Sacred Lotus / Nelumbo nucifera
Raymond Nadeau's lichens
Sunlit, distant beauty
Banded Orange / Dryadula phaetusa
Emma Neal and babies, taken in 1914
Male Downy Woodpecker putting on a display
One day less till spring and summer
Common Redpoll
A pleasant memory
Cutely curious
Mid-winter colours
Sun sparkles and ice
Eyes wide open
Tiny cluster
Mocker Swallowtail / Papilio dardanus
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Tightly shut
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Julia Heliconian / Dryas iulia
He: Honey, I'm home - She: what took you so long?
Baby Anne
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Fall colour bokeh
I'm not getting MY feet cold and wet
White-tailed Jackrabbit / Lepus townsendii
My paternal Great Grandmother
Cyclanthaceae, Carludovica palmata
Breathtaking beauty
Atlas Moth details
Her very first experience
Common Redpoll
Mosquito on a Morel
Northern Saw-whet Owl
Woodland encounter
Queen of the Lily Pad
My parents in 1939
Northern Saw-whet Owl / Aegolius acadicus
The only time I look tall and slim, ha
Isabella Tiger / Eueides isabella
Fluffed
Markhor
Alice Gladwell Bassindale, my paternal Grandmother…
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226 visits
And up comes the pellet
Horribly blurry, but thought I'd post it anyway, as not everyone gets the chance to witness a tiny Northern Saw-whet Owl coughing up an enormous pellet! Not sure if the owl's movement caused the blurriness - or maybe it was because I was so excited that this was happening, that I didn't keep the camera steady : ) Photographed at Carburn Park on January 26th.
Size: Length 17 to 21.9cm (6.7-8.6") Wingspan 45.9 to 56.3cm (18.1-22.2").
Weight 75-110g (2.6-3.9oz) - Females are slightly larger than males.
"A pellet, in ornithology, is the mass of undigested parts of a bird's food that some bird species occasionally regurgitate. The contents of a bird's pellet depend on its diet, but can include the exoskeletons of insects, indigestible plant matter, bones, fur, feathers, bills, claws, and teeth. In falconry, the pellet is called a casting.
The passing of pellets allows a bird to remove indigestible material from its proventriculus, or glandular stomach. In birds of prey, the regurgitation of pellets serves the bird's health in another way, by "scouring" parts of the digestive tract, including the gullet. Pellets are formed within six to ten hours of a meal in the bird's gizzard (muscular stomach)."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pellet_(ornithology)
Size: Length 17 to 21.9cm (6.7-8.6") Wingspan 45.9 to 56.3cm (18.1-22.2").
Weight 75-110g (2.6-3.9oz) - Females are slightly larger than males.
"A pellet, in ornithology, is the mass of undigested parts of a bird's food that some bird species occasionally regurgitate. The contents of a bird's pellet depend on its diet, but can include the exoskeletons of insects, indigestible plant matter, bones, fur, feathers, bills, claws, and teeth. In falconry, the pellet is called a casting.
The passing of pellets allows a bird to remove indigestible material from its proventriculus, or glandular stomach. In birds of prey, the regurgitation of pellets serves the bird's health in another way, by "scouring" parts of the digestive tract, including the gullet. Pellets are formed within six to ten hours of a meal in the bird's gizzard (muscular stomach)."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pellet_(ornithology)
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