Flowers make the difference
The simplicity of old times
Always love a Sunflower
A mix of colours
Castor Bean
A mountain of flowers
Sunflower details
Purple trio of Verbena
Pink and pretty
Don't throw away your old bath tub
Orange on green
Flower close-up
Jackrabbit nibbling on Pineappleweed / Matricaria…
Hidden in the forest - an old GMC van
Long-winged Fly, Diptera sp.? on Wild Strawberry f…
Bronze Bells / Stenanthium occidentale
A mushroom day is a good day : )
Western Wood Lily / Lilium philadelphicum
Puffball
Indian Paintbrush / Castilleja miniata
Fragile Bladder Fern / Cystopteris fragilis, growi…
Sapsucker holes
Horsefly / Tabanidae?
Mourning Dove / Zenaida macroura
European Starling / Sturnus vulgaris
Wilson's Snipe / Gallinago delicata
Brewer's Blackbird female? with insects for babies
Red-winged Blackbird
Wilson's Snipe
Brewer's Blackbird female?
Yellow-headed Blackbird female
Brewer's Blackbird
American White Pelicans on the Bow River
Sainfoin / Onobrychis
American White Pelicans on the Bow River
Sainfoin / Onobrychis
Beaver / Castor canadensis
Wild Licorice?
Beaver across the river
Sainfoin / Onobrychis
Beaver swimming in the Bow River
Cicer Milkvetch?
Fungi family - and slime mold?
Purple/Water Avens seedhead
Fungi group
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European Starling / Sturnus vulgaris


JUST ONE MORE FULL DAY AND THEN YOU WILL HAVE YOUR TWO DOCTOR APPOINTMENTS, PAM! WILL BE THINKING OF YOU, HOPING THAT YOU GET GOOD NEWS. HUGS XXX
The 10 photos and a video that I have just posted today, 26 July 2019, were all taken during a quick drive SW of the city, on 8 July 2019. Many of the 'usual' birds, though I was also happy to see a European Starling closer than I normally see them.
I have fallen behind again with editing and posting photos form walks or outings, and I have a few trips that are coming up in the next little while. Hard to believe that August is almost here and summer is flying by. Our weeks of endless rainy days seem to have come to an end for now, thank goodness.
"Starlings were brought to North America from Europe in the late 1890’s. Since that time, they have greatly increased in number and have spread across most of the North American continent. In Alberta, starlings can be a nuisance to livestock producers. They consume and contaminate livestock feed and water. They also “whitewash” buildings, facilities and animals with their droppings. In winter, flocks of up to 2,000 birds can consume 1 to 2 tonnes of feed in a month and can contaminate or spoil an additional 500 to 1,000 kg of feed. Worse still, starlings may selectively eat the high-protein portion of protein-supplemented livestock feed."
open.alberta.ca/publications/685-6
The 10 photos and a video that I have just posted today, 26 July 2019, were all taken during a quick drive SW of the city, on 8 July 2019. Many of the 'usual' birds, though I was also happy to see a European Starling closer than I normally see them.
I have fallen behind again with editing and posting photos form walks or outings, and I have a few trips that are coming up in the next little while. Hard to believe that August is almost here and summer is flying by. Our weeks of endless rainy days seem to have come to an end for now, thank goodness.
"Starlings were brought to North America from Europe in the late 1890’s. Since that time, they have greatly increased in number and have spread across most of the North American continent. In Alberta, starlings can be a nuisance to livestock producers. They consume and contaminate livestock feed and water. They also “whitewash” buildings, facilities and animals with their droppings. In winter, flocks of up to 2,000 birds can consume 1 to 2 tonnes of feed in a month and can contaminate or spoil an additional 500 to 1,000 kg of feed. Worse still, starlings may selectively eat the high-protein portion of protein-supplemented livestock feed."
open.alberta.ca/publications/685-6
Pam J has particularly liked this photo
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