Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone
Paper Kite
Forgetmenot Pond
Heat, steam and colour
Change of season
Orange beauty with spots
Vastness
Sunset over the Grand Tetons
Time for a quick rest
Splash of colour for a cold day
The scenic charm of the Grand Tetons
Beauty on beauty
Long-tailed Duck females / Clangula hyemalis
A fancy fungus
Long-tailed Duck / Clangula hyemalis
Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone National Park
West Thumb Geyser Basin, Yellowstone
For yet another snowy day
King Penguin
Goat's-beard
The colours of summer
A touch of blue
Great Gray Owl from 2012
Northern Hawk Owl juevnile - from the archives
Glacier National Park in fall colours
My Father - Tom Carden Bassindale
Creating my own sunshine - for me and for you : )
Earth Star fungus
Before the great melt
Mix of colours
Northern Saw-whet Owl
Eyes wide open
Beauty in the horse world
Northern Saw-whet Owl / Aegolius acadicus
Fluffed
Woodland encounter
Northern Saw-whet Owl
And up comes the pellet
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174 visits
Hanging out
Humboldt Penguins outside at the Calgary Zoo, on 4 October 2012.
"There are 10 Humboldt Penguins (Spheniscus humboldti) at the Zoo. The status of this species is IUCN Red List: Vulnerable. Current Impacts on their numbers are El Niño and La Niña weather patterns, predators, tourism, competition with fisheries, habitat change. Humboldt penguins groom their feathers before breakfast. They rub oil from a gland at the base of the tail into their feathers and the edges of their wings. Humboldts also groom each other. This species digs nesting burrows in thick deposits of seabird guano (droppings)."
storage.canoe.ca/v1/suns-prod-images/file/1297237247336_C...
"There are 10 Humboldt Penguins (Spheniscus humboldti) at the Zoo. The status of this species is IUCN Red List: Vulnerable. Current Impacts on their numbers are El Niño and La Niña weather patterns, predators, tourism, competition with fisheries, habitat change. Humboldt penguins groom their feathers before breakfast. They rub oil from a gland at the base of the tail into their feathers and the edges of their wings. Humboldts also groom each other. This species digs nesting burrows in thick deposits of seabird guano (droppings)."
storage.canoe.ca/v1/suns-prod-images/file/1297237247336_C...
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