View allAll Photos Tagged Canada!!
After 2 in-flight misses on the small goldeneyes, I opted to photograph one of these canadian jumbo jets in-flight. Whew, finally something that I can catch up to.
It was great to get back to the lake again early today - nothing exotic, but that's okay. Fun to shoot, and see some of my photographer friends again.
Had an awesome time with two beautiful Canadian tiger swallowtail's today. One followed me for 4 hours around the lake and then finally let me photograph him/her at the end before we said our goodbyes.
Taken at Victoria Park, around the Reservoir Trail, in Nova Scotia, Canada.
Every Labour Day weekend a group of us explore one of Canada's treasures: Algonquin Park just north of Toronto, Ontario. It is a time of canoeing, portaging and camping with a group of great friends in this wilderness jewel.
Wikipedia: The Canada warbler (Cardellina canadensis) is a small boreal songbird of the New World warbler family (Parulidae). It summers in Canada and northeastern United States and winters in northern South America.
During the breeding season 82% of the population can be found in Canada and 18% in the United States. In Canada, the summer range extends from southeastern Yukon to Nova Scotia. In the United States, the range extends from northern Minnesota to northern Pennsylvania, east to Long Island, New York. It also nests in the high Appalachians as far south as Georgia. In winter, the Canada warbler's range extends from Guyana to northwestern Bolivia around the northern and western side of the Andean crest.
Conservation status: Least Concern
The Canada goose, sometimes called Canadian goose, is a large wild goose with a black head and neck, white cheeks, white under its chin, and a brown body. It is native to the arctic and temperate regions of North America, and it is occasionally found during migration across the Atlantic in northern Europe. Wikipedia
Mass: 7.1 – 14 lbs (Male, Adult), 5.5 – 12 lbs (Female,
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he Canadian Rockies are the easternmost part of the Canadian Cordillera, the collective name for the mountains of Western Canada. They form part of the American Cordillera, an essentially continuous sequence of mountain ranges that runs all the way from Alaska to the very tip of South America. The Cordillera, in turn, is the eastern part of the Pacific Ring of Fire that runs all the way around the Pacific Ocean.
View of Lake Louise in Alberta
The Canadian Rockies are bounded on the east by the Canadian Prairies, on the west by the Rocky Mountain Trench, and on the north by the Liard River. Contrary to popular misconception, the Rockies do not extend north into Yukon or Alaska, or west into central British Columbia. North of the Liard River, the Mackenzie Mountains, which are a distinct mountain range, form a portion of the border between the Yukon and the Northwest Territories. The mountain ranges to the west of the Rocky Mountain Trench in southern British Columbia are called the Columbia Mountains, and are not considered to be part of the Rockies by Canadian geologists.
Canada Darner (Aeshna canadensis)
Photo taken at the RBG along the Hendrie Valley boardwalk in Burlington.
Happy Canada Day!
The night sky was burst with colour on "Canada Eve" when Harbourfront Centre presented the spectacular fireworks show.
After bathing and preening, this female Canada Warbler did some foraging to fuel its autumn migration south. I felt privileged to enjoy such a close view in a quiet corner of Confederation Park, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
CHÂTEAU FRONTENAC
Diseñado por el arquitecto Bruce Price, el castillo fue uno de una serie de hoteles estilo “château” construidos por la compañía Canadian Pacific Railway a finales del siglo XIX y comienzos del siglo XX.
Abierto desde 1893.
Los Aliados de la Segunda Guerra Mundial se reunieron durante la Primera y Segunda Conferencia de Quebec (en 1943 y 1944 respectivamente). Durante estas conferencias, funcionarios como el presidente estadounidense Franklin Delano Roosevelt, el primer ministro británico Winston Churchill y el primer ministro canadiense William Lyon Mackenzie King, discutieron la estrategia para la Segunda Guerra Mundial.
En 1953, este hotel fue utilizado como lugar de rodaje de la escena final de la película "I Confess" de Alfred Hitchcock, con Montgomery Clift y Anne Baxter.
Designed by architect Bruce Price, the castle was one of a series of château-style hotels built by the Canadian Pacific Railway in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Open since 1893.
The Allies of World War II met here during the First and Second Quebec Conferences (in 1943 and 1944 respectively). During these conferences, officials such as US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King discussed strategy for World War II.
In 1953, this hotel was used as a filming location for the final scene of Alfred Hitchcock's film "I Confess," starring Montgomery Clift and Anne Baxter.
I love see and hear Canada geese. This is 37 of a huge flock that flew in this morning. They certainly woke up the neighbourhood with their honking. Canada geese fly at an average speed of about 40 miles per hour when migrating, but may increase their speed to 70 miles per hour if they catch a strong tailwind. They typically fly at an altitude of 2,000 to 8,000 feet, although pilots have reported sightings of Canada geese at altitudes of up to 9,000 feet. Amazing birds!
No private group or multiple group invites please!
Ningún grupo privado o grupo múltiple invita por favor
Aucun groupe privé ou groupe multiple ne vous invite
Geen privégroep of meerdere groepsuitnodigingen alstublieft
Keine private Gruppe oder mehrere Gruppen laden bitte ein
Nenhum grupo privado ou grupo múltiplo convida por favor
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Canadian Penny
1876 - 2013
R.I.P.
For this week's FlickrFriday theme of "Made No More" I chose the penny as a subject. The life (and death) of the Canadian Penny is so full of fun facts that they cannot all be listed here. But here are a few:
*** For the first 32 years of its life, 1876 - 1908, the penny was minted in Britain and shipped over.
*** Nicknamed a "copper", the penny was not actually made of copper from 1997 on. It was copper-plated zinc or steel.
*** Even with the reduced copper content, pennies in their final years were costing 1.6 cents to make.
*** The Canadian federal government has saved millions of dollars by discontinuing the minting of pennies.
CHÂTEAU FRONTENAC
Diseñado por el arquitecto Bruce Price, el castillo fue uno de una serie de hoteles estilo “château” construidos por la compañía Canadian Pacific Railway a finales del siglo XIX y comienzos del siglo XX.
Abierto desde 1893.
Los Aliados de la Segunda Guerra Mundial se reunieron durante la Primera y Segunda Conferencia de Quebec (en 1943 y 1944 respectivamente). Durante estas conferencias, funcionarios como el presidente estadounidense Franklin Delano Roosevelt, el primer ministro británico Winston Churchill y el primer ministro canadiense William Lyon Mackenzie King, discutieron la estrategia para la Segunda Guerra Mundial.
En 1953, este hotel fue utilizado como lugar de rodaje de la escena final de la película "I Confess" de Alfred Hitchcock, con Montgomery Clift y Anne Baxter.
Designed by architect Bruce Price, the castle was one of a series of château-style hotels built by the Canadian Pacific Railway in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Open since 1893.
The Allies of World War II met here during the First and Second Quebec Conferences (in 1943 and 1944 respectively). During these conferences, officials such as US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King discussed strategy for World War II.
In 1953, this hotel was used as a filming location for the final scene of Alfred Hitchcock's film "I Confess," starring Montgomery Clift and Anne Baxter.
I really don't know if this cute little building is vintage and has been relocated to this site, or if it a reproduction made to look Victorian, period authentic to the area.
It sits perched upon the New Westminster boardwalk in Westminster Pier Park, that walks you along the scenic Fraser River.
The New Westminster Quay location makes for a beautiful view point and fabulous place to watch tugboats work their way up and down the Fraser River. ( as seen in my last couple of images)
I purposely included a couple of pedestrians to give you a sneak preview of the boardwalk next to follow.
New Westminster is the oldest city in western Canada.
New Westminster is a historically important city in the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia, Canada, and is a member municipality of the Greater Vancouver Regional District. It was founded by Major-General Richard Moody as the capital of the new-born Colony of British Columbia in 1858, and continued in that role until the Mainland and Island Colonies were merged in 1866, and was the Mainland's largest city from that year until it was passed in population by Vancouver during the first decade of the 20th Century.
It is located on the right bank of the Fraser River as it turns southwest towards its estuary, on the southwest side of the Burrard Peninsula and roughly at the centre of the Greater Vancouver region. ( Wikipedia )
Your views are greatly appreciated. Thanks for visiting.
~ Christie ( happiest ) by the River
A beautiful group of Canada Geese enjoying the wonderful landscape of Andrew Haydon Park. Best viewed large =)
Taken in Canada only had a short window before the effect would not be there . on the way to Maligne tours. - Patricia Lake Jasper...
The Intact Centre is an office building located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, that serves as the head offices of Ontario Power Generation and Intact Financial. It was originally built in 1975 for Ontario Hydro (of which OPG is a successor company) and has been previously known as Hydro Place, Ontario Hydro Building and Ontario Power Building. The building is owned by Triovest.
It was designed by the architect Kenneth Raymond Cooper with Consulting Architect Kenneth H. Candy, Chief Architect of Ontario Hydro, and Adamson Associates. Located at 700 University Avenue at the intersection of College Street in Downtown Toronto, the International Style building stands at 80.0 m and 19 floors with 113,898 m2 (1,225,990 sq ft) of space.
The building is served by Queen's Park station on the Toronto subway. The subway station connects the building to the MaRS Discovery District.
The building has a food court on the main floor which has restaurants such as Swiss Chalet, Subway, Tim Hortons, and Mr. Souvlaki. It also contains an INS convenience store, dental and eye offices. This food court is very popular among the people who work in the building as well as older students who go to Orde Street Junior Public School.