Red-necked Grebe / Podiceps grisegena
Lesser Scaup female / Aythya affinis
Lesser Scaup male / Aythya affinis
Mallard male / Anas platyrhynchos
Lesser Scaup male / Aythya affinis
Red-winged Blackbird female
Mallard male / Anas platyrhynchos
Common Grackle / Quiscalus quiscula
American Coot / Fulica americana
Lesser Scaup male / Aythya affinis
Mountain Bluebird / Sialia currucoides
Willow catkins
When the Tree Swallows get the box
Hawk
Red-winged Blackbird / Wilson's Snipe face-off
Mountain Bluebird male /Sialia currucoides, fluffe…
Wilson's Snipe
Hawk on the look-out
Mountain Bluebird female / Sialia currucoides
Red-tailed? Hawk
Mountain Bluebird male / Sialia currucoides
Red-winged Blackbird & Wilson's Snipe
Mountain Bluebird
Common Grackle after a bath
Mallard drake / Anas platyrhynchos
I think my daughter knows me well : )
Oodles of Chocolates
Yellow-headed Blackbird / Xanthocephalus xanthocep…
Frank Lake bird blind
Yellow-headed Blackbird / Xanthocephalus xanthocep…
Eared Grebe / Podiceps nigricollis
Young Richardson's Ground Squirrel / Urocitellus r…
Eared Grebe
Richardson's Ground Squirrel / Urocitellus richard…
Eared Grebe
Frank Lake
Yellow-headed Blackbird / Xanthocephalus xanthocep…
What insect is this (on my car)? Mosquito sp.?
Red-necked Grebe / Podiceps grisegena
Bleeding Hearts
Cow skull
Succulent in light
Springtime daisy
Tub full of joy
Colour on a gloomy day
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Lesser Scaup male / Aythya affinis
One of the new problems on Flickr today is having comments and faves not appear. If you get a first comment or make a first comment on someone else's photo, that comment will disappear. The comment is listed under the "bell", but does not appear under the photo. The "bell" stated that I had a comment under each of the five photos I posted today. These were the first comments to be made. Two of the comments stayed, but there was no sign of the other three. The same with faves - some show up, others don't. Other people are having the same problem and have reported it to the Help Forum.
On 23 May 2019, Flickr was unusable and some of the channels on TV were also not working. Combined, these two things made me decide that enough is enough, and that I needed to go for a short drive.
My first stop was at a local pond in the city, where I enjoyed seeing this Lesser Scaup, a Coot, Mallards, and a Common Grackle or two. It was also fun to come across a small group of children with their "care-givers". I identified a Coot for them and told them that it was not a duck and that their babies were so ugly that they were very, very cute. I did see one Red-necked Grebe swimming, but I didn't venture further along the path as I zoomed in on two Police officers checking out a parked car along the pathway.
After spending a bit of time at this location, I drove westwards to my "usual" area, wondering if I would see Mountain Bluebirds and a Snipe. I was in luck with both. This is the area that my small "team" covers for the annual May Species Count, so I was curious as to what I/we might see. The 23rd annual Count took place yesterday, 26 May. The weather was good (3C - 17C) - no sign of the rain that we've been getting on far too many days recently. However we desperately need the moisture. There are already wild fires in Alberta and the number will only increase over the summer.
There were nine of us on the May Species Count, travelling in two cars. We were out for 7 hours, travelling 52 km in our Count area, and saw 66 bird species. I will add the list of species in a comment box below so that I will be able to look back in a year's time and remind myself of what we saw in 2019.
On 23 May 2019, Flickr was unusable and some of the channels on TV were also not working. Combined, these two things made me decide that enough is enough, and that I needed to go for a short drive.
My first stop was at a local pond in the city, where I enjoyed seeing this Lesser Scaup, a Coot, Mallards, and a Common Grackle or two. It was also fun to come across a small group of children with their "care-givers". I identified a Coot for them and told them that it was not a duck and that their babies were so ugly that they were very, very cute. I did see one Red-necked Grebe swimming, but I didn't venture further along the path as I zoomed in on two Police officers checking out a parked car along the pathway.
After spending a bit of time at this location, I drove westwards to my "usual" area, wondering if I would see Mountain Bluebirds and a Snipe. I was in luck with both. This is the area that my small "team" covers for the annual May Species Count, so I was curious as to what I/we might see. The 23rd annual Count took place yesterday, 26 May. The weather was good (3C - 17C) - no sign of the rain that we've been getting on far too many days recently. However we desperately need the moisture. There are already wild fires in Alberta and the number will only increase over the summer.
There were nine of us on the May Species Count, travelling in two cars. We were out for 7 hours, travelling 52 km in our Count area, and saw 66 bird species. I will add the list of species in a comment box below so that I will be able to look back in a year's time and remind myself of what we saw in 2019.
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