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Snow Leopard / Panthera uncia
Happy Thanksgiving!
Red Panda / Ailurus fulgens
After our first major snowstorm
Heading into the mountains
Harlequin Duck / Histrionicus histrionicus
Unwanted in early October!
First year Iceland (Thayer's) Gull
Gadwall
Early fall, looking (and feeling) like winter
Yellowlegs - Lesser or Greater?
Unusual metal fence at Chestermere Lake
Vapor trails
Yellowlegs
Female Gadwall
Horned Grebe or Eared Grebe in winter plumage
Chestermere Lake reflections
Ducks and Geese
Wilson's Snipe
Greater White-fronted Geese
Yellowlegs
Early fall birding
Perfectly purple
Japanese Macaque
Gobi, baby Bactrian Camel
Victoria Water Lily / Victoria amazonica
Happy Gobble Gobble weekend!
Fall colours near the Highwood River
Mushrooms galore
Fun to spend time with
Old and weathered
Pink Showy Cinquefoil
Our majestic mountains
Chinese Lantern
Hello, winter!
Jackrabbit
American Pika - such a cutie
Old barn in early fall
Snow Geese & Greater White-fronted Geese
The start of fall in Kananaskis
Spikes against a soft background
Yesterday's treat - Rusty Blackbird female
Artichoke in bloom
Donkey at Marsland Basin
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Greater White-fronted Geese / Larus glaucoides


Yesterday, 6 October 2018, I joined a few birding friends for another day out east of the city. The weather was beautiful, and so different from the trip that was held about a week earlier. As usual, on these bird trips, every bird was far, far away, but I was able to zoom in on these Greater White-fronted Geese. Always a joy to see them when they migrate. The "white-fronted" refers to the patch of white around the bill.
Another bird I was happy to see was a Thayer's Gull. I was thinking that I had never seen one before, or at least not ot get a photo. However, I have just checked my photostream and discovered a photo of a juvenile that I took on 25 March 2018. The Thayer's Gull is now called an Iceland Gull. "The darker-winged “Thayer’s” gull of the west used to be considered a different species; the two were lumped in 2017."
Like many people, I just don't "do" Gulls. A lack of interest in them does seem to be fairly widespread, Yesterday, however, our leader, Terry Korolyk, who is a Gull expert (along with tremendous knowledge on hybrids and all birds/wildlife), found several huge flocks of various Gulls at different locations, along with other bird species, including a few more Rusty Blackbirds (whose numbers are declining). A delight to see a few distant Swans, a Wilson's Snipe, Yellowlegs and an assortment of other shorebirds.
Thank you, Terry, for yet another enjoyable and interesting trip. Thank you, also, for the ride.
Another bird I was happy to see was a Thayer's Gull. I was thinking that I had never seen one before, or at least not ot get a photo. However, I have just checked my photostream and discovered a photo of a juvenile that I took on 25 March 2018. The Thayer's Gull is now called an Iceland Gull. "The darker-winged “Thayer’s” gull of the west used to be considered a different species; the two were lumped in 2017."
Like many people, I just don't "do" Gulls. A lack of interest in them does seem to be fairly widespread, Yesterday, however, our leader, Terry Korolyk, who is a Gull expert (along with tremendous knowledge on hybrids and all birds/wildlife), found several huge flocks of various Gulls at different locations, along with other bird species, including a few more Rusty Blackbirds (whose numbers are declining). A delight to see a few distant Swans, a Wilson's Snipe, Yellowlegs and an assortment of other shorebirds.
Thank you, Terry, for yet another enjoyable and interesting trip. Thank you, also, for the ride.
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