Canada
Lundbom Lake

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    • Day 1

      lundbom lake east campsite

      July 12, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

      Nice little campsite on the east side of the lake. We went to see if there were any sites on the south east side where we had been in 2016, but the lake water was so much higher all the beach sites were flooded. Where I had hung the hammock between trees was now beach front. amazing how much water was in the lake and how much more of the shore areas were flooded. the camp host said that it was like this for the last 2 years..

      the site we had was right on the water, small path to leave the canoe and sit on the water. nice and breezy so that kept the bugs at bay during the day.....not so at night we had to put up the bug house as it was just too much.

      Yellow salsify -Yellow Salisify -Trapopogon dubious
      - Salsify from french Salsifis and latin Solsqeuium - Sol -sun, Sequium -follower a plant that follows the sun

      Verbascum -thapsus - great mullein -
      -Eurasian origin. common low to mid elevations disturbed, gravely sites, fields and pastures. biennial. Greek legend has it that ulysses, hermes and circe used this plant in their incantations and witchcraft. hedge taper and torch are derived from the practice of dipping the plant in suet and burning it as a candle or torch. Interior native poples used to smoke the dried leaves.
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    • Day 1

      eve walk and back to campsite

      July 12, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

      more aspen in the setting sun.
      wild rose, maybe rosa nutkana? these were also at our campsite
      view from the campsite looking to the west side of the lake where the horse camp is located.

      The little water birch shrub? (at least that is what i think it is) , rose, saskatoon berry shrubs had lots and lots of bird activity. Cedar wax wings and house finches were feeding on the berries of the saskatoons. The finches were so ravenous they had berry juice all over their beaks. the waxwings were much more delicate. they just swallowed the berry whole. Lots of yellow birds, finches, warblers, Siskins? kinglets, I didn't figure out who was who. and humming birds I think they were rufous, but immatures so hard to id. I did catch a glimse of a burnt orangish bib.t There was a small woodpecker (maybe a hairy or a three toed) that had drilled some holes into the birch shrub. the sap was running so insects were congregating there. consequently the hummers, and yellow birds were all going in to eat the insects. quite the commotion. the hummers were flying so close we could hear the buzzing of their wings. They kept buzzing our heads. at first I thought there was a nest, but I couldn't really identify any mature ones, although there was one time a courting display was done; that huge arc where they fly down and peep at the bottom of the arc. The birds just kept flittering from shrub group to shrub group. it was great. The waxwings were also eating the insects on the fly and they would buzz up and around in a small flock (5 birds maybe) as they did that. all over the lake.Read more

    • Day 2

      doggy trying out the old air matress

      August 17, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

      We were able to go for a dip in the lake on Friday. I even got out the old air mattress and doggy did attempt to get on it. He didn't do to bad considering he is not the greatest fan of the water!

      Colin had just commented on how nice the day had been, not a lot of smoke and literally 15 minutes later the smoke came and didn't really leave.
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    • Day 2

      smoke on Saturday

      August 17, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

      The smoke lowered the temperature enough we had to put on our fleece jackets in the morning. It was like a fall day. We were at 3,000 ft elevation so it would be cooler when the sun wasn't out, but surprising when we had been so hot the day before we had to dip in the lake to cool down!
      Because it was cooler we were able to do a walk in the commonage. The cows had been in the campground the day before, but we saw them round them up and move them to another pasture on Friday. Very noisy on Friday morning with all the mooing, but by Friday night and Saturday morning no mooing!

      We used the GPS and sort of found the circular path that we hadn't found a month before, but we still got off the trail and ended up wandering along one of the cow trails.
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    • Day 3

      hike/walk in the smoke

      August 18, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

      The smaller lake in the back.

      some sort of scat. Not sure from who. Lots of berry seeds in it. The saskatoons were pretty well finished this trip. Most of them were dry and consequently not as many cedar waxwings in the shrubs. But something had finished them as we saw lots and lots of this scat all over the place.Read more

    • Day 2

      canoe ride

      July 13, 2018 in Canada ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

      Canoe trip out around the lake margins.

      The fishermen were already out by the time we ate breaky, but we still had a nice quite, calm lake. It had been windy the day before in the afternoon.

      Lots of birds at the lake edge.
      -3 ducks, I think female or immature golden eyes. brown heads, greyish sides of body, golden eye. they didn't like us getting too close so flew off.
      -great blue herons, maybe 2 which we kept disturbing and they flew off further down the lake then to the other side...by the time we reached the other side,they flew back to the other side again.
      -loons, I love to hear the calls of the loons. There were probably 5 on our lake with 1 or 2 young and at least another pair on the lake behind us with a youngster
      -osprey. they may have been nesting in the large ponderosa pine at the lakes edge. the adult who was out hunting got quite antsy as we approached the pine tree and was whistling to the one in the tree. the one in the tree called back.
      -spotted sandpipers. quite a few, mostly solitary. all along the rocky north shore in the sun. they have spots on their breast, orange beak and that constant bobbing tail. we saw some fluffy ones too so I assume immatures maybe, no orange beak?
      -greater or lesser yellow legs. we really saw his yellow legs, taller than the sandpipers, longer beak too a bit, and bigger. only saw one.
      -red winged blackbirds, in the reeds
      -brewers blackbird at the waters edge, white around eye
      =eagles, one had caught a fish and the osprey was chasing him. saw this later in the afternoon. it may have been the osprey who actually caught the fish and the eagle stole it as eagles are known to do that.....
      -hawks but i don't know which ones. they like to hover, as do the osprey.

      we saw a beaver on both mornings that we were out. there was lots of evidence of chewing of the reeds. the reeds themselves were down in the water all over the place. the first morning we saw him we saw him floating chewing on one of the reeds. you could see his tail and it looked much broader than a muskrat. on day 2 we saw the fat head as well. saw him close to the same location both mornings on the north side of the lake.

      -the reeds themselves were covered in exoskeletons of some of the insect larvae that had climbed to the top we assume before they emerged. I think mostly damsel fly, -bluet- as there were many of these beautiful small damsel flys about. they lined up with the winds when the wind was high, and when i was swimming when it was calm they were all resting on the twigs of the submerged shrubs. like little blue baubles for christmas decorations.
      -boreal bluet, phosphorescent tough picks hovering in the reeds.

      -other exoskeletons may have been the water tiger beetle. apparently quite ferocious in the larvae stage, they bite their prey and once impaled they inject digestive juices which dissolves the prey in its own body which the water tiger beetle then digests. starfish have the same method for eating.

      - the damsel fly larvae have 3 gills at the bottom of their body when in the larval stage. one of the larvae landed on my arm and you could see those 3 little gills.

      -lots of Blue eyed Darners too. a type of dragon fly- much larger than the damsel fly. The darners are important food source for kestrels and merlin. the young birds hone their hunting skills by capturing the darners.

      damsal flys and dragon flys apparently will lay their eggs either in the soft water plants or on top of the water so as they fly they dip their abdomen into the water.
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    Lundbom Lake

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