Cattle drive in the mountains
A favourite road
Columbian Ground Squirrel / Urocitellus columbianu…
Fungi on a log
Scaly Hedgehog (Shingled Hedgehog) fungus / Sarcod…
Beautiful guttation droplets on a polypore
Beginning to look like fall
Thirsty Bighorn Sheep
Bunchberry
Psathyrella hydrophila?
Gills galore
Most likely a Ground Pholiota / Pholiota terrestri…
Just a little brown mushroom
Part of our group on yesterday's foray
Let the light shine in
Broad-winged Hawk
White-crowned Sparrow juvenile
White-throated Sparrow
Sora with reflections
Broad-winged Hawk
Just for a change of colour
Osprey number 1
Beauty of a weed
Pika - a two-second nibble
Upper Kananaskis Lake
Mourning Dove
European Starling in my back yard
Mourning Dove
Grebe sp.
Creative
Baird's Sandpipers?
Yellowlegs
Mourning Doves
Cicer milkvetch seedpods
Rough cocklebur / Xanthium strumarium
Mourning Doves
Western Kingbird
Baird's Sandpipers?
Swainson's Hawk
European Starling in my backyard
Least Flycatcher
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher?
Western Kingbird
House Wren
Eastern Kingbird
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Bighorn Sheep
Yesterday, 28 August 2018, I did another long drive, this time SW of the city into the mountains. This is a second area that I try to do on my own each year now, to make sure that I don't lose confidence to do the drive. Luckily, I saw a few furry, four-legged critters, which will make a change from all my recent photos. Though my main purpose was to simply do the drive, I knew I would be driving through spectacular scenery and I knew that I might just see a Bighorn Sheep or two and maybe even a tiny Pika/Rock Rabbit. Fortunately, I was in luck with all three. This photo is one of the only photos of a Bighorn Sheep that came out. All my photos were taken through the windscreen, but this was one rapid shot I managed to get when one of the sheep walked past my side window. The windscreen photos are all terrible - weird colour and oh, so blurry. but hoping I might be able to rescue one or two of them.
A tiny Pika made my day, too. Sometimes, one is out of luck, but I was able to get a few photos yesterday, mainly more distant shots. It was a relief to find that there was no snow on the ground, as walking on a talus slope that is also covered in snow and ice is really treacherous. Snow had fallen in the mountains the day before - yes, it's August!! - but either it didn't reach the area I was in or else it had already melted.
When i woke up yesterday morning, it looked like it might finally be a day without smoke from all the wildfires - a day with some blue sky, not to mention that perhaps the mountains and foothills could actually be seen. We all know that they are there, but it is eerily strange when they all disappear from view. A quick decision was made and I knew the drive had to be done. As it turned out, scenic shots had a haze to them, especially when I reached my furthest point which was Upper Kananaskis Lake. I need to check, but I'm pretty sure this was the first time I had ever driven myself to the lake, and I felt really uncomfortable once I turned off the main highway. So many small roads leading off the road I was on and I couldn't help wondering how on earth I would ever find the way back along this long road that seemed to go on forever. The view at the lake was so hazy, but I posted a photo mainly to remind myself that I actually made it to the lake.
Once I turned around to head home, an orange light came on, on my dashboard. Out came the car manual and I saw that it was the Maintenance light. I think this is only the second time it has ever come on (in just under 19,000 km), both times when I was far, far away from home. Must phone and make an appointment, hopefully for as soon as possible, as I have a couple of drives coming up. (Yay, they can do it early this afternoon!)
A tiny Pika made my day, too. Sometimes, one is out of luck, but I was able to get a few photos yesterday, mainly more distant shots. It was a relief to find that there was no snow on the ground, as walking on a talus slope that is also covered in snow and ice is really treacherous. Snow had fallen in the mountains the day before - yes, it's August!! - but either it didn't reach the area I was in or else it had already melted.
When i woke up yesterday morning, it looked like it might finally be a day without smoke from all the wildfires - a day with some blue sky, not to mention that perhaps the mountains and foothills could actually be seen. We all know that they are there, but it is eerily strange when they all disappear from view. A quick decision was made and I knew the drive had to be done. As it turned out, scenic shots had a haze to them, especially when I reached my furthest point which was Upper Kananaskis Lake. I need to check, but I'm pretty sure this was the first time I had ever driven myself to the lake, and I felt really uncomfortable once I turned off the main highway. So many small roads leading off the road I was on and I couldn't help wondering how on earth I would ever find the way back along this long road that seemed to go on forever. The view at the lake was so hazy, but I posted a photo mainly to remind myself that I actually made it to the lake.
Once I turned around to head home, an orange light came on, on my dashboard. Out came the car manual and I saw that it was the Maintenance light. I think this is only the second time it has ever come on (in just under 19,000 km), both times when I was far, far away from home. Must phone and make an appointment, hopefully for as soon as possible, as I have a couple of drives coming up. (Yay, they can do it early this afternoon!)
neira-Dan has particularly liked this photo
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