The following photos were taken on April 13 in the Creston Valley.
Snow Goose

Snow Goose
Snow Geese

Snow Geese
Wilson’s Snipe
Mallards
Male Brewer’s Blackbird
Osprey in Flight
Osprey Landing
The following photos were taken on April 13 in the Creston Valley.
Snow Goose

Snow Goose
Snow Geese

Snow Geese
Wilson’s Snipe
Mallards
Male Brewer’s Blackbird
Osprey in Flight
Osprey Landing
The following photographs were taken over the last 10 days in the Creston Valley.

River Otter
River Otter
Red-tailed Hawk
Wilson’s Snipe
Wilson’s Snipes
Black-capped Chickadee

Black-capped Chickadee

Downy Woodpecker

Northern Pygmy Owl
The following photos were all taken over the last week in the Kootenays near Creston, B.C.
Mountain Fog
Bighorn Ram in the snow on Kootenay Pass
Bighorn Ram on Kootenay Pass
Trees in the Mist
House Finch
Song Sparrow
Sharp-shinned Hawk with Prey
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Black-capped Chickadee
Black-capped Chickadee

American Kestrel

Wilson’s Snipe
Horse
Yellow Fog
Why oil sands, a sunken ferry, and the price of oil in China have the Great Bear Rainforest in an uproar - National Geographic Society.
View the CINE film festival award winning documentary spOIL to see what's at risk by Enbridge & Alberta's dirty oil sands!
Tar sands to tankers - The fight against Enbridge - Living Oceans Video
Oil in Eden: The Battle to Protect Canada's Pacific Coast - Pacific Wild Video
The secrets and wonders of the Great Bear Rainforest: Global TV - Land of the Spirit Bear Series
Over a year later they are still trying to clean up 819,000 gallons of oil that Enbridge spilled into the Kalamazoo River near Marshall Michigan.
It's also worth noting that Canadian taxpayers will be on the hook for billions of dollars in clean up costs from a catastrophic oil spill from the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline tankers.
Exxon Valdez 22 Years Later - a video showing what happens when enough oil is spilled to cover 1300 miles of coastline & 11,000 square miles of ocean... 22 years later!
The 225 tankers per year that will have to navigate some of the most treacherous waters in the world, along the B.C. coast & Douglas Channel, will each carry 500,000 more barrels of oil than the Exxon Valdez!
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