Ruddy Duck female
Splash of colour
Swainson's Hawk / Buteo swainsoni
Bear Grass
Day Lily
Western Meadowlark
No longer a home
Little green hearts of White Camas
Treasures in the yellow strip
Yesterday's barn
A wild Sunflower from a gravel road
Anyone have a comb?
Out in the middle of nowhere
Bison with smoke haze
Who can resist a Burrowing Owl?
Ohio Buckeye or ?
I fell in love ....
Yesterday's main find : (
Painted Lady
Love those hills
Dragonfly
Borage
Domestic Duck
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Star-flowered Solomon's Seal / Maianthemum stellat…
Purple Honeycreeper male, Trinidad
Bear Grass bud
Stellar's Jay juvenile
Wild European Rabbit
Common Tansy / Tanacetum vulgare
My new neighbour?
Common Nighthawk
Bear Grass with Crab Spider and prey
Red-winged Blackbird juvenile
Nodding/Musk Thistle / Carduus nutans
Cameron Falls, Waterton Lakes National Park
Western Wood Lily
Here comes dessert!
Little country church
Helmeted Guineafowl / Numida meleagris
Forever cute
Once a home
Western Grebe
American Robin with food for his babies
White-tailed Deer
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Evening Grosbeak


I am absolutely dragging my feet at the moment - far too hot and tired to make the effort to do anything. Hence, my late posting today and still, a few hours later, trying to get descriptions, etc. added. Though today's temperature is a few degrees cooler, the inside of my place isn't cooling down yet. The whole summer has been so hot, apart from the odd day, and everywhere is bone dry. Friends went to Kananaskis the other day, returning to two locations where we found so many beautiful mushroom last summer, and they were unable to find any at all. This year is not going to be a good year for them, unfortunately.
What a great day our group of four people had on 28 May 2017, taking part in the annual May Species Count. We travelled in just one car, which worked out well. On the 2016 May Species Count, we had been unable to find a Great Gray Owl, but I drove back to the area the next day and found two of them. No matter how many times I see one of these owls and no matter how many hundreds/thousands of photos I've taken of them, each owl is just as exciting as the very first. So, it was a thrill this year to see one of these spectacular owls.
One of the places we stopped at was friend Barb's acreage, where I had been eight days earlier. That day, we had seen beautiful Evening Grosbeaks and a Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Purple Finch, etc.. Yesterday, there were fewer birds to be seen, but this male Evening Grosbeak certainly caught our attention.
We saw a total of 72 species during the day! Amazing, really. Three pairs of great eyes - plus me : ) Part of our Count covers some of my favourite roads, so it is not surprising that I enjoy it so much. Once the Count had finished, I drove a few of the roads again on my way home, mainly focusing on two pairs of Mountain Bluebirds that I had enjoyed watching last year. Needless to say, I went home feeling very happy after a long day of birding, and oh, so tired!
"The count goes May 27-28: Calgary birders have been out in force every May since 1979, contributing to a broad census of the constantly changing patterns of bird distributions in North America. The count circle is the same as previous years, extending from Olds to Nanton, and from Exshaw to Standard, and includes a variety of environments." From NatureCalgary.
What a great day our group of four people had on 28 May 2017, taking part in the annual May Species Count. We travelled in just one car, which worked out well. On the 2016 May Species Count, we had been unable to find a Great Gray Owl, but I drove back to the area the next day and found two of them. No matter how many times I see one of these owls and no matter how many hundreds/thousands of photos I've taken of them, each owl is just as exciting as the very first. So, it was a thrill this year to see one of these spectacular owls.
One of the places we stopped at was friend Barb's acreage, where I had been eight days earlier. That day, we had seen beautiful Evening Grosbeaks and a Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Purple Finch, etc.. Yesterday, there were fewer birds to be seen, but this male Evening Grosbeak certainly caught our attention.
We saw a total of 72 species during the day! Amazing, really. Three pairs of great eyes - plus me : ) Part of our Count covers some of my favourite roads, so it is not surprising that I enjoy it so much. Once the Count had finished, I drove a few of the roads again on my way home, mainly focusing on two pairs of Mountain Bluebirds that I had enjoyed watching last year. Needless to say, I went home feeling very happy after a long day of birding, and oh, so tired!
"The count goes May 27-28: Calgary birders have been out in force every May since 1979, contributing to a broad census of the constantly changing patterns of bird distributions in North America. The count circle is the same as previous years, extending from Olds to Nanton, and from Exshaw to Standard, and includes a variety of environments." From NatureCalgary.
, Treasa Ui Cionaodha, Roger Dodger, and 5 other people have particularly liked this photo
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