Remembering a cold, frosty bird count
Smiling in the snow
A view through the bushes
Wild Blue Columbine / Aquilegia brevistyla
A few little wrigglers
Springtime colour
Fort Macleod grain elevator, Alberta
Tall Lungwort / Mertensia paniculata
Well camouflaged, except for those eyes
Rough-Fruited Fairybells / Prosartes trachycarpa
Little church in the valley
McDougall Memorial United Church
A cluster of red barns
Sunlight on distant peaks
Pine Grosbeak enjoying the sun
Blink .... and spring will be here
And they call this winter (in Alberta)?
Great Gray Owl with its catch
A snack for his babies
McDougall Memorial United Church
Natural beauty
03 Short-eared Owl / Asio flammeus
02 Mountain Lady's Slipper / Cypripedium montanum
Narrow strip of light
Feasting on cone seeds
Watchful eye
Poppy art
Four more months to wait
Beautiful bird, but grainy and blurry photo : (
Little forest muncher
A fine old barn
Snowy Owl - just close enough
A most challenging bird
Davisburg Community Church, Alberta
Northern Pygmy-owl, one year ago
Moose cow looking for salt
Old barn with a different style
Focused, listening, watching
Barn-shaped mailbox
Snow Bunting / Plectrophenax nivalis
Clark's Nutcracker
Downy Woodpecker
Glenmore Dam, Calgary, Alberta
When winter really was winter
Varied Thrush
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Yesterday's treat - a Great Gray Owl
I decided to post a distant shot of this beautiful Great Gray Owl, seen yesterday when I made the long drive NW of Calgary. I did take closer photos, but haven't had a chance to go through them yet. Also, I really liked the trees where the owl landed, so would not have cropped this image anyway.
My alarms were set for 5:30 yesterday morning, 28 February 2016, and I was full of hope that for once, I would actually get out of the house good and early. I have such a problem getting myself out very early when I go off for a drive by myself. I think it was something like 8:30 am by the time I dragged myself off the computer and out the front door. To my horror, I discovered that my car door locks had frozen shut and my car was totally covered in a thick layer of extremely stubborn ice, that took me a long time to remove. Half an hour or so later, I was finally ready to start on my trip.
It had been quite a long time since I saw my last Great Gray Owl. Some of my most recent sightings had been one that was in Fish Creek Park in Calgary for a while and my last photos of it were taken on 18 February 2014. There was also a Great Gray at Griffith Woods, Calgary, and some of my photos were taken on 10 February 2014. Saw another owl on our May Species Count out of the city on 25 May 2014. Many of my 'best' sightings and photos of Great Grays were taken NW of Calgary, the last dates being 28 March 2013 and 5 May 2013. After 25 May 2014 .... nothing! So, seeing one yesterday was such a thrill. No matter how many times I see one of these owls and no matter how many hundreds/thousands of photos I've taken, each owl is as exciting as the very first.
When I first reached my approximate destination yesterday morrning, I could see two or three cars way down the road, pulled over at the edge of the road. Often a good sign : ) Sure enough, friends had found an owl, It was on a distant barbed-wire fence post at first, then dove into the snow to try and catch a Meadow Vole. It then flew off into the trees with it and didn't return. After a while, I drove some of the other roads in the area and later drove back to where the owl had been. Amazingly, it was in a distant tree, from where it hunted, moving to a different tree each time it made an unsuccesful dive. Eventually, it did catch a Vole. I left after a while, feeling that it was time to leave the owl 'in peace', and also knowing it was time for me to make the long drive home - approximately 246 km round trip. I think the excitement plus the long drive (on less than three hours' sleep) totally wore me out and I've felt too tired to even write descriptions for today's 'daily three' photos until this evening.
A good thing I went yesterday, as we had fog, a bit of snow and hoarfrost and very slick roads overnight till this afternoon, apparently. There were 234 reported accidents in the city during those hours, none with life-threatening injuries. So glad I didn't have to go out today.
My alarms were set for 5:30 yesterday morning, 28 February 2016, and I was full of hope that for once, I would actually get out of the house good and early. I have such a problem getting myself out very early when I go off for a drive by myself. I think it was something like 8:30 am by the time I dragged myself off the computer and out the front door. To my horror, I discovered that my car door locks had frozen shut and my car was totally covered in a thick layer of extremely stubborn ice, that took me a long time to remove. Half an hour or so later, I was finally ready to start on my trip.
It had been quite a long time since I saw my last Great Gray Owl. Some of my most recent sightings had been one that was in Fish Creek Park in Calgary for a while and my last photos of it were taken on 18 February 2014. There was also a Great Gray at Griffith Woods, Calgary, and some of my photos were taken on 10 February 2014. Saw another owl on our May Species Count out of the city on 25 May 2014. Many of my 'best' sightings and photos of Great Grays were taken NW of Calgary, the last dates being 28 March 2013 and 5 May 2013. After 25 May 2014 .... nothing! So, seeing one yesterday was such a thrill. No matter how many times I see one of these owls and no matter how many hundreds/thousands of photos I've taken, each owl is as exciting as the very first.
When I first reached my approximate destination yesterday morrning, I could see two or three cars way down the road, pulled over at the edge of the road. Often a good sign : ) Sure enough, friends had found an owl, It was on a distant barbed-wire fence post at first, then dove into the snow to try and catch a Meadow Vole. It then flew off into the trees with it and didn't return. After a while, I drove some of the other roads in the area and later drove back to where the owl had been. Amazingly, it was in a distant tree, from where it hunted, moving to a different tree each time it made an unsuccesful dive. Eventually, it did catch a Vole. I left after a while, feeling that it was time to leave the owl 'in peace', and also knowing it was time for me to make the long drive home - approximately 246 km round trip. I think the excitement plus the long drive (on less than three hours' sleep) totally wore me out and I've felt too tired to even write descriptions for today's 'daily three' photos until this evening.
A good thing I went yesterday, as we had fog, a bit of snow and hoarfrost and very slick roads overnight till this afternoon, apparently. There were 234 reported accidents in the city during those hours, none with life-threatening injuries. So glad I didn't have to go out today.
, novogorodec, Jan Klimczak, have particularly liked this photo
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