Day 6, Northern Cardinal male, southern Texas
Day 1, statue, Pelican Bay Resort, southern Texas
Day 1, Snowy Egret, southern Texas
Day 1, Thistle sp., southern Texas
Day 1, Thistle sp., southern Texas
Day 1, Thistle sp., southern Texas
Day 1, Thistle / Cirsium horridulum, southern Texa…
Day 1, Thistle / pink form of Cirsium horridulum,…
Day 1, juvenile White Ibis, southern Texas
Day 1, Little Blue Heron juvenile / Egretta caerul…
Day 1, Snowy Egret / Egretta thula, southern Texas
Day 1, Sandhill Cranes, southern Texas
Day 1, Red-tailed Hawk / Buteo jamaicensis, southe…
Day 1, Red-tailed Hawk / Buteo jamaicensis, southe…
Day 1, Red-tailed Hawk / Buteo jamaicensis, southe…
Day 1, Red-tailed Hawk / Buteo jamaicensis, southe…
Day 1, Red-tailed Hawk / Buteo jamaicensis, southe…
Day 1, Red-tailed Hawk / Buteo jamaicensis, southe…
Day 1, Red-tailed Hawk / Buteo jamaicensis, southe…
Day 1, Red-tailed Hawk / Buteo jamaicensis, South…
Day 1, Tricolored Heron / Egretta tricolor
Day 1, Great Blue Heron / Ardea herodias
Day 1, Turkey Vultures / Cathartes aura
Day 6, Green Jay / Cyanocorax yncas, southern Texa…
Day 7, Brown Anole (?) extending dewlap, southern…
Great Gray Owl - from my archives
Short-eared Owl out on a tree limb
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Burrowing Owl, ENDANGERED - from the archives
Kananaskis, through the windshield
Burrowing Owl, ENDANGERED - from the archives
Wilson's Snipe - from the archives
Great Gray Owl - from the archives
Northern Pygmy-owl - from the archives
Great Gray Owl - from the archives
Northern Pygmy-owl - from the archives
Yellow-bellied Marmot - from the archives
Juvenile Swainson's Hawk / Buteo swainsoni
Great Horned Owl / Bubo virginianus
Farm with sheep and a donkey
Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
Long-eared Owl / Asio otus
Is this a Silkie rooster?
Northern Hawk Owl juevnile - from the archives
Barred Owl in FCPP - from the archives
See also...
Flowers & trees of southern Texas, 19-31 March 2019
Flowers & trees of southern Texas, 19-31 March 2019
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
326 visits
Day 7, Hong Kong orchid tree / Bauhinia (blakeana?), southern Texas


Thanks to Ben Caledonia (Flickr member), I now know the ID of the tree that produced this large, beautiful flower - the Hong Kong orchid tree / Bauhinia (blakeana?) or similar. The article, "BBC - Earth: How a weird hybrid plant ended up on the flag of Hong King" makes an interesting read. The flag shows a white flower on a red background. We did see a different tree that had the white flowers, which were just as beautiful. In a comment box below, I have added a photo from 2010, of the Hong Kong Orchid Tree flower that was (is?) growing in the ENMAX Conservatory at the Calgary Zoo.
This tree is a native of the island of Hong Kong, but the true origin of this mysterious plant has only been revealed in recent years. The tree produces no seeds and can only reproduce with human help, by grafting.
www.bbc.com/earth/story/20161209-how-a-weird-hybrid-plant...
Yesterday evening, 31 March 2019, four friends and I arrived back in Calgary after an amazing 13-day birding trip to southern Texas! This morning, I grabbed four photos to give an idea of what kinds of things we saw - four of my better photos, I should add : ) As usual, for me, it was not a trip to photograph just birds, but to capture anything else of interest, of beauty. This included flowers, insects, a few fungi, wild animals, and so on. As always, I missed quite a few of the birds that were seen by my friends. They are excellent birders and spend so much time birding and taking photos, and so are able to spot and capture the tiniest, fastest of birds. I am happy to have seen every bird that I did see! Everything from Whooping Cranes down to a small Yellow-throated Warbler. Unlike on our trip to Ontario and Quebec last year, we were thrilled to see Northern Cardinals close enough to photograph this holiday.
Right now, I can't remember names of places, and I have a huge amount of getting organized with where and when I saw most things. However, I just wanted to let you know I am home, feeling back to being motivated to take photos again, after totally losing interest the last few weeks before we left on this exciting trip.
I used both my old Canon SX60 and my less old Nikon P900 on this trip. The advantage of the P900 is that it has GPS and automatically loads on the map on Flickr. It may not always give an accurate location, but hopefully it will be close enough. Part way through the holiday, it looked like the Canon was taking somewhat better photos than the newer Nikon, so I was using the Canon as my main camera.
First things first, though - I need a mug of coffee and some breakfast before I download the rest of my images to my computer. Such a mixed bag - some reasonable shots and others just about as bad as they could possibly be, but will post them on Flickr for the record. Once again, I will post photos in very roughly the order in which they were taken, to help give me a much better idea of just where we went and what we saw and when.
This tree is a native of the island of Hong Kong, but the true origin of this mysterious plant has only been revealed in recent years. The tree produces no seeds and can only reproduce with human help, by grafting.
www.bbc.com/earth/story/20161209-how-a-weird-hybrid-plant...
Yesterday evening, 31 March 2019, four friends and I arrived back in Calgary after an amazing 13-day birding trip to southern Texas! This morning, I grabbed four photos to give an idea of what kinds of things we saw - four of my better photos, I should add : ) As usual, for me, it was not a trip to photograph just birds, but to capture anything else of interest, of beauty. This included flowers, insects, a few fungi, wild animals, and so on. As always, I missed quite a few of the birds that were seen by my friends. They are excellent birders and spend so much time birding and taking photos, and so are able to spot and capture the tiniest, fastest of birds. I am happy to have seen every bird that I did see! Everything from Whooping Cranes down to a small Yellow-throated Warbler. Unlike on our trip to Ontario and Quebec last year, we were thrilled to see Northern Cardinals close enough to photograph this holiday.
Right now, I can't remember names of places, and I have a huge amount of getting organized with where and when I saw most things. However, I just wanted to let you know I am home, feeling back to being motivated to take photos again, after totally losing interest the last few weeks before we left on this exciting trip.
I used both my old Canon SX60 and my less old Nikon P900 on this trip. The advantage of the P900 is that it has GPS and automatically loads on the map on Flickr. It may not always give an accurate location, but hopefully it will be close enough. Part way through the holiday, it looked like the Canon was taking somewhat better photos than the newer Nikon, so I was using the Canon as my main camera.
First things first, though - I need a mug of coffee and some breakfast before I download the rest of my images to my computer. Such a mixed bag - some reasonable shots and others just about as bad as they could possibly be, but will post them on Flickr for the record. Once again, I will post photos in very roughly the order in which they were taken, to help give me a much better idea of just where we went and what we saw and when.
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.