View allAll Photos Tagged Canada!!!
Terribly funny! The necks of those geese sticking out of the high grass seemed to get longer and longer the closer I got, but they did not want to get up. In the end I turned around to walk a differend path lest they hurt those graceful necks :)
Canada's 150th Anniversary ( 1867 -2017 )
Confederation
The scenic, Steveston Heritage Fishing Villiage is a charming & ever so romantic fishing village that is situated in Richmond BC on the Mighty Fraser River
Definitely one of British Columbia's best kept secrets.
Series: Steveston by Romance
I 💖 Steveston
www.flickr.com/photos/120552517@N03/albums/72157677404584764
>>>Best experienced in full screen<<<
Passer un moment à photographier ces oiseaux est toujours un pur bonheur.
Spending a moment to photograph these birds is always pure happiness.
A captive cat at Aspen Valley Wildlife Sanctuary in Rosseau, Ontario...due to human intervention this lynx cannot be released back into the wild.
A Canada Goose (Branta canadensis) huddles together on the shoreline of an urban pond in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The abundance of urban flood water ponds has done much in creating beneficial habitat to amy waterbird species including the Canada Goose.
11 May, 2021.
Slide # GWB_20210511_6229.CR2
Use of this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission is not permitted.
© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
Unfortunately, I don't know the full meaning behind the many elements in this mural but the large tree and many animals are certainly key factors in their beliefs.
Prêt à relever tous les défis...
Une bonne et heureuse année en santé !
Ready to take on any challenge...
A happy, healthy new year!
A Canada Lynx (Lynx canadensis) emerges from the shrubs in Denali National Park while a tour in the park in Alaska, U.S.A.
17June, 2010.
Slide # GWB_20100617_3548.CR2
Use of this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission is not permitted.
© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
Just a few of the many impressive peaks of the Rockies of Canada seen near Spray Lake in Kananaskis Country.
"The Canadian Rockies are quite different in appearance and geology from the American Rockies to the south of them. The Canadian Rockies are composed of layered sedimentary rock such as limestone and shale, whereas the American Rockies are made mostly of metamorphic and igneous rock such as gneiss and granite.
The Canadian Rockies are overall more jagged than the American Rockies because the Canadian Rockies have been more heavily glaciated, resulting in sharply pointed mountains separated by wide, U-shaped valleys gouged by glaciers, whereas the American Rockies are overall more rounded, with river-carved V-shaped valleys between them. The Canadian Rockies are cooler and wetter, giving them moister soil, bigger rivers, and more glaciers. The tree line is much lower in the Canadian Rockies than in the American Rockies."
Wikipedia
Agreed, peaks are more magnificent up north. John Muir said it so well, as they do "call me." Can't wait to return.
Your views, comments and faves are always appreciated!
Waterfowl such as this Canada Goose (Branta canadensis) must contend with a host of predators during the nesting period. This goose solved the problem of land based predators by nesting in the middle of a wetland and the dense cattail vegetation gives some protection from aerial predators such as crows and ravens but it still needs to guard the nest closely. Whether this nest was successful is an unknown. This wetland was located west of St. Albert, Alberta, Canada.
25 May, 2022.
Slide # GWB_20220525_1541.CR2
Use of this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission is not permitted.
© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
A colorful, energetic warbler of northern forests, the Canada Warbler spends little time on its breeding grounds. It is one of the last warblers to arrive north in the spring, and one of the first to leave in the fall to return to its South American wintering grounds. This steely gray and yellow songbird is sometimes called the "necklaced warbler" thanks to the bold black necklace that it wears across its chest.
"It is only her in large portions of Canada that wonderous second wind,
the Indian summer, attains its amplitude and heavenly perfection, -- the
temperatures; the sunny haze; the mellow, rich delicate, almost
flavoured air: Enough to live -- enough to merely be."
- Walt Whitman, Diary in Canada
A lot of them, but they can be quite entertaining
As always, many thanks for taking the time to view, fave and comment. That's very much appreciated
Stay safe!
Boston Hollow, Ashford, Connecticut
This warbler was an unsually cooperative individual. If it seems I was quite close here as well as with my earlier images of this Canada Warbler, it is because I was. It certainly makes up for the difficulty I had last year trying to photograph one of these.
Most welcomed visitor! A few days back I saw this guy in my garden. Hope he stays....
Many thanks to all those who view, fav or comment my pictures. I very much appreciate it.
Happy Canada Day to all who celebrates it!
Snowy Owl: Ontario, Canada
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The Canada goose (Branta canadensisBranta canadensis) is a large wild goose species with a black head and neck, white cheeks, white under its chin, and a brown body
A Canada Jay near Galena Lodge north of Ketchum, Idaho
"The Canada Jay is a widespread resident of North America's boreal and subalpine coniferous forests. Occupation of permanent all-purpose territories in such climatically hostile biomes is made possible by scatter-hoarding and recovery of seemingly perishable food items that this species fastens in trees under bark scales and lichens with the assistance of copious sticky saliva from enlarged salivary glands."
birdsoftheworld-org.proxy.birdsoftheworld.org/bow/species...
A Canada Warbler photographed near Essex Junction, Vermont
"A colorful, energetic warbler of northern forests, the Canada Warbler spends little time on its breeding grounds. It is one of the last warblers to arrive north in the spring, and one of the first to leave in the fall to return to its South American wintering grounds." www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Canada_Warbler/overview