Visit to the Oilbird cave, Trinidad
Oilbird, Asa Wright Nature Centre, Trinidad
Fungi seen on the Oilbird hike, Trinidad
Pachystachys coccinea?
Purple Honeycreeper male, Asa Wright, Trinidad
The Bow River at Carburn Park
Hooded Merganser male
Winter walk in the park
Joy
Townsend's Solitaire / Myadestes townsendi
Crested Oropendola / Psarocolius decumanus, Trinid…
Delicate fungi, Trinidad
Tree stump covered in fungi, Trinidad
Bananaquit / Coereba flaveola, Trinidad
Fungi along the Oilbirds trail
Heliconia, Lobster-claws, Asa Wright, Trinidad
White-necked Jacobin, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Golden Tegu, Asa Wright, Trinidad
White-necked Jacobin female, Trinidad
Torch Ginger, Asa Wright, Trinidad
A Snowy Owl makes all the difference
Clouds over the Prairies
A most welcome find
Silver-beaked Tanager female, Trinidad
Long-tongued Bat, Trinidad
Caught in the act
Immature White-necked Jacobin
Rural decay
Northern Pygmy-owl
An upside-down kind of life
Cute and curious
A glimpse through the trees
In memory of my daughter
Pretty in the sunshine
On a New Year's Day Bird Count
On a brutally cold New Year's Day Count
Happy New Year, everyone!
An old dog named Fang
On a Christmas Bird Count, -23C
Handsome Pine Grosbeak male
Jackrabbit, seen in my car headlights
Red barn in winter
Love a Llama
Common Redpoll
Last night's snow .... and -29°C (windchill -38°C)
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A rural Christmas


HELP is needed to find the two amazing men who stopped (in brutal, -30C weather) to help save the life of one of our birder/photographer friends, who was in a very serious vehicle accident east of the city. Mike (Mike Kelly on Flickr), who is in hospital with a broken jaw, broken wrist, and two broken legs, really, really wants to meet his two rescuers so that he can thank them in person for saving his life. Everyone is using the social media on Facebook in an attempt to find these two good Samaritans, and I thought I would add it here, too, in the hope that someone out there might just know the hoped-for information. It would mean so much to Mike! His many friends would be so happy, too. I will add the link to today's Global TV News article. Of course, it is possible that the two rescuers might have seen the News and hopefully come forward. Mike thinks that one of them might live in British Columbia, the province to the west of us.
globalnews.ca/news/3949198/calgarian-who-barely-survived-...
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I happened to come across this photo last night while searching for certain other shots. Kind of late for Christmas, but I thought it was such a cute scene.
On 2 February 2014, a group of us went on an annual birding trip west of the city, that is normally to the Sibbald Creek area, Exshaw and Harvie Heights. This year, though, we drove around the Water Valley area (NW of Calgary) first and then went straight on to Harvie Heights. Very few birds to be seen in either area, but of course it was wonderful to get out to these places, in good company. At Harvie Heights, near Canmore (near Banff), there were no Grosbeaks, no Clark's Nutcrackers, etc.. The same has been true for so many walks and outings these days - where are all the birds? The day before this trip, a group of people went to a local city park and, in just under three hours of walking, saw only five species of bird.
The following is the report complied by trip leader, Andrew Hart. Thanks for a great day, as always, Andrew!
"Twelve of us set out on a sunny but chilly day with temperatures ranging from -14 deg C to -8 deg C. We started off by driving around in the area to the south of Water Valley as far as the Bates Ranch. We were hoping to find owls, but despite visiting several known previous sighting locations, came up short. We did see several Ravens and Magpies, some Blue Jays (at the Winchell Lake Estates), Black Capped Chickadees, a Rough Legged Hawk, Pileated Woodpecker, and Hairy Woodpecker. We also saw a Coyote.
After lunch we went further south and encountered a family of 6-8 Gray Jays near the Bates Ranch.
We then headed to Harvie Heights. En route we passed a road-killed deer swarming with 20 Ravens, and a Coyote angling to see them off. We also saw two Bald Eagles.
At Harvie Heights we saw several Mountain and Black Capped Chickadees, a Brown Creeper, Pine Siskins, Dark Eyed Juncos, and Downy and Hairy Woodpeckers (the Woodpeckers seen by Phil Quin at a feeder by the hamlet entrance that the rest of us drove past). No Pine Grosbeaks (not that much of a surprise this year) and no Clark's Nutcrackers (more of a surprise).
The incredible sunlit snow blanketed scenery made up for the relative shortcomings in bird species."
globalnews.ca/news/3949198/calgarian-who-barely-survived-...
*********************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************************
I happened to come across this photo last night while searching for certain other shots. Kind of late for Christmas, but I thought it was such a cute scene.
On 2 February 2014, a group of us went on an annual birding trip west of the city, that is normally to the Sibbald Creek area, Exshaw and Harvie Heights. This year, though, we drove around the Water Valley area (NW of Calgary) first and then went straight on to Harvie Heights. Very few birds to be seen in either area, but of course it was wonderful to get out to these places, in good company. At Harvie Heights, near Canmore (near Banff), there were no Grosbeaks, no Clark's Nutcrackers, etc.. The same has been true for so many walks and outings these days - where are all the birds? The day before this trip, a group of people went to a local city park and, in just under three hours of walking, saw only five species of bird.
The following is the report complied by trip leader, Andrew Hart. Thanks for a great day, as always, Andrew!
"Twelve of us set out on a sunny but chilly day with temperatures ranging from -14 deg C to -8 deg C. We started off by driving around in the area to the south of Water Valley as far as the Bates Ranch. We were hoping to find owls, but despite visiting several known previous sighting locations, came up short. We did see several Ravens and Magpies, some Blue Jays (at the Winchell Lake Estates), Black Capped Chickadees, a Rough Legged Hawk, Pileated Woodpecker, and Hairy Woodpecker. We also saw a Coyote.
After lunch we went further south and encountered a family of 6-8 Gray Jays near the Bates Ranch.
We then headed to Harvie Heights. En route we passed a road-killed deer swarming with 20 Ravens, and a Coyote angling to see them off. We also saw two Bald Eagles.
At Harvie Heights we saw several Mountain and Black Capped Chickadees, a Brown Creeper, Pine Siskins, Dark Eyed Juncos, and Downy and Hairy Woodpeckers (the Woodpeckers seen by Phil Quin at a feeder by the hamlet entrance that the rest of us drove past). No Pine Grosbeaks (not that much of a surprise this year) and no Clark's Nutcrackers (more of a surprise).
The incredible sunlit snow blanketed scenery made up for the relative shortcomings in bird species."
Nouchetdu38 has particularly liked this photo
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