Blog Categories: Nature

Five Fast Facts for Friday: Cougars

And the Guinness World Record for the animal with the most names goes to….. the cougar!   There are well over 40 different English names for the animal Albertans call ‘cougar’, and many more names...

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Five Fast Facts for Friday: Weird Grizzly Grub

Grizzly bears are omnivores, and a very small percentage of their diet is actually meat. An adult grizzly needs to consume about 30,000 calories a day (compared to 2,500 calories for an average man) and...

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Five Fast Facts for Friday: Waterton-Glacier Peace Park

At the moment, tensions between Canada and the United States are a bit high, but in 1932 the Waterton – Glacier International Peace Park was created to celebrate the peace and friendship between the...

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Searching…..in Waterton

When I visited Waterton in September, something was missing. Actually, a few somethings were missing, the most obvious of which were the mountains.               Berries were nowhere to...

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Five Fast Facts for Friday: About the Kenow Fire

I visited Waterton Lakes National Park last fall, walked the Lakeshore Trail all the way to Montana and climbed the Bear’s Hump for the very first time. It was lush and green. We hiked...

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Batty for Bat Boxes

I’ve gone a bit batty recently, but I’m happy to say I’m not the only one. Bats seem to make the news almost every week and more people are aware of the perils they...

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Batty Recipes to Celebrate Bat Week

Why are people so worried about bats? Well, do you like strawberries, mangoes, almonds, carrots, bananas, oranges, sunflower seeds, cashews, or avocadoes? Do you like chocolate? Bats help farmers, growers and harvesters bring these foods to...

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Five Fast Facts for Friday: Wind Energy

  My new book for young readers, Bats in Trouble, is about the conflict between bats and wind turbines. I had to learn a lot about wind energy before I started writing the story...

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Blind as a Bat?

We’ve all heard the description ‘as blind as a bat’ – but how blind is a bat, really? I mean, bats hunt insects with better accuracy and success than I have with a fly...

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It’s Bat Week!

What’s better than a day to celebrate bats? How about an entire week to focus on these tiny superheroes! To get the week started, here’s a short video with some cool facts (and great...

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Five (More) Fast Facts for Friday: Bats

Bats exist on every continent except Antarctica (just like ospreys!), and there are many amazing different species. One quarter – yes, 25% – of all known mammal species are bats. There are 1293 species...

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Five Fast Facts for Friday: Bats

My enthusiasm for bats always seems to raise a few eyebrows. Most people don’t see them as the misunderstood, hardworking heroes of the ecosystem, like I do. Are you a skeptic, too? Here are...

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Book Launch in October

It’s time to release a new book out into the wild! I hope you’ll join me for the launch of Bats in Trouble on Thursday, October 19, 7:00 – 8:30 pm at Owl’s Nest...

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A Canadian Safari

A few weeks ago I went on a safari. Not a giraffe, lion, elephant safari – a grizzly bear safari in the Khutzeymateen Grizzly Sanctuary, one of the few places in the world where...

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Have you met Taco-Charlie?

If you go to Lethbridge, you must visit Taco-Charlie at the Helen Schuler Nature Centre. During my book tour this month, my time in Lethbridge was limited and I had to make a choice:...

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Amphibian or Reptile: Can you tell the difference?

Here’s a pop quiz – just like in school, when your teacher tests you before the lesson, just to see how much you already know (or don’t know). This is just like that. Take...

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Wild ID – more than a mug shot

Long-toed salamanders are pretty distinctive. The vivid yellow stripe is a sure giveaway, as is the long toe on each back foot. But how did researchers in Waterton distinguish one long-toed salamander from the...

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Five Fast Facts for Friday: Landslides

Often, the deadliest landslides happen with little warning. I have driven through the Frank Slide in the Crowsnest Pass many times and always find it quite eerie to consider that some of the town’s...

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BOOK LAUNCH for Salamander Rescue

I hope you will join me for the launch of Salamander Rescue on Tuesday, May 10, 7:00 – 8:30pm at Owl’s Nest Books in Calgary. I’ll talk a bit about Waterton’s salamanders, read some...

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Today is Bear Day

“Why is Dad standing outside with the pole for the umbrella?” “What?” I turned the water off and shook my hands dry. There were no paper towels in the campground washrooms. As I turned...

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Five Fast Facts for Friday: Manta Rays

When I’m swimming in the ocean, it’s always in the back of my mind that a ray could be underfoot. They’re flat, well-camouflaged and downright scary. Remember how Steve Irwin died? As I researched...

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Five Fast Facts for Friday: Flight

If you could become an animal, what would you choose? I would like to be a bird, able to soar over mountains and deserts. When I was researching facts for this book, I discovered many...

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Five Fast Facts for Friday: Gorillas

I could watch the gorillas at the zoo for hours. Did you know they are the largest of the apes and live only in the forests of Africa? Here are a few more facts about gorillas:...

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Looking for Winter in Waterton

Resolution #1 : Embrace Winter What better place to strengthen my resolve than Waterton Lakes National Park? Six-foot drifts and a weekend on snowshoes should do the trick. I had never visited Waterton in...

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Five Fast Facts for Friday: Hibernation

It’s winter, and I would dearly love to curl up with a blanket and hibernate. But…in true hibernation, an animal is close to death. Its heart and breathing almost stop. Here are five fast...

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