Happy Thanksgiving!
Fall colours in Fish Creek Park
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Purity
Great Horned Owl on a fence post
Same kind of flower as yesterday's
A mountain meadow, Kananaskis, Alberta
Yesterday's Great Horned Owl
Fish Creek Park on a low-light day
Friendly visitor
Impressive peak in Kananaskis - Mt. Sparrowhawk?
Side by side
Cosmos beauty
Old barn
Kohleria tubiflora, Trinidad
Yellow Oriole, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Great Blue Heron, fishing
Complete with little red birdhouse
Great Horned Owl juvenile
Ring-billed Gull / Larus delawarensis
At the Oilbird (Steatornis caripensis) cave, Trini…
Oilbird / Steatornis caripensis, Trinidad
Cockshutt tractor, Pioneer Acres
Old homestead, Alberta
Cattle drive in the mountains of Kananaskis, Alber…
Heading for the mountains on a hazy morning
Blackened remains of McDougall Memorial United Chu…
Another favourite Alberta barn
Old Minneapolis Moline tractor, Pioneer Acres
Gentians in a friend's garden
The charred remains of McDougall Memorial United C…
Lenticular (?) clouds over the mountains
Common Raven keeping watch
I'm tiny - and BLUE
Spray Lakes, Kananaskis
Fall bokeh
Masterwort / Astrantia major
Kananaskis before the snowstorm
Case steam tractor, Pioneer Acres
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Before the snow arrived
Part of an old miners' camp
Beautiful Mule Deer doe
Things are not always what they seem
A new-to-me old barn
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Kangaroo Apple flowers / Solanum aviculare (?)


"Solanum aviculare, commonly called poroporo (New Zealand), kangaroo apple (Australia), or New Zealand nightshade, is a soft-wooded shrub native to New Zealand and the east coast of Australia.
Its hermaphroditic (having both male and female organs) flowers are white, mauve to blue-violet, 25–40 mm (0.98–1.6 in) wide, and are followed by berries 10–15 mm (0.39–0.59 in) wide that are poisonous while green, but edible once orange.
Solanum aviculare grows in rainforests, wet forests and rainforest margins on clay soils." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solanum_aviculare
www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamental/shrubs/kangaroo-apple...
On the day I took this photo, 8 September 2017, I decided on the spur of the moment, to drive south to the Saskatoon Farm. I wasn't sure what I would be doing that weekend and wanted to make sure I went there to buy a few of their vegetables and fruit. I knew that a weekend would be a much busier time and definitely wanted to avoid that. I also wanted to photograph a few of their beautiful Artichoke flowers before they were all past their prime. These flowers were very popular with the bees, which was so good to see.
As usual, I wandered round the grounds with my camera, catching one of the cats, one of the dogs, and a few of the chickens, an old tractor, as well as flowers. I never return home with an empty memory card when I visit this place.
Unfortunately, it was a smoky day (what's new?) with the air quality rating an unpleasant High Risk level. In fact, I almost turned back before I was half way there.
This interesting place is maybe a 25-minute drive SE from the southern edge of Calgary. You can collect your own Saskatoon berries in season, look around their outside green houses, and their inside gift shop full of unusual things, and buy special baking, jams, teas and so on. They also have a restaurant that offers great food.
www.saskatoonfarm.com/
We had snow this morning, 8 October 2017 - all five minutes of it : ) I don't mind that kind of snow. Our temperature shortly before noon is 3C (windchill -3C).
Its hermaphroditic (having both male and female organs) flowers are white, mauve to blue-violet, 25–40 mm (0.98–1.6 in) wide, and are followed by berries 10–15 mm (0.39–0.59 in) wide that are poisonous while green, but edible once orange.
Solanum aviculare grows in rainforests, wet forests and rainforest margins on clay soils." From Wikipedia.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solanum_aviculare
www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamental/shrubs/kangaroo-apple...
On the day I took this photo, 8 September 2017, I decided on the spur of the moment, to drive south to the Saskatoon Farm. I wasn't sure what I would be doing that weekend and wanted to make sure I went there to buy a few of their vegetables and fruit. I knew that a weekend would be a much busier time and definitely wanted to avoid that. I also wanted to photograph a few of their beautiful Artichoke flowers before they were all past their prime. These flowers were very popular with the bees, which was so good to see.
As usual, I wandered round the grounds with my camera, catching one of the cats, one of the dogs, and a few of the chickens, an old tractor, as well as flowers. I never return home with an empty memory card when I visit this place.
Unfortunately, it was a smoky day (what's new?) with the air quality rating an unpleasant High Risk level. In fact, I almost turned back before I was half way there.
This interesting place is maybe a 25-minute drive SE from the southern edge of Calgary. You can collect your own Saskatoon berries in season, look around their outside green houses, and their inside gift shop full of unusual things, and buy special baking, jams, teas and so on. They also have a restaurant that offers great food.
www.saskatoonfarm.com/
We had snow this morning, 8 October 2017 - all five minutes of it : ) I don't mind that kind of snow. Our temperature shortly before noon is 3C (windchill -3C).
Rainer Blankermann has particularly liked this photo
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