Shaggy Bison
Many-plume moth / Alucita sp.
Hundreds of Common Grackles and Starlings
Smokey Eagle Lake
Cute goat at Eagle Lake
European Starlings
Mourning Dove
Swainson's Hawk juvenile
Sowthistle(?) flower and seedhead
Yellowlegs feeding (soapsuds, not snow!!)
Western Wood Pewee?
Eastern Kingbird
Swainson's Hawk
Mourning Dove
Tangled
Eastern Kingbird
House Wren
Western Kingbird
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher?
Least Flycatcher
European Starling in my backyard
Swainson's Hawk
Baird's Sandpipers?
Smokey sun
Unidentified roadside plant
A classic light/intermediate-morph adult Swainson'…
Ferruginous Hawks - now safely grown and gone
Horned Lark / Eremophila alpestris
Eastern Kingbird juvenile / Tyrannus tyrannus
Is this a young Swainson's Hawk?
Western Meadowlark juvenile
Ferruginous Hawk
Still standing
Impressive creature
Enjoying a good meal
Vesper Sparrow
Police Car Moths on Goldenrod
Colourful cluster
Wild Raspberry
Fungus on a log
Spruce Grouse / Falcipennis canadensis
Pine Siskin
Pine Siskin taking a bath
Smoke from the British Columbia wildfires
Glasswort
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82 visits
Swainson's Hawk
A different individual than the two hawks on a hay bale that I posted recently.
Yesterday, I was shocked to see the following warning, knowing the absolute devastation that our beautiful Waterton Lakes National Park suffered in the summer of 2017. Wildfire has now come to within 7 km of Waterton townsite! I haven't found any further update for today.
"PARKS CANADA HAS ISSUED AN EVACUATION ALERT FOR ALL AREAS IN WATERTON NATIONAL PARK DUE TO WILDFIRE:
Thursday August 23, 2018 - 10:45pm
Parks Canada has issued an Evacuation Alert for all areas in Waterton Lakes National Park.
A wildfire that started south of Waterton in the Boundary Creek valley is currently burning out of control. Because of the potential danger to life and health, Parks Canada has issued an Evacuation Alert for all of Waterton Lakes National Park.
An Evacuation Alert has been issued to prepare you to evacuate your premises or property should it be found necessary. Visitors and residents will be given as much advance notice as possible prior to evacuation; however you may receive limited notice due to changing conditions.
The wildfire in Waterton Lakes National Park approximately 5 km south of the townsite. It is located in the Boundary Creek Valley and approaching Upper Waterton Lake. Parks Canada staff are monitoring the fire.
People in Waterton Park should be prepared to evacuate on short notice."
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As you can tell by the photos I posted this morning, I got out of the forest and into the dry prairies. Four days ago, on 21 August 2018, it turned out to be such a great day, with some much-appreciated sightings. I must have spent about 8 or 9 hours driving and almost every inch of my body aches like crazy. Now, each summer, I try and do two or three longer (for me) drives, making sure I don't lose confidence to get there.
Weather-wise, it was around 24C, so not too hot. Yes, it was still smokey from the British Columbia wildfires, making distant hills barely visible and deleting mountains from view, but it didn't have too much effect on closer photography.
It was a good day for Hawks, seeing three on the way south and a few on the way home. I almost missed two Swainson's Hawks, as the hay bale they were standing on was way out in a large field. At first, I thought there were three hawks together, but when I stopped to take a few photos, I realized that there were only two - one looked almost like two hawks close together, but then I saw that it had its wings mantled. I guess it wanted to make sure that the second hawk behind it couldn't steal any of the food from it.
A Horned Lark, a Western Meadowlark juvenile, and a Vesper Sparrow gave me the chance for a photo or two, and a lone hawk I spotted way in the distance was a Ferruginous Hawk. A happy sighting, as these hawks are so few and far between.
Yesterday, I was shocked to see the following warning, knowing the absolute devastation that our beautiful Waterton Lakes National Park suffered in the summer of 2017. Wildfire has now come to within 7 km of Waterton townsite! I haven't found any further update for today.
"PARKS CANADA HAS ISSUED AN EVACUATION ALERT FOR ALL AREAS IN WATERTON NATIONAL PARK DUE TO WILDFIRE:
Thursday August 23, 2018 - 10:45pm
Parks Canada has issued an Evacuation Alert for all areas in Waterton Lakes National Park.
A wildfire that started south of Waterton in the Boundary Creek valley is currently burning out of control. Because of the potential danger to life and health, Parks Canada has issued an Evacuation Alert for all of Waterton Lakes National Park.
An Evacuation Alert has been issued to prepare you to evacuate your premises or property should it be found necessary. Visitors and residents will be given as much advance notice as possible prior to evacuation; however you may receive limited notice due to changing conditions.
The wildfire in Waterton Lakes National Park approximately 5 km south of the townsite. It is located in the Boundary Creek Valley and approaching Upper Waterton Lake. Parks Canada staff are monitoring the fire.
People in Waterton Park should be prepared to evacuate on short notice."
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As you can tell by the photos I posted this morning, I got out of the forest and into the dry prairies. Four days ago, on 21 August 2018, it turned out to be such a great day, with some much-appreciated sightings. I must have spent about 8 or 9 hours driving and almost every inch of my body aches like crazy. Now, each summer, I try and do two or three longer (for me) drives, making sure I don't lose confidence to get there.
Weather-wise, it was around 24C, so not too hot. Yes, it was still smokey from the British Columbia wildfires, making distant hills barely visible and deleting mountains from view, but it didn't have too much effect on closer photography.
It was a good day for Hawks, seeing three on the way south and a few on the way home. I almost missed two Swainson's Hawks, as the hay bale they were standing on was way out in a large field. At first, I thought there were three hawks together, but when I stopped to take a few photos, I realized that there were only two - one looked almost like two hawks close together, but then I saw that it had its wings mantled. I guess it wanted to make sure that the second hawk behind it couldn't steal any of the food from it.
A Horned Lark, a Western Meadowlark juvenile, and a Vesper Sparrow gave me the chance for a photo or two, and a lone hawk I spotted way in the distance was a Ferruginous Hawk. A happy sighting, as these hawks are so few and far between.
, Malik Raoulda have particularly liked this photo
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