-
Recent Posts
- House mouse
- Birds & mammals
- Pine Siskins
- Tadpoles
- Heron returns
- Fussy dipper chicks
- Dipper chicks feeding
- Osprey interloper
- Male Black-chinned
- Early chicks
- Rufous male
- Eagle, Osprey, fish
- Acrobatic Osprey mating
- Waneta birds
- Rufous Hummingbird
- Catchup females
- Two more migrants
- Seven migrants
- Non-pigment blue
- Chickadee, merlin
- Two birds, black & blue
- Flickers mate in midair?
- Lunar eclipse, red with blue
- White-winged Crossbill
- Killdeer mid-Feb
- Trumpeter Swans a plenty
- Ice blocks on pond
- Muskrats
- Trumpeter family
- Icicles
- Dippers fighting
- Then there were two
- Tundra and Trumpeter
- Turkey display
- Fencing, whitetails
- Combative female whitetails
- Birds and berries
- Squirrel provisioning
- Horned Lark
- Black bears
- Grizzly sow & cub
- Eagles
- Two uncommon birds
- Steam devil
- Otter visit
- Squirrel’s find
- Canada Jay
- Black bear
- Feeding on spawners
- Pileated Woodpecker
Archives
Categories
Subscribe/Unsubscribe
Category Archives: mammals
July goulash
This is a collection of a dozen images from July, none of which has had a posting of its own. Where have all the male Mallards gone? They are here, but are in their eclipse plumage, which makes them … Continue reading
Posted in birds, bugs, fish, mammals, wildflowers
3 Comments
Species diversity
A year ago on Canada Day, I posted a collection of my favourite images from the previous decade, and said: “My two-dozen mute portraits offer peeks into the charm and beauty of life in Canada.” Commenting on it, Carlo … Continue reading
Posted in birds, commentary, mammals
15 Comments
June goulash
This a collection of June images, none of which has had a posting of its own. A female Common Yellowthroat watches for insects to eat. A male Common Yellowthroat has managed to catch a bug to eat. Two Yellow-bellied … Continue reading
Pika cries “eep!”
Pikas live in talus, usually near the treeline. The talus visited two days ago was near neither road nor trail. The pikas that lived there would likely be unfamiliar with humans, as even access from below was impeded by … Continue reading
Posted in mammals
4 Comments
Kisses
Marmots are playful and affectionate. We have two species around the Lake: the smaller, Yellow-bellied Marmots, live in the valleys; the larger, Hoary Marmots, live high in the mountains. These Hoary Marmots were seen at about 1600 metres elevation. … Continue reading
Posted in mammals
3 Comments
Sub-alpine delights
There are delights in the high country that are unknown, or uncommon, in the valleys. Items, below, were seen a few days ago at an elevation of about 1600 metres. This is the Western Anemone (Pulsatilla occidentalis). Another term for … Continue reading
Posted in birds, mammals, wildflowers
2 Comments
Bear colour
Black Bears are so called because all are apparently black on the east side of the continent where they were named. However around here, Black Bears come in a remarkable range of hues: black, chocolate, cinnamon, beige, cream, and … Continue reading
Rapidity of May
The rapidity of May is the speed of change that takes place as the region shifts from winter to summer. Events pile up on my camera. Here are a few of them. The rising waters of the Lake overflow … Continue reading
Posted in birds, bugs, herptiles, mammals
6 Comments
Ecotone walk
I could have merely spoken of a walk along the beach, but, I wanted to emphasize something subtly different than such a stroll. An ecotone is a place where ecologies are in tension (in Greek, the word is tonos). It describes … Continue reading →