Yesterday, with the Kokanee moving up local creeks to spawn, I posted a picture of a heron hunting by the creek. Today, it plunged after a Kokanee.
A Great Blue Heron strikes at a Kokanee. Alas, it failed to catch one.

Yesterday, with the Kokanee moving up local creeks to spawn, I posted a picture of a heron hunting by the creek. Today, it plunged after a Kokanee.
A Great Blue Heron strikes at a Kokanee. Alas, it failed to catch one.

Kokanee are filling local creeks in preparation for spawning, after which their carcasses will become available to many other creatures. Those creatures are already standing by in anticipation.
A Kokanee salmon enters the creek to spawn.

Standing by to pick off the dying fish are ravens.

A juvenile Bald Eagle looks down on a creek with impatience.

Turkey Vultures soar overhead in anticipation of a feast.

And a Great Blue Heron watches from beside the creek.

Mommy Osprey brings a serving of fish to her rather large chicks still in the nest.

This is only the third time I have seen a Solitary Sandpiper in the last decade, and it has always been seen in August.
The Solitary Sandpiper does not appear to breed around Kootenay Lake, but does breed farther north. So, when seen around the Lake, it is just stopping to feed during migration.
A Solitary Sandpiper forages in the Harrop wetlands during its migration south.

Now is the season to watch fawns — and the season for fawns to stare back at us.
Deer stare at people, and, it seems, this practice starts at a fairly early age. As was discussed in staring contests, this probably results from a deer’s rather poor vision. The deer cannot quite tell if you are there or not, and if there, are you a threat? As it tries to figure this out, it just stares hoping to spot clues.
In tall grass, a white-tailed fawn just stands and stares at a passing human.

Oh well, caution advises departure.

That indefatigable wanderer of the woods, Doug Thorburn, has shared his pictures of a family of wolves, which he encountered beside a mountain road in the south Selkirks in late July.
Fifty years ago, wolves were considered to be extirpated from around here. We now have a low density population. I have never seen one in my own wanderings.
Doug Thorburn’s picture is used with permission.
Two mammals posed for portraits in a short time this morning.
This is a white-tailed buck with misshapen antlers: an extra spike and nodules at the base. Apparently, these can be caused by damage to the deer’s pedicles (region from which antlers grow). However, this buck also had a truncated tail, so it may have had more problems.

The Columbian ground squirrel is fairly common, but it rarely approaches closely and poses.

Each July and August, I keep an eye out for Indian pipe, a flower also known as the ghost plant. Only now and then will I encounter the strange plant that lacks chlorophyll. It has carved out an ecological niche on the deep, sunlight-deprived, forest floor, where it extracts energy, with the help of fungi, from surrounding trees, rather than from direct sunlight.
Alas, I rarely find it.
A couple of years ago, I and others, discovered a small patch of Indian pipe that had started growing beside the spawning channel at the Kokanee Creek Park. It was there again last year. This year, it has erupted into many patches, each with multiple flowers.
What is it about the weather this year that encouraged the growth of Indian pipe? I don’t know, but I do delight in the present profusion of these ghosts.
One of a number of patches of Indian pipe along the spawning channel.

This group of plants is sitting in a momentary patch of sunlight on the dark forest floor.

A headless fish flew by. It was being packed by an osprey.
For an earlier discussion of this strange phenomenon, see headless fish flying.

Flaws in supporting pictures
This blog bases its postings on recently taken pictures from local nature. Now and then an identification is mistaken and this results in a flawed text. Nevertheless, the picture is correct.
News sites have the opposite problem. A textual story comes over the line and some benighted picture editor has the job of providing (presumably) relevant illustrations. Sometimes these illustrations are just silly.
Why such text stories are deemed inadequate without an accompanying image strikes me as bizarre, and many of the better news websites do not insist upon it. Yet, many news sites seem to require a gratuitous picture for each story — often one that is merely generic clip art, and now and then one that is misleading.
Below are two discussions of recent ineptitude on the part of picture editors.
During the recent catharsis in the Manitoba wilderness, the BBC ran a story about the dangers of the locale and illustrated it with a shot of a grizzly bear. Alas, grizzly bears have not been seen in that region for hundreds of years. Someone must have pointed this out to them, for a couple of days later the picture was changed to show a black bear. Here, I show a local grizzly bear, something long gone from Gillam, Manitoba.

A recent story in the New York Times discussed a study of the behaviour of migrating European warblers. However, they illustrated it with a North American Yellow Warbler. Alas, despite the similarity of names, these two warblers are only distantly related, making the illustration irrelevant. Here is a shot of the local Yellow Warbler.
