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Sunday, 13 July 2025

July beauty

One of the environmental highlights for us this past week on Prince Edward Island was a calm day, without any wind, when the sea and sky became one. On such a day, the horizon disappears and different elements are indistinguishable.




I wonder what the cormorant sees when it looks around?




Our family went camping this past weekend, so my husband and I had the golden grand-dog for a few days. Those days included a visit to the beach at Mont Carmel. Daisy can be off-lead there as few people frequent the beach. She loves to fetch a ball out of the water.




It was a calm day and local cottagers were enjoying water sports . Paddle boards, Sea-doos, 





and a hydrofoil provided hours of entertainment for the cottagers and those watching.




Other days we walked on trails where other walkers were obvious in the distance and Daisy could run free before they approached. Unfettered, she runs ahead and stops periodically waiting for the seniors to catch up. 




We know it was a successful outing with Daisy if she is tired afterwards. A tired dog is a good dog.


Nature provided hours of entertainment this past week as the parade of wildflowers continues along the trails. Along the Confederation Trail, fireweed is resplendent in some areas. 




Queen Anne’s lace dominates in places though the two are usually not together. 




In the fields, some potato plants are in blossom already while others have some growing yet to do. 





A wheat field that borders the Confederation Trail looks to have benefitted from the rain we’ve had recently.




Along the boardwalk, the wildflowers are doing well. Yarrow 





and St. John’s wort grow beside the trail and brighten the days with their colour. 





At more than a metre high, wild roses and vetch attract bees. We stopped to watch the bees among the roses as we could hear their collective buzz.





Another interesting sight this past week was a swarm of flies we suspect were midges. They are visible in the photo below 




and a close-up is better than I thought it would be. We were lucky they weren’t biting.





I was fortunate to see a Great Blue Heron fishing in the salt marsh one day.





Another fortunate photo was the Yellow-bellied Sapsucker with a beak full of pin cherries before it entered the nest to feed its young.




Finally this week, one evening, just after dark, we passed a young fox out hunting. It was near a wheat field where the hunting is good. The fox wasn’t afraid of us when we rolled down the window to photograph it. 




Our encounters and experiences in nature continue to brighten our days and keep us moving.












8 comments:

Beatrice P. Boyd said...

It looks like grand puppy had a grand time with you and Rick this week.

DJan said...

Absolutely wonderful pictures, every last one. Thank you for the eye candy feast. Love seeing Daily looking happy like that.

Debra She Who Seeks said...

Love all your wildflower shots!

aurora said...

Love the endless serenity! Your wildflowers are beautiful. Colorful thick patches really stand out. That is a crazy swarm! I wonder what causes/ed them.

Your grand pup is such a joy!!

Anvilcloud said...

The fireweed is such a wonderful colour. We saw a lot of Queens Anne this morning on our walk, some of it past her best. We also spotted a heron, but is was not in good surroundings like yours.

Sandi said...

Pretty pictures! Thank you for sharing them with us.

Debbie said...

the grand doggy looks very happy, it is always a joy to watch a dog frolic in water. speaking of water, how do those kids stay up on those boards. the wild flowers are lovely, the fireweed is so pretty, i love the color!! it is amazing how wild flower thrive, with no love from us. nice to see you toay....have a great week!!

photowannabe said...

Delightful times in your part of the world. I love all the critters you photographed... but, oh my on those flies...yikes... great picture though.
I miss our "granddogger" a lot. its been 3 years since she's been gone. She used to be playful like your Golden. Ours was a labradoodle.
Sue