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Love Nature photo contest entries

By |2020-10-22T09:17:54-04:00August 12th, 2020|Creative, Love Nature photo contest|

Here are the entries in our Love Nature photo contest, which is open to all residents of Windsor and Essex County. We will post them as they come in until the contest deadline: Sept. 30, 2020.

Tap here to go to our Facebook page and like your favourites.

Tap here for more details about the contest.

Category: Junior Egrets

The beauty of fall at Ojibway Park on Sept. 27, 2020. Photo by Caitlyn Walker
A beautiful flower for a beautiful time of year. This photo was taken Sept. 27, 2020 at Ojibway Park. Photo by Caitlyn Walker
A beautiful natural corridor at Maidstone Conservation Area on Sept. 26, 2020. Photo by Caitlyn Walker

Category: Teens

This close-up photo of a giant swallowtail was taken at a flower shop on Wyandotte Street East in Windsor on June 4, 2020. Photo by Warren Evans
A bunny sits in a familiar pose along the Riverfront Trail in Windsor on June 25, 2020. The photo was taken when it was blinded by the sun. Photo by Warren Evans
My first time seeing a cormorant. This photo was taken at Riverside Marina on Aug. 31, 2020. Photo by Warren Evans

Category: Adults

This young fox kit was happy to pose for a few minutes before scurrying back into its den. This photo was taken May 19, 2020 in Kingsville, which definitely seems to have a higher amount of foxes reported than most places I see. Photo by Donny Moore
This image of trumpeter swans was taken in Harrow on May 29, 2020. It is the first confirmed successful breeding of the species in Southwestern Ontario in over 100 years. Photo by Donny Moore
A bee sits on a milkweed flower in LaSalle. This photo is related to my fun hobby as a beekeeper. As a lover of nature I snap pictures (a lot of them!) of honeybees on my own apiary, and when I am out in the community helping others with bee rescues and educating the public about the importance of protecting pollinators like the honeybee and the forage sources in our community. Photo by Tim Purdie
Bees gather on a tree in LaSalle. This photo is related to my fun hobby as a beekeeper. I started an Essex County Beekeepers Club about three years ago and we have over 160 members today! Photo by Tim Purdie
Baby raccoons, like this one on my property in LaSalle, were everywhere this spring. There is so much wildlife in our region and it is important to respect this land is an ecosystem that we share, and need to take care of. Photo by Tim Purdie
Ox-eye daisy growing in an empty lot on Peter and Indian streets in Windsor on June 6, 2020. I’m a biology graduate from the University of Windsor. My work predominantly focused on fish and wetland ecology. This past year I decided to start teaching myself plant identification. It has been an exciting spring and summer. Photo by Justin Landry
Blue flag/blue iris at Ojibway Prairie Complex on June 8, 2020. Photo by Justin Landry
Blue vervain at Ruscom Shores Conservation Area on Aug. 2, 2020. Photo by Justin Landry
This iPhone photo was taken on Aug. 19, 2020 in our backyard in Lasalle. This is my first butterfly after collecting eggs on milkweed leaves and feeding caterpillars until they are at the pupa stage; then waiting while they are enclosed in chrysalises. Photo by Cheryl Thomson
These flowers are food for the pollinators on the LaSalle trails near Malden Road. This photo was taken Aug. 27, 2020. Photo by Catherine Hogg
The sun setting behind Fighting Island in mid-June 2020. Photo by JoAnn Grondin
Robins nesting under a gazebo roof in LaSalle in mid-June 2020. Photo by JoAnn Grondin
“OK if I sit here?” Photo by Mary Jane MacVicar
A monarch lands on a flower in front of Erie Shores Hospice in Leamington. Photo by Mary Jane MacVicar
A great blue heron about to take off at Cedar Creek in the summer of 2020. Photo by Jacqueline Patterson
This green heron was nice enough to pose and allow me to get fairly close. The photo was was taken on May 4, 2020 at the Essex sewage lagoons. I walk on the beautiful trails provided for us here in Essex almost every day and am constantly surprised by the beauty that nature provides. And I always bring my camera. Photo by Mike Burkoski
This photo of a common ringlet butterfly was taken on June 16, 2020 on the Cypher Systems Group Greenway between North Malden and Pinkerton roads. Photo by Mike Burkoski
This colourful shot of a bee visiting a thistle was taken on the Cypher Systems Group Greenway in Essex on Aug. 26, 2020. Photo by Mike Burkoski
A heron with his breakfast catch at Hillman Marsh on June 18, 2020. Photo by Linda Enns
A heron poses for a photo near East Beach Road on Aug. 22, 2020. Photo by Linda Enns
The Marsh Boardwalk tower at Point Pelee National Park on Sept. 18, 2020. Photo by Linda Enns
A hummingbird at rest in Tecumseh on Aug. 31, 2020. Photo by Allison Couture
A sunflower standing up to a storm in Tecumseh on Aug. 14, 2020. Photo by Allison Couture
A busy bee in Reaume Park in Windsor on Sept. 4, 2020. Photo by Allison Couture
A dragonfly dries after a dip in the pool in LaSalle in August 2020. Photo by Fiona Klein
Backyard barefoot bliss in LaSalle in August 2020. Photo by Fiona Klein
This monarch butterfly is at our house in Belle River. We have planted milkweed, collected eggs and raised 10 monarchs. This was one of our releases. Photo by Lucille St. Pierre
This was taken at Point Pelee. The sanderlings were running along the beach at the tip. It was a windy day. They were trying to stay out of the surf. Photo by Lucille St. Pierre
An eastern tailed-blue sits in the afternoon sun at Ojibway Park in Windsor in August 2020. Photo by Paula O’Rourke
An eastern tiger swallowtail rests on a milkweed plant in LaSalle on July 30, 2020. Photo by Paula O’Rourke
A monarch in the late afternoon at Ojibway Park in September 2020. Photo by Paula O’Rourke
The orioles come to the feeder every year. This photo was taken in Kingsville on May 13, 2020. Photo by Ashley Holden
An oriole in Kingsville on May 13, 2020. Photo by Ashley Holden
Touch me or touch me not is a child’s favourite. This photo was taken Sept. 27, 2020 at Point Pelee National Park. Photo by Lourdes Daly
This swallowtail butterfly was attracted to the colourful butterfly bush in our backyard. The picture was taken on Aug. 8, 2020 in Leamington. Photo by Peter Hack
On Aug. 4, 2020, I captured this monarch butterfly coming in for a landing on our backyard butterfly bush in Leamington. Photo by Peter Hack
Numerous bees gathered on the pinkish flowers from our ornamental onion plant in the front yard in Leamington. The setting sun of Aug. 6, 2020 highlighted the translucency of the bee’s wings as it moved across the flower. Photo by Peter Hack
A swan sits at the Gil Maure boat dock in LaSalle on April 30, 2020. Photo by Alex Szalkai
A baby deer curls up in a backyard in LaSalle on May 24, 2020. Photo by Alex Szalkai
A baby deer and mother walk through a backyard in LaSalle on May 24, 2020. Photo by Alex Szalkai
This photo was taken in Wheatley on Aug. 30, 2020. Photo by Wally Simpson
I took this photo in our apple orchard in Leamington on May 15, 2020. Photo by Wally Simpson
An eastern chipmunk caught on camera in my backyard in LaSalle on Sept. 9, 2020. Photo by Linda Menard-Watt
A blue dasher makes a stop in my LaSalle backyard on July 28, 2020. Photo by Linda Menard-Watt
A honey bee with with a pollen sack on its leg sits on a flower in the Ojibway Prairie on Sept. 19, 2020. Photo by Linda Menard-Watt
An osprey embraces the sky at Hillman Marsh Conservation Area on Sept. 27, 2020. I took this photo while on a canoeing trip. Photo by Nancy Platsko
A sunflower in full bloom in Kingsville on Aug. 3, 2020. Photo by Olivia Wuerch
A butterfly lands on a flower in LaSalle on Aug. 12, 2020. Photo by Julie Szalkai
Geese with lots of babies as seen from LaSalle’s Front Road Park on May 16, 2020. Photo by Julie Szalkai
A swan with babies swims at LaSalle Front Road Park on May 21, 2020. Photo by Julie Szalkai
A curious fawn near Front Road in LaSalle is captured on camera Sept. 1, 2020. Photo by Landan Dallyn
Dragonfly rests on wild grass next to Front Road in LaSalle on July 5, 2020. Photo by Landan Dallyn
A starling comes in for landing near Front Road in LaSalle on Aug. 31, 2020. Photo by Landan Dallyn
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Love Nature photo contest

By |2020-08-29T06:45:38-04:00August 10th, 2020|Creative, Love Nature photo contest|

The Essex County Field Naturalists’ Club’s first Love Nature photo contest is open to all residents of Windsor/Essex County. Show us your love of nature. Send us a photo you have taken anywhere in Windsor/Essex County between March 15 and September 30, 2020. The club will share the photos on the Essex County Nature website. We’ll also share them on our Facebook page and everyone can ‘like’ their favourites. Then the judges will pick the winners.

 Categories

Junior Egrets (under 12 years)

Teens (12 to 17 years)

Adults (18 years and older)

Winners will have bragging rights plus:

All                                            Jr Egrets                                    Teens                            Adult

1st 2021 family membership +    hummingbird feeder                   hummingbird feeder       egret print

2nd 2021 family membership +   backyard bird songs book            fish book                       fish book

3rd 2021 family membership

Contest Rules

  • Open to all Windsor/Essex County residents.
  • Photos must be taken in Windsor/Essex County between March 15and Sept. 30, 2020.
  • All types of cameras and devices (smartphones, tablets, etc.) can be used to take the photos.
  • We welcome all kinds of photos that show your love of nature. Pictures with individuals are not allowed.
  • Photos can be cropped. They cannot be edited or enhanced in any other way.
  • Deadline for submitting photos is September 30, 2020.
  • The limit per person is three entries.
  • A panel of Essex County Field Naturalists’ Club board members will select the winning photos.

Winning Entries

  • Winners will be notified by email or phone.
  • Winning photos will be published on the club’s website and social media outlets.
  • Photos of all 1st prize winners will be printed and raffled off during a club meeting once they resume.

Submission Guidelines

Publishing and copyright

  • By submitting a photo, you represent and warrant that you took the photo and retain the copyright to it.
  • By submitting a photo to the contest, the entrant hereby grants the Essex County Field Naturalists’ Club the right to use the photo submitted. The Essex County Field Naturalists’ Club will have the rights to use the image digitally to: (a) publish on its website, Essex County Nature, and in its newsletter, The Egret; (b) promote the Essex County Field Naturalists’ Club; and (c) promote the Essex County Field Naturalists’ Club via Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Flickr and other social media outlets.

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Jessica’s Nature Journal — Spring Awakenings

By |2020-04-13T18:02:23-04:00April 11th, 2020|Creative|

Spring is such an uplifting time of year. The birds are returning from their winter homes, frogs are calling for their mates, trees are bursting with buds, and flowers like trout lily and mayapple are pushing their way up through the moist forest floor. This would be a perfect time for an Essex County Field Naturalists’ Club “pop up” event,  perhaps do a “first of the year” sightings list, or go on a multi-sensory hike through different habitats!  Unfortunately, due to the emergence of the new virus known as Covid-19, we cannot gather for any events right now… But that doesn’t mean we can’t still go outside and share our experiences! That’s what I did recently, and I brought my nature journal with me to help tell my story. So lend me your imaginations, and let me take you on an early spring “field trip”…  Today we are going for a long, slow walk through the Spring Garden Natural Area!

April 7th, 2020, 1:30pm
Spring Garden Natural Area
Clear skies with incoming clouds, ~15°C

Spring Garden is an Area of Natural and Scientific Interest with a mix of dry and wet habitats— tall grass prairie, oak savannah, Carolinian forest, a pond and the Turkey Creek. We will stick to the trails, but it’s good to be aware of the possibility of encountering ticks (Do your tick checks, just in case!). We begin at the south end, walking up a gravel trail that runs alongside the creek.  Some little brown birds take off from the ground, disappearing into a tangle of branches on the side of the trail. Overhead, the outstretched wings of gulls, riding the thermals high above, remind me of airplanes. We stop at a small clearing and stand quietly, and we notice the near absence of traffic noises and drop-in to the diversity of other, “more than human” sounds.

Spin in a circle and look up and down. What’s all around? To the south: the trail from which we came, the song sparrows are back on the path, shrubs are at eye level and a giant, cavity-ridden cotton wood carries a poison ivy vine up to the sun. To the west: a dense forest with a strong chorus of chorus frogs singing from dark pools of water.  To the north are “the hills”— a large, open, hilly area where the ground shines gold with last year’s grasses and wildflowers. To the east is Turkey Creek, flowing from the Grand Marais ditch and winding its way into the Detroit River. You notice something move on a small island in the creek— a couple of mallards! Apparently undisturbed by our presence, the male tucks his beak back into his feathers while the female stretches a wing.

We stand over the creek for a minute or ten (who’s keeping track of time anyway?).  The sun makes you squint and feels slightly toasty on bare skin. A cool breeze freshens the air around us. The ground is soft and damp. A little brown spittlebug shows up unannounced. I open my nature journal and start documenting some findings:

Sensing that it’s time to move on and feeling pulled toward the warm, sunny openness of “the hills”, I decide to put my notebook away. We walk slowly so as not to scare any snakes that might be basking on the sides of the trail. With eyes on the ground, we notice the ages of different plants.  The old ones, long but bent, lay flat or propped up about a foot, while the new ones, only a centimetre long, poke straight up and are bright green. Suddenly, by the edge of the field, you hear a distinct and familiar sound: “Drink your TEA!”. We run ahead to get a closer look, and there, in the tree beside us, is the black, rusty-orange and white male Eastern Towhee. What a treat! Meanwhile, another bird flies out from the forest and as it enters the sun it turns blue and you know it’s none other than the Eastern Bluebird. Beauty!  And then, there’s a laugh from the sky— a belted king fisher! This is a great day for birds.  Now who else can we find?…

A shadow moves across the landscape as a few clouds come in. Moving north-west, we walk down from the hills to the edge of the forest. We are greeted by more sounds of chorus frogs, woodpeckers, blue jays and robins. There are puddles with trees growing out of them.  The canopy of the willows is flecked with bright yellow-green, and a cotton wood just dropped a catkin! I pick it up and put it in my pack for a comparison study that I want to do later…

What’s that sound??  A very strange sound!  A bubbly “Baaa”, a bit like a sheep. It’s getting closer. We look, and wait. Some red, green, blue and white colours flash through the trees ahead— the colourful clothing of homosapiens! A family rounds a bend in the trail, and we see that the mom has a baby in her arms. They’re doing the thing where you move your finger up and down over your lips while saying “Aaaaaaa”. That baby seems so happy, and why wouldn’t he be? It’s his first-ever spring, and everything is new.  We find a spot where the trail gets a bit wider and move to the side, giving that two metre space that is currently recommended for social distancing.

The trail winds and climbs, bringing us to a large pond in the heart of this natural area. Although it is man-made and has lots of phragmites, it is an attraction and is currently bustling with life. We walk around the perimeter of the pond, seeing mallards, geese, a pair of king fishers flying overhead, and a pair of buffleheads swimming about twenty meters away. The first dragonflies— Green Darners— are spotted near the shore. These are awesome to watch— large, colourful predators that zig zag through the air. A mating pair lands in front of us but never stays still long enough for a photo. On the sandy berms of the pond, ground nesting bees poke their heads out of holes, and a mourning cloak butterfly, with its light-tipped, dark wings, disappears into the forest.

Travelling north, we enter some prime oak savannah. This area received prescribed burns on March 14th and 15th, and still smells of burnt organic matter. The open understory lets you see far into the distance— far enough that things start to look hazy. Nothing but big old oak trees. It’s surprisingly quiet, but you know these oaks can support hundreds of species of insects, so there is certainly diversity here too.

The prescribed burns were done in sections going all the way to the far north end of the park. Here, the habitat changes again into a small and precious patch of prairie. Pausing at the end of the trail, you notice some chickadees around a small tree. The tree has some holes in it. Sure enough, the chickadees are going in and out of one particular hole. This would be a nice spot to come back to over the next few weeks to hopefully observe the busy nesting behaviour of a chickadee family.

It’s time to start the journey home, but we only quicken the pace a little, stopping often as we never cease to see something new. An oak tree from another angle might reveal a cavity fit for an owl!  Coming back to the pond, I find an aspen tree— it too is dropping it’s catkins! Compared to the cotton wood, these ones are larger and remind me very much of caterpillars. And then, just as we are about to move on, something purple catches your eye. A patch of common blue violets! They may be small, but when you get down to their level and see how their five vibrant petals light up in the sun, you can’t believe you almost missed them.

We take another look at the pond, from the south end, looking north. The water is doing something really cool right now… a rainbow!  Not a reflection from the sky, but some kind of phenomenon on the surface of the water. It only lasts a moment before more clouds block the sun, but in that moment I capture this photo:

Back at “the hills”, we notice the sky and realize how much time has passed.  The sun is low on the horizon. And my stomach is grumbling.  Turkey Creek shows us the way home, the straight stretch of trail we walked a few hours ago. But just as you think the adventure is over, one more thing grabs your attention— a young brown snake, no bigger than your hand, is coiled up on the trail. Frozen in its defensive posture, but really quite defenceless, I admire it and then shoo it off to the side where it should be safe from getting accidentally stepped on or rolled over by a speedy bike. Well worth that final look! Good luck little guy.

And so that brings us to the end of this field trip.  Thank you for joining me! I hope that in some way you felt like you were there too, especially if you’re currently trapped inside or struggling with social isolation.  In retelling my story, I got to experience it on another level, and I am feeling very grateful for seeing those first dragonflies of the year, the chickadees preparing their nest, and helping that snake off the trail.  I am lucky to live close to such an amazing natural area and am taking full advantage of all the time I have now to explore. I look forward to hearing some of your nature stories too, and hopefully going on outings together in person again some day soon. In the meantime, stay safe everyone, and may we find peace and wonder in nature now and always.   

~Jessica

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