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Duffins Creek: March 2021

My grandfather, as a professor of zoology at the University of Toronto, would bring students every year to Duffins Creek. Each was given a net and they proceeded to learn about every creature that was briefly pulled from the creek or the shores and then put back. On occasion, I was invited to go along.

American Toad from August 2020

Here is how the area looked in early August 2020:

Quite different on this early spring morning in 2021:

ice

Some botany:

White Pine (Pinus strobus)
Pileated Woodpecker drilling in White Cedar
Black Alder (Alnus glutinosa)
American Beech (Fagus grandifolia)
Willow (Salix)
Manitoba Maple (Acer negundo)
Balsam Poplar (Populus balsamea)
Red-osier (Cornus sericea)
White Cedar (Thuja occidentalis)
Basswood (Tilia americana)
Multiflora Rose (Rosa multiflora)
Sweetbrier
Woodpecker drilling in Goldenrod gall
Jerusalem Artichoke (Helianthus tuberosus)
Red Ash (Fraxinus pensylvanica)

MAILBOX

Thanks to a reader for this:

An owl dangling precariously from a branch has scooped the overall prize of this year’s
Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards.
Out of the 3,500 entries, Tibor Kercz won the overall prize with his series of images
showing an owl losing its footing and trying to claw
 its way back on to a branch.
Other entrants included a yawning dormouse, a photo bombing sea turtle and
a rather shocked seal. 
Take a look at all the winning photos from the competition.Tibor Kercz’s photo of an undignified owl was the overall winner. Andrea Zampatti
won the Land category with a photograph of a dormouse.

Troy Mayne
won Under The Sea category with a photobombing sea turtle.
 John Threlfall
won the In The Air category with a bird and an ominous vapor trail.
 Daisy Gilardini
photographed a polar bear clinging on to its mother.

Penny Palmer
caught a sea otter reaching for the sky.
 Carl Henry’s
was highly commended for his photo entitled All Dressed And Ready For Church.
 Olivier Colle
spotted a hare munching on grass.
 Katy
Laveck-Foster snapped two cheeky monkeys
 Jean-Jacques Alcalay
captured the moment it looked as though a wildebeest was riding on the back of its companions.
 George Cathcart
was highly commended for his photo entitled WTF.

Douglas Croft
caught a fox getting a hole in one on a golf course.

Daniel Trim
snapped two mudskippers appearing to be in mid-song.

NATURE POETRY

It is the first mild day of March:
Each minute sweeter than before
The redbreast sings from the tall larch
That stands beside our door.                             – William Wordsworth (1770–1850)

Miles Hearn

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