Siberian Squill
Balsam Poplar catkins
Showing off his fine feathers
Food for his babies
Delicate Iris
Pileated Woodpecker female
Pink Hellebore
Candy-striped Tulip
Physoclaina orientalis
An over-the-shoulder glance
Hoverfly on European Pasque Flower
Art of nature
Beauty of spring
Sharp-tailed Grouse
Sharp-tailed Grouse female
Green caterpillar on Balsamroot
Elephant Ears / Bergenia cordifolia
Hellebore beauty
Backlit beauties
Purple Rain
Indian Breadroot
After the rain
Hepatica
Sharp-tailed Grouse in the early morning sun
Early Cinquefoil
Snake's Head Fritillary / Fritillaria meleagris
Nuttall's Sunflower / Helianthus nuttallii
A bird of many colours
Colour
Periwinkle / Vinca minor
The joy of spring
Fancy plumage
Canada Goose
Red Baneberry
Sharp-tailed Grouse
Finely iridescent
Snake's head fritillary / Fritillaria meleagris
A little fungi family
Striped Coralroot / Corallorhiza striata
Flowers of spring
The purity of white
Herper friend with Wood Frog (and fly)
Made my day : )
Gaillardia on red
Dame's rocket
Camouflaged Wood Frog
Hollyhock buds
Needed a change of colour
Spotted Coralroot / Corallorhiza maculata
Red-edged petals
Tattered and torn - and still beautiful
Iris at Olds College Botanical Gardens and Wetland…
Wild Rose in the rain
A forest find
False Dandelion / Hypochaeris radicata
Yellow lady's-slipper
Gaillardia
Mountain Death Camas / Zigadenus elegans
Egyptian Walking Onion
Showy Milkweed / Asclepias speciosa
Fleabane
Ladybug larva on Showy Milkweed
Pinedrops / Pterospora - rare, Listed S2
Raindrops on the back of a Canada Goose
My first sighting of the season
Mountain Bluebird
Why did the Pheasant cross the road?
Bright and cheery
Hadada Ibis / Bostrychia hagedash
Petunia
Fine feathers of a female Mallard
Catkins - a sure sign of spring
Ring-necked Pheasant hoping to attract a mate
Hanging on to the old
Camouflaged House Sparrow at cavity
Yesterday's lucky encounter
Hepatica
A serious pose
Colours made for each other
Pink Monkeyflower / Mimulus lewisii
Mountain Bluebirds have no blue pigment
Spider on Strawflower
Beauty lasts
Tree Swallow from the archives
Tangled
A bird in the hand is worth many in the bush
Delicate Damselfly
Great Gray Owl - breathtaking
Floral beauty
Passing the time
Built with love
Popular with the Aphids
Remembering a winter day
'Hiding' in the grass
Himalayan Blue Poppy
Siberian Squill
Datura flower?
Blink .... and spring will be here
Rough-Fruited Fairybells / Prosartes trachycarpa
Tall Lungwort / Mertensia paniculata
Springtime colour
A few little wrigglers
Smiling in the snow
Poppy art
Downy Woodpecker
Common Redpoll / Carduelis flammea
Dianthus sp.
Embracing the sun
European Pasque Flower / Pulsatilla vulgaris
One day closer to spring
Primula denticulata / Drumstick Primula
Vole brains for her afternoon snack
Vibrant
Busy little bee
Persian Cornflower / Centaurea dealbata?
Painted Tongue / Salpiglosis
A sweet face
Carnivorous Sundew
Remembering the warmth of summer
Red-sided Garter Snake scales
Shoo Fly / Nicandra physalodes
Pine Grosbeak in pretty light
Get well, Rachel
Hoping for food
Another day closer to spring
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
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161 visits
Sweet equine faces
![Sweet equine faces Sweet equine faces](https://cdn.ipernity.com/200/52/72/41645272.6902287a.640.jpg?r2)
![](https://s.ipernity.com/T/L/z.gif)
William J. Bagnall Wilderness Park is named after Mountain View County’s first reeve, who served in the position from 1961 to 1981 and also served as a councillor until 1985. The William J. Bagnall Wilderness Park (34.7 acres) is located seven kilometres west of Water Valley just off Highway 579.
"Remediation efforts for the wilderness park were undertaken after the area was made inaccessible following the flood of 2005. Included in the upgrades is a new entry and parking lot on the south side (just off Highway 579); two walking trails that will form a 1.2-kilometre loop; a historical sign detailing the history of the site as a coal mining area; a small picnic area, including outhouses, tables and pest-proof containers; along with several stairways for steep-grade accessibility." From an article in the Mountainview Gazette on 14 June 2011.
www.mountainviewgazette.ca/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201...
This was my very first visit to the William J. Bagnall Wildnerness Park. A couple of friends had mentioned it recently and I finally decided to go and explore part of the area.
On that day, 5 April 2016, I had to remove my car so that the parking lot could be cleaned. I don't have a current street pass, so I knew that I had a few hours to kill before I could get back home. The notice said that cleaning would start at 12:00 noon, so at 11:40 am, I was on my way, heading NW of the city. There was no way I was going to set my alarm clocks for 5:00 am again, so I thought I would do an afternoon/evening drive for a change. I was hoping that I might just see one of the Great Gray Owls, but there was nothing in sight, other than a couple of Ravens and a pair of distant Mountain Bluebirds. It was kind of amusing, as there was one other car up there, moving very slowly. Turned out to be a man who told me that he had never once been there without seeing a Great Grey Owl. Well, I jokingly told him that maybe I would end up changing that for him - and sure enough, not a single owl. He's probably hoping that he never runs into me again, lol!
After calling in at the little general store in Water Valley, I drove westwards, a road I had never driven before, and eventually reached the William J. Bagnall WIlderness Park. I can't remember exactly where the park began, but I think these horses and a third one were just before it started.
The scenery was beautiful, with many treed ridges with small creeks in between. There were still patches of ice in places - something I hadn't seen for quite a while. I didn't look for birds, as I was so focused on the road ahead. A wide road, but slightly muddy gravel which made the car 'slide' a little. I'm not quite sure just where the road goes in the park, but I turned around when I came to a fork in the road and the roads became very narrow. I wasn't sure if I was allowed to drive in either direction. Oh, yes, I had forgotten, early on, I had come to a sign telling drivers that they would be driving at their own risk! I never like seeing these signs, ha, including knowing that my car is now 17 years old.
After the long drive back to the city, I was tired and just wanted to go straight home. However, I knew I just had to go and wash my absolutely filthy vehicle that was caked in so much dried mud from so many back road drives recently. Didn't want the mud falling on to a newly cleaned parking space. Took forever to wash, but now simply gleams (temporarily!). Guess what I discovered when I did reach home - the parking lot had NOT been cleaned after all ... sigh.
"Remediation efforts for the wilderness park were undertaken after the area was made inaccessible following the flood of 2005. Included in the upgrades is a new entry and parking lot on the south side (just off Highway 579); two walking trails that will form a 1.2-kilometre loop; a historical sign detailing the history of the site as a coal mining area; a small picnic area, including outhouses, tables and pest-proof containers; along with several stairways for steep-grade accessibility." From an article in the Mountainview Gazette on 14 June 2011.
www.mountainviewgazette.ca/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201...
This was my very first visit to the William J. Bagnall Wildnerness Park. A couple of friends had mentioned it recently and I finally decided to go and explore part of the area.
On that day, 5 April 2016, I had to remove my car so that the parking lot could be cleaned. I don't have a current street pass, so I knew that I had a few hours to kill before I could get back home. The notice said that cleaning would start at 12:00 noon, so at 11:40 am, I was on my way, heading NW of the city. There was no way I was going to set my alarm clocks for 5:00 am again, so I thought I would do an afternoon/evening drive for a change. I was hoping that I might just see one of the Great Gray Owls, but there was nothing in sight, other than a couple of Ravens and a pair of distant Mountain Bluebirds. It was kind of amusing, as there was one other car up there, moving very slowly. Turned out to be a man who told me that he had never once been there without seeing a Great Grey Owl. Well, I jokingly told him that maybe I would end up changing that for him - and sure enough, not a single owl. He's probably hoping that he never runs into me again, lol!
After calling in at the little general store in Water Valley, I drove westwards, a road I had never driven before, and eventually reached the William J. Bagnall WIlderness Park. I can't remember exactly where the park began, but I think these horses and a third one were just before it started.
The scenery was beautiful, with many treed ridges with small creeks in between. There were still patches of ice in places - something I hadn't seen for quite a while. I didn't look for birds, as I was so focused on the road ahead. A wide road, but slightly muddy gravel which made the car 'slide' a little. I'm not quite sure just where the road goes in the park, but I turned around when I came to a fork in the road and the roads became very narrow. I wasn't sure if I was allowed to drive in either direction. Oh, yes, I had forgotten, early on, I had come to a sign telling drivers that they would be driving at their own risk! I never like seeing these signs, ha, including knowing that my car is now 17 years old.
After the long drive back to the city, I was tired and just wanted to go straight home. However, I knew I just had to go and wash my absolutely filthy vehicle that was caked in so much dried mud from so many back road drives recently. Didn't want the mud falling on to a newly cleaned parking space. Took forever to wash, but now simply gleams (temporarily!). Guess what I discovered when I did reach home - the parking lot had NOT been cleaned after all ... sigh.
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