Huffing bear

 

A Black Bear in a tree huffed at me.

The bear was about three metres above the ground feasting on bitter cherries when it decided that I had wandered too close. It let me know its feelings. While a huffing Black Bear sounds intimidating, it is actually bluster made by an apprehensive bear. Huffing does not lead to an attack. 

Even though I knew the bear was all bluster, this was the first time a bear had addressed me this way and the interaction prompted a mixture of delight and concern. I drifted away leaving the bear to continue trashing the tree.

A Black Bear in a tree expresses its apprehension towards me by huffing.

However, we parted amicably.

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Loon preening

 

For a loon, preening seems to be a mixture of grooming and calisthenics.

I watched two loons, seemingly lollygagging about the Lake. However, they were intent upon preening, an activity with many functions.

One loon waggles its foot, presumably merely to stretch, while the other preens.

Then the bird on the right flexes its wings. It is really important to keep in shape.

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Hailstorm

 

The day bounces around from sun, to cloud, to rain, to hail, and back to sun. The sight and sound of hail falling on the Lake is magnificent. Depending upon the size of the hailstones, the sound ranges from a loud hiss to a cacophonous clatter.

Hailstones, ranging in size up to a centimetre in diameter, fell among the begonias.

While large raindrops hitting the Lake can cast up a central tower of water (see, raindrop splash), a hailstone seems to merely create craters and toss droplets sideways. It produces a delightful and distinctive din.

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Robin chicks

 

Both robin parents tend their chicks in the nest. The parent featured here is the mommy. 

A female robin pauses on a branch before delivering a mouthful of worms and insects to her chicks.

At the nest, four chicks beg: Feed me.

And one of them gets fed (this time).

Then, that chick turns its bottom up and poops out a faecal sac which mommy picks up to discard.

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Kestrel nest

 

It has been five years since I last managed to photograph kestrels feeding chicks in a nest (kestrel bonanza). On that occasion the chicks feasted on both bugs and a decapitated bird. This time, it was bugs and a mouse. I will try to visit the latest nest again before the chick fledges.

The kestrel mother passes a green bug to her chick. 

Parents share in the feeding. I only spotted the kestrel father when he was about to leave the nest.

However, the chick happily displayed the tasty prize daddy brought: a mouse. 

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Black-chinned

 

July has brought a hummingbird transition around my home. Earlier the Rufous dominated, now the Black-chinned does. 

The male Black-chinned Hummingbird has a distinctive black head, which depending upon the lighting might be edged with iridescent purple.

Unlike the aptly named Rufous, the Black-chinned has a greenish back and a black tail. 

However, the female Black-chinned Hummingbird is the real cutie as a result of its delightful penchant for spreading its tail feathers. 

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Protect and serve

 

Protect and serve — not the police, parents — and not people, birds. 

While chicks are in the nest, bird parents have a seemingly endless task of ferrying food in and waste out. And then there is the job of keeping predators at bay.

A dipper parent brings an aquatic insect to its four demanding chicks.

These dipper parents have already done much to protect their chicks from land predators. The nest is under a bridge high over a raging stream. Further, the bridge deck prevents a raptor’s attack from above. Nevertheless, the nest must be kept clean. Chicks expel faeces in a white sac which parents then remove and discard. 

As with dippers, both Tree Swallow parents deliver insects to the nest. This is a male. The chicks are not yet big enough to be peeking out.

Having delivered food to the nest, the female swallow heads off on the endless round.

And both remove faecal sacs from the nest and drop them far away.

With all the coming and going, sometimes parents collide.

Tree Swallows must protect their nest. In this case, a female Common Goldeneye landed and twice peered into the cavity. It isn’t trying to eat the chicks, and it is late in the season for a goldeneye to start nesting. However, inexperienced female goldeneyes will begin looking for potential cavities the summer before breeding. Even though it is not an immediate threat, from the swallow’s point of view, the goldeneye had to be driven off.

Midst the activity, I managed perhaps my best shot of a swallow in flight.

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Photobombing fish

 

Photobombing is a comparatively recent term used to describe a sudden and unexpected addition to a picture.

The object of my picture had been a duck in the centre of the frame, but far to one side a fish jumped. This is not an easy thing to capture purposely, so I happily accept a fish bombing my photo, and cropped out the duck. 

What I suspect is a Kokanee (landlocked Sockeye Salmon) jumped out of the water to bomb my photo.

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Deer serenity

 

The long weekend is a time to retreat from life’s exigencies. So it was that a young buck with velvet antlers arrived in its quest for wholesome serenity.

A White-tailed Deer looks for a good setting for its contemplative retreat.

It scans the neighbourhood with the objective of avoiding the boisterous crowd.

It starts its retreat with some fresh salad.

Sated, it begins yoga. This may be the cervid version of the Urdhva Prasarita Eka Padasana.

Yoga is followed by meditation in the grass. Life’s exigencies melt.

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June goulash

 

This is an end-of-the-month collection of images, none of which has had a posting of its own.

A cinnamon-coloured Black Bear eyes an intruder in its territory.

For a female Osprey to be lifting her tail this late in the season is a bit odd.

A female Redstart flits through the foliage.

A Columbia Spotted Frog prefers the quietude of its pond.

The Western Trumpet is one of the many wildflowers on the mountain slopes.

A Great Blue Heron flies by.

A Pileated Woodpecker searches for insects.

A male Tree Swallow brings a bill full of insects to its chicks.

Posted in birds, bugs, herptiles, mammals, wildflowers | 2 Comments