Tag Archives: Travel
17. Apr, 2011

Robins! I had about 50 in the yard at once. Pictures from Calgary. In the snow.

Robin on a branch while snow is falling.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

The robins came in droves over the weekend. It was also snowing the whole time. The whole scene was unusual. Robins and snow aren’t supposed to go together. Snow in April is not particularly welcome (though not at all uncommon). Robins in flocks, very unusual for me.

07. Apr, 2011

Policeman on horseback at the shopping centre, Calgary

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Went out foraging for food at the big Safeway. Had a coffee in the Starbucks and while I was just sitting there minding my own business, a policeman rode by on a horse.

I lept up, ran to the window and snapped a picture. The guy I leaned over to do that didn’t seem to notice.

Will upload the pic shortly.

This was not a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The Calgary city police also use horses, though not very much. I can’t remember seeing one in this neck of the woods before.

05. Apr, 2011

Robins in Calgary

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

The robins have been here for at least a couple of weeks, but now I’m hearing them at least once a day.

I put 200 mealworms (dried) out for them to eat on Sunday afternoon. They were still untouched this morning. Need a more visible spot.

North American robins are big birds, compared to the cheery English robin red-breast of Christmas card fame. Our robins are a kind of thrush, with grey backs and orange-y breasts. The male is brighter than the female.

Baby robins have spotted breasts and look clumsy, which they are, but only briefly. Soon they leave the nest and learn to fly.

Robins are one of the most common birds we have. We tend to use them as one of the standard birds for describing the size of other birds. Bigger than a robin? That’s fairly big, for a city bird. Something like a gull or a crow. Smaller than a robin? That would be in the chick-a-dee or sparrow range.

Robins build round nests, using a lot of mud and straw and twigs. Two nests glued together could make a sphere.

Because they are reasonably unafraid of people, robins will build their nests close to houses. We had one in our Virginia creeper a couple of years ago, and everyone had to walk right by it (within inches) to get into the house. That particular nest was a little fancier than most because the birds had found some coloured yarn and worked it in.

Some people leave long bits of yarn lying around for birds to use in nesting, but this one was by luck, not design.

The eggs are a special shade of turquoise (robin’s egg blue). The babies are born with that prehistoric naked dinosaur look, but soon they grow feathers and put on weight.

If you hold your hand over the robin’s nest when the babies are in there (when the mother is away looking for worms and bugs to feed them), the babies, even though their eyes may be closed, will turn their heads up to the shadow you’re casting. They open their mouths wider than the size of their heads, and wait for dinner to drop in.

The year we had that nest in the Virginia creeper, I had the door open to get a breeze through the house one summer day. Later, after I’d been working up in my office for a while, I went downstairs to the ground level and there was a robin in the living room.

He was one of the babies, and the Mum was outside calling him, but he couldn’t figure out that he had to return the way he’d come.

I tried to shoo him out, but it was too complicated for him to follow my directions. Picking him up wasn’t my first choice, but that’s what I had to do. I guess robins are tough enough to survive a little handling, but the poor little guy’s heart was racing.

He joined his Mum, who scolded him, and then they flew away.

03. Apr, 2011

The prairie dogs are awake near Edmonton

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Away: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Drove back home to Calgary

It was one of those blue Alberta days, the high-pressure, semi-euphoric air mass finally giving us an uplift. The winter dust and grime didn’t look so thick today.

Best of all, the little gophers, aka prairie dogs, Richardson’s ground squirrels, were standing by the road here and there. I didn’t see many, but there were a few between Edmonton and Red Deer.

The prairie dog life cycle includes a lot of time spent underground: all winter, much of the summer and fall, and at night.

Dr. Gail Michener at the University of Lethbridge has studied them closely. One of her many interesting findings about these little guys is that the dates of starting and ending hibernation depend on age (juvenile or adult) and gender. The boys and girls are not all upstairs at the same time, though of course there is some overlap of they would be the Shakers of the animal kingdom.

Here’s a link to Dr. Michener’s explanation of the yearly cycle of the Richardson’s ground squirrel.

01. Apr, 2011

April Fool’s: Winter weather warning for Calgary

Friday, April 1, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Away: Drove to Edmonton

I didn’t look forward to the drive north to Edmonton today.

OK, let’s get it over with, no one in Calgary looks forward to going to Edmonton, thanks to our inter-city rivalry. But, shock, horror, I’ve lived in both places and each has its charm. The drive between Calgary and Edmonton can be beautiful in the spring, as the migrating birds return.

Spring?

I woke up this morning to see on the AMA’s (Alberta Motor Association) website: Winter weather warning.

Fantastic! Just what I was hoping for!

I was lucky. The bad weather with the snow and wind and ice and all that was west and south of my route.

A calm and pleasant drive to our provincial capital.

Didn’t see any swans at Red Deer though. Too early, I guess.

30. Mar, 2011

Dragon City Mall, Calgary

110222 Chinatown in Calgary IMG_5361

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Red pillars and green and yellow roof of Chinese restaurant

Chinatown in Calgary, corner of 4th Avenue and Centre Street South. Photo by Jill Browne, February 22, 2011.

Calgary’s Chinatown has a long, well-established history, though not without its dark moments. Stories for another day, perhaps.

This Dragon City Mall, in the picture, is popular. I haven’t been in for a long time but I think I had Dim Sum at the Regency Palace there. I thought we sat in the part you can see, upstairs in the round part. Maybe I’m wrong or maybe I’m right and the restaurants have moved around a bit. Upstairs the sign is for the Kingfisher, Regency Palace is in there but you can’t see their sign, and on that prominent corner featured in the picture is, ta da: Sushi Tokyo.

29. Mar, 2011

Picture of Centre Street, Calgary, on a winter morning. Getting stuck. (Not me).

110222 Centre Street Calgary looking north IMG_5366

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Centre Street in Calgary

Looking north toward the Centre Street Bridge, Calgary. Photo by Jill Browne, February 22, 2011.

We’ve been on daylight savings time for a while now. Why it started in early March is a good question but OK, it did.

This means it stays light later in the evening, and that’s nice.

Going to work in the morning, for those who have to travel any distance, is still dismal and dark.

This picture from February could have been taken today, a month later.

The picture is of Centre Street, looking north. In the distance is the Centre Street Bridge, crossing the Bow River. It’s a two-level bridge. Every year, usually on the first day of the Calgary Stampede, someone who can’t read road signs will drive his RV, or attempt to drive his RV, across the lower deck and get stuck because the bridge clearance is too low for his vehicle.

Some day I hope to get to the scene and watch the RV extraction process. It’s sort of a rite of passage. (Watching, not being the driver.)

28. Mar, 2011

Picture of the Westin, Calgary with Starbucks sign

Starbucks at the Westin Calgary
Starbucks logo on Westin Hotel, Calgary

Starbucks at the Westin Hotel, Calgary. Photo by Jill Browne, February 22, 2011.

Monday, March 28, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

The picture shows the Westin Hotel on 4th Avenue SW, downtown. It’s still one of the leading business hotels, with a great location for people who have meetings right downtown.

I haven’t visited the Starbucks in there yet.

27. Mar, 2011

Grey Sunday, and pictures of downtown Calgary buildings

Calgary skyscrapers
Two shiny tall buildings in Calgary

Calgary skyscrapers. Photo by Jill Browne, February 22, 2011.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Shiny buildings, but not so shiny on a grey February day. It’s like that again today.

Here’s a Google Street View picture, also downtown, looking at different buildings, in warmer weather.


View Larger Map

And a link in case you can’t see that.

That clear structure hanging over the sidewalk, looking like several box kites joined together, is a sculpture put in when the building was known as the Amoco building. When the sun shines through it, there are rainbow colours. It’s quite attractive.

24. Mar, 2011

Best pizza in Calgary

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Home: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

My vote for best pizza in town is the Ambrosia at Nick’s on Crowchild Trail across from McMahon Stadium.

Artichokes and sun dried tomatoes and spinach and feta cheese.

Yummy.