eggs.
youtu.be/k3vAPMUW4CA
These birds were seen on 17 June 2017, when five of us went east of the city for the day, to visit our friend, Shirley, at her seasonal trailer. Most of our birding was done at and near Shirley's trailer site, including seeing a wonderful Great Horned Owl family with three young ones, two Killdeer and their nests, a Baltimore Oriole, and (finally!) a pair of Brown Thrashers. I had hoped for several years to see one of these birds, so it was a real treat to see a 'lifer'. They were far away and so high up, but I managed to get a couple of shots just for the record.
As we were walking around the grounds, two ladies stopped us and showed us some baby birds that they had had to remove from the engine of their vehicle. They wondered if we knew what kind of birds they were, but we were unable to help. I posted a photo of them a few days ago, just in case someone can ID them. The ladies had a bird house that they were going to put the babies into, hoping that the parents would hear them calling and be able to continue feeding them.
Thank you so much, Shirley, for inviting us all out to visit you while you were there for the weekend! It was such a pleasure to see some of "your" birds that you enjoy so much. Such a great variety of species! Wow, what a lunch we had, sitting at a table under the Tree Swallow tree, with a very vocal American Robin just a few feet away. How DO some birds manage to sing non-stop?! Hot chili made by Shirley, and a whole array of delicious salads and desserts left me feeling full till the early evening.
Many thanks, Anne B, for picking up three of us and for driving us east across the prairies. Hugely appreciated!
An amazing short video from a videocam by Cornell, showing a female Brown-headed Cowbird actually laying an egg in a Cardinal's nest and removing one of the Cardinal's eggs.
youtu.be/k3vAPMUW4CA
These birds were seen on 17 June 2017, when five of us went east of the city for the day, to visit our friend, Shirley, at her seasonal trailer. Most of our birding was done at and near Shirley's trailer site, including seeing a wonderful Great Horned Owl family with three young ones, two Killdeer and their nests, a Baltimore Oriole, and (finally!) a pair of Brown Thrashers. I had hoped for several years to see one of these birds, so it was a real treat to see a 'lifer'. They were far away and so high up, but I managed to get a couple of shots just for the record.
As we were walking around the grounds, two ladies stopped us and showed us some baby birds that they had had to remove from the engine of their vehicle. They wondered if we knew what kind of birds they were, but we were unable to help. I posted a photo of them a few days ago, just in case someone can ID them. The ladies had a bird house that they were going to put the babies into, hoping that the parents would hear them calling and be able to continue feeding them.
Thank you so much, Shirley, for inviting us all out to visit you while you were there for the weekend! It was such a pleasure to see some of "your" birds that you enjoy so much. Such a great variety of species! Wow, what a lunch we had, sitting at a table under the Tree Swallow tree, with a very vocal American Robin just a few feet away. How DO some birds manage to sing non-stop?! Hot chili made by Shirley, and a whole array of delicious salads and desserts left me feeling full till the early evening.
Many thanks, Anne B, for picking up three of us and for driving us east across the prairies. Hugely appreciated!
Pam J has particularly liked this photo
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