Milk chocolate curls
Smoke + sun = orange
Red-tailed Hawk / Buteo jamaicensis
First the flower, then the bokeh, then the bee
Wood Frog
Yellowjacket
Pink crinkles
It's beginning to look a lot like autumn
You take what you can get
Heading into fall
Between the distant trees
Pinkish
Pink Hollyhock / Alcea
Many-flowered Monkeyflower / Mimulus floribundus
Beauty on a rotting log
Ruby-throated Hummingbird / Archilochus colubris
Yarrow with tiny visitor
A change of subject
Coral fungus
Orange False Dandelion / Agoseris aurantiaca
A view at Marsland Basin
Beauty - flower and bokeh
Comb Tooth fungus / Hericium coralloides
Thimbleberry / Rubus parviflorus
Young Brown-headed Cowbirds
An attractive little cluster
The beauty of Pinedrops
Mystery flower
Wood Nymph sp.
Gathering at the feeder
Emerald waters
Common Tansy / Tanacetum vulgare
Busy little Muskrat
In a field of bokeh
Canyon Church Camp, Waterton Lakes National Park
Willowherb / Epilobium sp.
Look what I can do!
Decorating a tree
Strawberry Blite / Chenopodium capitatum
Yellow Scabious with bee and bokeh
Doing their best
Insect galls on Rose leaves
Keeping each other company
Bear claw marks on a tree trunk
Peony seedpods
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Keywords
Authorizations, license
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145 visits
Small and cute
On 23 July 2015, five of us spent the day botanizing the land belonging to Darryl Teskey, SW of Calgary and W of Millarville (maybe a 40-minute drive from the city). This was the first time I had been there and I'm so glad I went - I would have missed all sorts of things, including a family of Ruffed Grouse and several fungi. The Grouse are rufous-morph, I believe, and we startled them when we were walking through the forest in their direction. Usually, you don't see Grouse because they are so well-hidden. When you get fairly close (sometimes very close) to them, they suddenly "explode" from the tangle of shrubs and plants of the forest floor, making ones heart beat fast!
The family has four beautiful dogs of various breeds (at least, we only saw four). They were all very friendly, including this little one.
Our walk took us over grassland and through forest, many places treacherous with so many fallen logs which were often barely visible. I have never, ever seen so many tiny Skipper butterflies - there must have been hundreds or even thousands of these bright orange beauties that were flying or perched on flowers of every colour.
Fortunately, the rain stayed away until we started driving back to Calgary. Quite a lot of black clouds, reminding me of the tornado that passed through Calgary just the day before (22 July 2015).
Our purpose, as always, was to find and list everything that we saw - wildflowers, trees, grasses, birds, insects, fungi, etc.. Our leader then compiles an extensive list of our finds and this is later sent to the landowner, along with any photos that we might take. Always a win/win situation, as the landowner then has a much better idea of just what is on his property, and we have a most enjoyable day. This summer, with so many botanizing outings like this, plus two 3-day trips to Waterton Lakes National Park, I am so behind with the photos that I need to edit and e-mail!
The family has four beautiful dogs of various breeds (at least, we only saw four). They were all very friendly, including this little one.
Our walk took us over grassland and through forest, many places treacherous with so many fallen logs which were often barely visible. I have never, ever seen so many tiny Skipper butterflies - there must have been hundreds or even thousands of these bright orange beauties that were flying or perched on flowers of every colour.
Fortunately, the rain stayed away until we started driving back to Calgary. Quite a lot of black clouds, reminding me of the tornado that passed through Calgary just the day before (22 July 2015).
Our purpose, as always, was to find and list everything that we saw - wildflowers, trees, grasses, birds, insects, fungi, etc.. Our leader then compiles an extensive list of our finds and this is later sent to the landowner, along with any photos that we might take. Always a win/win situation, as the landowner then has a much better idea of just what is on his property, and we have a most enjoyable day. This summer, with so many botanizing outings like this, plus two 3-day trips to Waterton Lakes National Park, I am so behind with the photos that I need to edit and e-mail!
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