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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
Rust patterns
A Coyote's last look back
A view from Quarry Lake, Canmore
Yesterday's Bald Eagle
Sun halo over Glenmore Reservoir
Pam and friend
Cosmos beauty
Side by side
Impressive peak in Kananaskis - Mt. Sparrowhawk?
Friendly visitor
Fish Creek Park on a low-light day
Yesterday's Great Horned Owl
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…
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Old barn


My intention on 4 October 2017 had been to drive some of the back roads a bit further north of where I have been two or three times before, almost as far as Olds. However, after finding myself on a couple of muddy, slushy, potholed country roads caused by our recent snow storm, I decided not to risk driving on any others. I ended up stopping and photographing a couple of my absolute favourite barns that I had seen a couple of times before, and was happy to see again. I first discovered the old barn in this photo - or is it a homestead? - on 28 October 2014. Good to see that it is being taken care of, with its new roof.
My final stopping point towards the end of a day of driving N and NW of the city, was at the site where the McDougall Memorial United Church had stood. On 22 May 2017, this beautiful, historic church was burned to the ground by an arsonist. Such a very sad loss! Such a sad sight to see the burnt outer walls, knowing that that was all that was left of this special little church that was almost as old as Canada itself. I loved this little country church, especially the long, photogenic fence line leading up to it from the parking lot. The church was built in Carpenter's Gothic style of architecture. A sign had the following words on it:
"The historic church at the end of this pathway was constructed in 1875. At that time, native people were still hunting bison on the prairies. The young nation of Canada was only eight years old; the Canadian Pacific Railway still nine years in the future. And this church would become the heart of a thriving community, Morleyville, and for a time the largest settlement in what would be southern Alberta.
The story of this church is really the story of Rev. George McDougall who moved to western Canada with his family in 1862 to minister to the fur traders and native people. In 1873, the McDougalls established the first mission in the region and built this church. In doing so, they wrote an important chapter of Alberta's settlement history".
After George McDougall's tragic death in a snowstorm, his body was brought back to the church at Morleyville and laid to rest.
www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=8788
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morley,_Alberta
An enjoyable day out - a barn day, not a birding/wildlife day. I think the only birds I noticed were the usual Ravens. Seeing that snow was once again in our forecast in a few more days, I wanted to get this drive done while the weather was still decent. Today, 13 October 2017, the temperature around noon is 0C (windchill -3C) with a heavily overcast sky. Snow flurries are in the forecast for this afternoon, but I don't know if that is going to happen.
My final stopping point towards the end of a day of driving N and NW of the city, was at the site where the McDougall Memorial United Church had stood. On 22 May 2017, this beautiful, historic church was burned to the ground by an arsonist. Such a very sad loss! Such a sad sight to see the burnt outer walls, knowing that that was all that was left of this special little church that was almost as old as Canada itself. I loved this little country church, especially the long, photogenic fence line leading up to it from the parking lot. The church was built in Carpenter's Gothic style of architecture. A sign had the following words on it:
"The historic church at the end of this pathway was constructed in 1875. At that time, native people were still hunting bison on the prairies. The young nation of Canada was only eight years old; the Canadian Pacific Railway still nine years in the future. And this church would become the heart of a thriving community, Morleyville, and for a time the largest settlement in what would be southern Alberta.
The story of this church is really the story of Rev. George McDougall who moved to western Canada with his family in 1862 to minister to the fur traders and native people. In 1873, the McDougalls established the first mission in the region and built this church. In doing so, they wrote an important chapter of Alberta's settlement history".
After George McDougall's tragic death in a snowstorm, his body was brought back to the church at Morleyville and laid to rest.
www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=8788
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morley,_Alberta
An enjoyable day out - a barn day, not a birding/wildlife day. I think the only birds I noticed were the usual Ravens. Seeing that snow was once again in our forecast in a few more days, I wanted to get this drive done while the weather was still decent. Today, 13 October 2017, the temperature around noon is 0C (windchill -3C) with a heavily overcast sky. Snow flurries are in the forecast for this afternoon, but I don't know if that is going to happen.
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