Mountain Bluebird
Alberta foothills in smoke haze
White-tailed Deer family
Mountain Bluebird female
Nemophila sp.
Ruby-throated Hummingbird female
Celosia sp.
Greenish-flowered Wintergreen / Pyrola chlorantha
White-tailed Deer
American Robin with food for his babies
Western Grebe
Once a home
Forever cute
Helmeted Guineafowl / Numida meleagris
Little country church
Here comes dessert!
Western Wood Lily
Cameron Falls, Waterton Lakes National Park
Nodding/Musk Thistle / Carduus nutans
Red-winged Blackbird juvenile
Bear Grass with Crab Spider and prey
Common Nighthawk
My new neighbour?
Purple/Water Avens seedhead / Geum rivale
Red-winged Blackbird
Marbled Godwit / Limosa fedoa
Old barn in a field of canola
Wolf's Milk slime mold, Rusty Bucket Ranch
A country scene
Smoke from the British Columbia wildfires reaches…
Blonde curls
Garden flowers at the Rusty Bucket Ranch
Watch dog : )
Sheep at the Rusty Bucket Ranch
Hearts at the Rusty Bucket Ranch
Artist's Conk (or Conch), Rusty Bucket Ranch bio-b…
Fungus, Rusty Bucket Ranch bio-blitz
Summer colour
Pure bliss when it's 32°C
Golden-mantled Ground Squirrel
A view from Red Rock Canyon, Waterton
Pinedrops
Bear Grass / Xerophyllum tenax
Bighorn Sheep, Waterton Lakes National Park
Orange False Dandelion / Agoseris aurantiaca
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Keywords
Authorizations, license
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Indian Paintbrush


Another smoky day here in Calgary, so it has to be another day at home with windows closed. The air quality today is expected to reach High Risk. I really hope that rain will arrive soon to help the firefighters in British Columbia and in Alberta, too! So much devastation.
Six days ago, on 14 July 2017, it was a hot day, but our bio-blitz of the Rusty Bucket Ranch, west of Calgary, started at 8:00 am, to catch the coolest part of the day. This was the first time we had been there and we had such a great morning. What a beautiful place and area! Thirteen of us gathered to explore part of the land belonging to Liz and Alan Breakey - 160 acres, mostly wooded, with many streams feeding into Bragg Creek.
The gorgeous garden itself was full of bright, healthy plants. Once we were in the forest, we came across all sorts of wildflower species and even a few fungi and slime molds. We all met the challenges of small, hidden logs along the trail, lying in wait to trip anyone who was not paying careful attention. One of the last areas was a bog, where the small, partly hidden pools of water were difficult or impossible to avoid - I nearly lost a shoe in there, lol! On the final stretch back to the house, we caught sight of a distant buck with its new growth of antlers; also, a few of the sheep that the Breakeys raise. A really fun walk for us all, with all sorts of things of interest. Many thanks to Liz and Alan for inviting us to the Rusty Bucket Ranch to explore and list all species seen! Thank you, too, for the very warm welcome you gave us, and for the muffins, delicious lemon drink, and coffee!
After the morning's hike, we all returned to the city and thoroughly enjoyed a BBQ lunch put on by our botany/birding friends, Dorothy and Stephen. I hadn't had a burger in years - and this one was so good! Thanks so much, Dorothy and Stephen, for all the time and effort you put into this. What a lovely way to spend the afternoon, chatting with friends and eating all sorts of 'goodies'. Happy to see the tiny Hummingbird that has been visiting your garden, and lovely to see the bright yellow American Goldfinch. It was quite windy, too, which felt wonderful on a hot day.
Six days ago, on 14 July 2017, it was a hot day, but our bio-blitz of the Rusty Bucket Ranch, west of Calgary, started at 8:00 am, to catch the coolest part of the day. This was the first time we had been there and we had such a great morning. What a beautiful place and area! Thirteen of us gathered to explore part of the land belonging to Liz and Alan Breakey - 160 acres, mostly wooded, with many streams feeding into Bragg Creek.
The gorgeous garden itself was full of bright, healthy plants. Once we were in the forest, we came across all sorts of wildflower species and even a few fungi and slime molds. We all met the challenges of small, hidden logs along the trail, lying in wait to trip anyone who was not paying careful attention. One of the last areas was a bog, where the small, partly hidden pools of water were difficult or impossible to avoid - I nearly lost a shoe in there, lol! On the final stretch back to the house, we caught sight of a distant buck with its new growth of antlers; also, a few of the sheep that the Breakeys raise. A really fun walk for us all, with all sorts of things of interest. Many thanks to Liz and Alan for inviting us to the Rusty Bucket Ranch to explore and list all species seen! Thank you, too, for the very warm welcome you gave us, and for the muffins, delicious lemon drink, and coffee!
After the morning's hike, we all returned to the city and thoroughly enjoyed a BBQ lunch put on by our botany/birding friends, Dorothy and Stephen. I hadn't had a burger in years - and this one was so good! Thanks so much, Dorothy and Stephen, for all the time and effort you put into this. What a lovely way to spend the afternoon, chatting with friends and eating all sorts of 'goodies'. Happy to see the tiny Hummingbird that has been visiting your garden, and lovely to see the bright yellow American Goldfinch. It was quite windy, too, which felt wonderful on a hot day.
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"Hi Anne! I really want to take a look at these pink prairie plants that seem to be quite widespread in the Prairie Provinces. It's always been treated as C. miniata, but, as in this plant, many features just don't fit that species. It likely deserves some sort of formal name, as a new species or var. Maybe next season I'll get up there. Several other plants I want to look at in SE B.C, and adjacent Alberta. I was going to come this year, but California was SO good, I had to go there! I'll be sure to let you know!"
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