Fish Creek Park on a low-light day
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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
Merlin
Old dolls, Pioneer Acres Museum, Alberta
Once a home
Artichoke flower with different bee species
Bald Eagle / Haliaeetus leucocephalus
A new-to-me old barn
Yesterday's storm
Bighorn Sheep, mom and youngster
A mountain meadow, Kananaskis, Alberta
Same kind of flower as yesterday's
Great Horned Owl on a fence post
Purity
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Fall colours in Fish Creek Park
Happy Thanksgiving!
Kangaroo Apple flowers / Solanum aviculare (?)
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
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Yesterday's Great Horned Owl


Another dreary, overcast day today, with a temperature of 1C (windchill -4C) this morning. Yesterday, 10 October 2017, was much the same, if not worse, but I decided to join friends for a three-hour walk - that included a fair bit of standing - at the east end of Fish Creek Provincial Park. I was hoping that there might still be some fall colour to be seen. Strong winds and snow had removed a lot of the leaves from the trees, but there were still enough to give a golden glow to photos. There is a 70% chance for mixed precipitation this afternoon, so yesterday may have been the last of any good colour.
We had a few good sightings yesterday, including a Great Blue Heron that seemed to have a problem with swallowing a very tiny fish it had caught. It would catch the fish, and then drop it back in the water, and repeated this several times. I don't think it ever did catch and actually eat it. Another fun thing to see was a male Downy Woodpecker that suddenly flew down to someone's hand. Chickadees and Nuthatches were also very aware that we were standing there. They are so busy searching for and collecting food to store away for the long, harsh winter months.
Great Horned Owls nest each year at the east end of the park and have done so for years. I don't know how on earth someone spotted the one we saw yesterday. It was perched far away in a wooded area and was almost impossible to see. If I moved two or three inches to the left or right, the owl was hidden from view. I wanted to add this photo to my albums, just for the record, despite the quality. Even though I have seen endless owls over the years, it is always a good feeling to see one again. I guess I missed the owls in this area back in March or April of this year - too busy with preparations for my trip to Trinidad & Tobago, but also, last winter was so brutal, that I stayed home most of the time..
We had a few good sightings yesterday, including a Great Blue Heron that seemed to have a problem with swallowing a very tiny fish it had caught. It would catch the fish, and then drop it back in the water, and repeated this several times. I don't think it ever did catch and actually eat it. Another fun thing to see was a male Downy Woodpecker that suddenly flew down to someone's hand. Chickadees and Nuthatches were also very aware that we were standing there. They are so busy searching for and collecting food to store away for the long, harsh winter months.
Great Horned Owls nest each year at the east end of the park and have done so for years. I don't know how on earth someone spotted the one we saw yesterday. It was perched far away in a wooded area and was almost impossible to see. If I moved two or three inches to the left or right, the owl was hidden from view. I wanted to add this photo to my albums, just for the record, despite the quality. Even though I have seen endless owls over the years, it is always a good feeling to see one again. I guess I missed the owls in this area back in March or April of this year - too busy with preparations for my trip to Trinidad & Tobago, but also, last winter was so brutal, that I stayed home most of the time..
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