Ruddy Turnstone, Tobago
White-lined Tanager, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Bear Grass, Waterton Lakes National Park
Wood Ducks
Sedge
Ghost Reservoir
A favourite old barn
Blue-gray Tanager, Trinidad
Wild European Rabbit
White-necked Jacobin male, Trinidad
The process of decay
Sunflower detail
A touch of blue
Hooded Merganser male
Ring-necked Pheasant male / Phasianus colchicus
Purple Honeycreeper, Trinidad
Brewer's Blackbird / Euphagus cyanocephalus
Jackrabbit
Gathering lunch for his babies
Hanging on - Gaillardia
Wild Bergamot / Monarda fistulosa
A memory of Waterton from before the fire
White-necked Jacobin female, Trinidad
When the world turns white
Evening Grosbeak male
Donkey guardians of the old schoolhouse
Agouti, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Green Honeycreeper male, Trinidad
Tropical plant, Asa Wright, Trinidad
Red-breasted Meadowlark / Sturnella militaris, Tri…
Purple Honeycreeper male, Trinidad
Black-capped Chickadee
New birding blind in a local park
Violaceous Euphonia / Euphonia violacea
Sleepy Great Horned Owl
One of two Coyotes
Crested Oropendola, Trinidad
Winter's artwork
Glaucous Gull / Larus hyperboreus
Great Gray Owl
Common Redpoll
European Starling / Sturnus vulgaris
Burrowing owl in the wild
Crested Oropendola, Trinidad
Palm Tanager, Trinidad
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Shoo-fly / Nicandra physalodes


On 16 September 2015, I called in at the Reader Rock Garden after my volunteer shift. There seemed to be more flowers in bloom than on my previous visit.
Shoo Fly, Shoofly or Shoo-fly, Peruvian Bluebell, even Apple of Peru ... take your pick, lol. It is native to Peru, and it is known elsewhere as an introduced species and sometimes a weed. It is also kept as an ornamental plant, as at the Reader Rock Garden, where this photo was taken. This plant is a member of the Nightshade family, Solanaceae. The green or black-mottled calyces have always fascinated me. Branches of the mature Chinese lantern-style fruits can be dried and used for winter decoration.
There were also quite a few distant small birds flitting from tree to tree at one point. They were impossible to see well enough to get photos or IDs - - a little Hermit Thrush was the only bird I managed to photograph.
I also noticed a Jack Rabbit in the Garden and then, when I drove through the adjoining cemetery, it or another one was running in among the gravestones. When it saw my car coming, it froze and waited till I had moved on.
Shoo Fly, Shoofly or Shoo-fly, Peruvian Bluebell, even Apple of Peru ... take your pick, lol. It is native to Peru, and it is known elsewhere as an introduced species and sometimes a weed. It is also kept as an ornamental plant, as at the Reader Rock Garden, where this photo was taken. This plant is a member of the Nightshade family, Solanaceae. The green or black-mottled calyces have always fascinated me. Branches of the mature Chinese lantern-style fruits can be dried and used for winter decoration.
There were also quite a few distant small birds flitting from tree to tree at one point. They were impossible to see well enough to get photos or IDs - - a little Hermit Thrush was the only bird I managed to photograph.
I also noticed a Jack Rabbit in the Garden and then, when I drove through the adjoining cemetery, it or another one was running in among the gravestones. When it saw my car coming, it froze and waited till I had moved on.
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