An old red barn
You looking at me, lady?
Semipalmated Plover / Charadrius semipalmatus?
Four in a row
Green Honeycreeper female, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Hosta flowers
Patiently waiting
Swainson's Hawk juvenile
Canada Warbler / Cardellina canadensis
Golden-mantled Ground Squirrel
Yellowlegs
Killdeer / Charadrius vociferus
A filtered Poppy
Swainson's Hawk juvenile
Sheep on a smoky day
Checkered Skipper sp.?
American Goldfinch eating Sunflower seeds
Green-winged Teal and Black-bellied Plover
Bee on Sunflower
Hybrid Mourning Dove-Eurasian Collared Dove
Sneezewort Yarrow / Achillea ptarmica
Black Meadowhawk
Pika, on a windy day
Hanging on
On the way down
Remember to stop and smell the .... wildflowers
Blue-gray Tanager / Thraupis episcopus, Asa Wright…
Handsome Wood Ducks
When the last petal has fallen
Sleepy Short-eared Owl
Scenery along Highway 40, Kananaskis
Golden-mantled Ground Squirrel in a Pika's cave
Red Birds in a Tree plant
Old country schoolhouse
A favourite road
Painted Lady
Waiting for the herd to descend
Wide angle on the Bighorn Sheep ridge
Keeping watch over the herd
Small and fast .... and adorable
The beauty of our mountains
Clouds over the mountains
Short-eared Owl
An unusual shape
A road less travelled
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The beauty of wheat (?)


All three photos posted this morning were taken yesterday, when I at last did a long-overdue drive east of the city. This is my least favourite direction in which to drive from the city and I have to say it stresses me out so much. Once I reach the back roads, I can relax a little, but I am always worried about getting lost.
The best few minutes in the five and a half hours I was out were when I came across a beautiful Swainson's Hawk juvenile (hope I have identified it correctly!), perched on a fence post. Finally, a hawk perched along a back road, where I could stop. Amazingly, not one single vehicle came along while I was there. It felt so good to get a few photos of a hawk in the wild, unlike the ones I photographed recently at the Alberta Birds of Prey Centre. I had really hoped I would see a perched hawk and, in fact, I had seen another one earlier in my drive, though that one was more distant. That's all I needed, to make me feel happy and that the drive was worthwhile.
For the first time ever, and after having driven past the location other times, I stopped at Weed Lake (south end). Lots of birds, but most were really too far to photograph. Still, I was happy to see a Killdeer and what I think was a little Semipalmated Plover close enough to get a few shots. One disturbing thing I found on the path was a large dead, white bird with a long neck. There were two cylindrical canisters on top of the rotting body - looks like these were empty fireworks. No idea how long this body had been there, or if anyone else has seen it there. Added later: apparently, this dead Swan has been there since at least April of this year.
The best few minutes in the five and a half hours I was out were when I came across a beautiful Swainson's Hawk juvenile (hope I have identified it correctly!), perched on a fence post. Finally, a hawk perched along a back road, where I could stop. Amazingly, not one single vehicle came along while I was there. It felt so good to get a few photos of a hawk in the wild, unlike the ones I photographed recently at the Alberta Birds of Prey Centre. I had really hoped I would see a perched hawk and, in fact, I had seen another one earlier in my drive, though that one was more distant. That's all I needed, to make me feel happy and that the drive was worthwhile.
For the first time ever, and after having driven past the location other times, I stopped at Weed Lake (south end). Lots of birds, but most were really too far to photograph. Still, I was happy to see a Killdeer and what I think was a little Semipalmated Plover close enough to get a few shots. One disturbing thing I found on the path was a large dead, white bird with a long neck. There were two cylindrical canisters on top of the rotting body - looks like these were empty fireworks. No idea how long this body had been there, or if anyone else has seen it there. Added later: apparently, this dead Swan has been there since at least April of this year.
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