Elaine Kennedy Photography

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Elaine Kennedy Photography

Sunday 18 May 2014

Grasslands National Park and a long awaited sharp-tailed grouse lek

Grasslands National Park is most definitely one of my favourite parks in Canada. It’s the only park that protects mixed-grass prairie, Canada’s most endangered ecosystem. Only ~19% of our country’s native prairie remains; most of it has been converted to cropland or tame pasture. Native prairie supports a very high biodiversity, including many species that are not found anywhere else in Canada. Grasslands National Park is home to several species at risk including the black-footed ferret, plains bison, sage grouse and burrowing owl. It’s also a very undeveloped park, with only a few gravel roads, one corralled campsite and virtually no buildings on site. This makes it a great spot for wildlife and hiking, and of course an incredibly important ecosystem.

My first trip to GNP was during the summer of 2013, camping with a couple of friends over a long weekend. Due to some slightly inaccurate time estimates, we didn’t arrive at the park until about 11:30pm and of course couldn’t find the campground in the dark (no lights at GNP! On the figuratively-speaking-bright side, this also makes it North America’s darkest dark sky preserve, phenomenal for star gazing) so we ended up sleeping in the truck bed at a turn-off from the main road. As soon as sunrise hit, I woke up to my camping buddy shaking me awake, excitedly whispering “Elaine Elaine! There’s a lek outside!!” And wouldn’t you know it, we unknowingly slept in the middle of a sharp-tailed grouse lek site! There were ten or twelve males dancing right outside the truck, all doing their best to impress one very picky female. We watched them for a good hour or two before falling back asleep, but it was definitely the best 5am surprise I’ve ever woken up to. The ultimate downside though: my camping buddy and I were both enthusiastic amateur photographers, but since we’d slept in the truck bed, we’d moved all out gear into the cab… Needless to say both of us were very frustrated at the missed photo op, but still crazy excited about waking up to a lek outside the truck.

plains bison, bison bison, grasslands national park, saskatchewan
Sleepy plains bison from my first visit to GNP
 On to more current events! Ever since that first lek, I’d been dying to find another one and try to catch some good shots of the birds dancing. This led me to my fourth trip to GNP! The second trip was later in 2013 for black-footed ferret monitoring (run around prairie dog colonies all night with a giant spotlight looking for ferret eyeshine) and third in spring of 2014 doing sage grouse surveys (run around historic lek sites just before sunrise with super-powerful microphones listening for sage grouse). But the fourth time was just for fun J Hiking, camping, and photography. The first night we spent in East block badlands hiking around, which was a great time, and then the second night we camped out at the lek from my first GNP trip. It’s a super popular site; the birds were even there in the evening beforehand – not dancing, just hanging out. After carefully positioning the car for best viewing, we bunkered down… and woke up to the sweet sweet sound of sharpies lekking! Music to my little ears and candy for my little camera. There were about nine males and one female this time. Most of the morning was overcast so the lighting was pretty dark for a while, but the sun really came out and created perfect  backlighting for a solid 15 minutes of photography gold! I snapped a bunch of shots as quick as I could (a car was also coming down the road so I knew my birds would all flush soon). Watching sharp-tailed grouse lek is definitely better than television; I watched them for three hours before going back to sleep. After a whole year of waiting, I got my sharpie photoshoot :D


sharp-tailed grouse, lek, lekking, fighting, grasslands national park, saskatchewan
The fight begins! 

sharp-tailed grouse, lek, lekking, grasslands national park, saskatchewan
I really like this shot, there's just something about the angle and symmetry :)

sharp-tailed grouse, lek, lekking, grasslands national park, saskatchewan

sharp-tailed grouse, lek, lekking, grasslands national park, saskatchewan
This proud grouse is looking for his next competitor.

sharp-tailed grouse, lek, lekking, grasslands national park, saskatchewan
I love the way that the dust around his feet is lit up by the sun.

Other highlights of the GNP trip were the first prairie crocuses, a couple long-billed curlews, a few pronghorn, a chestnut-collared longspur, a couple of owls (not sure of the ID, either GHOW or SEOW), several ring-necked pheasants, and getting chased by a herd of bison. Okay that last one was a bit of an exaggeration, but they just popped up running up over a hill towards us from about 400m away and they cover ground pretty darn fast so it was a bit scary. But all’s well that ends well J

ring-necked pheasant, ring necked pheasant, male, grasslands national park

badlands, east block, grasslands national park, saskatchewan

Like these photos? Want to see more? Visit my photography website at www.elainekennedyphotography.com!





Saturday 3 May 2014

The start of something fun!

As my first blog post, I feel like this should be something of an introduction, so here goes nothing.

My name's Elaine Kennedy, I'm a recent graduate from the University of Guelph, and I've decided to create a blog to document my photography, hiking trips, work experiences, thoughts on the importance and management of native prairie, and progress on an edible plant field guide I'd like to make. I first came to the prairies last summer for a student position with the Canadian Wildlife Service in Saskatoon, which was so far probably the best summer I've had. I got to work outside almost every day with a wonderful partner, learning all about the history, ecology and beauty of the prairies. I got to learn prairie plants (shrubs, forbs, grasses, sedges and rushes!), birds, mammals, the ecological consequences of cultivation, and ways to manage and restore native grassland. Of course, I also learned about how friendly and fun the people are in Saskatchewan! After finishing my degree in Ontario, I took the first chance I could to move back, this time to Regina to work for the provincial government doing GIS work for a species at risk project. This summer I'll be working with the Alberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute based out of Red Deer as a plant technologist, contributing to a province-wide species inventory and monitoring program. I aim to one day be a great botanist and help protect and restore the native prairie in Canada!

Apart from work, I do a lot of outdoor activities and take every opportunity I can to get outside and hike around. Some notable trips have been the Juan de Fuca trail in British Columbia, the Landmannalauger trail in Iceland, the Skyline trail in Alberta, and excursion in my favourite park: Grasslands National Park in Saskatchewan.

Landmannalauger trail, Iceland, mountains, landmannalauger
Landmannalauger trail, Iceland

Mount Tekkara, skyline, jasper, mountain, alberta
Mount Tekkara, Jasper National Park

prairie dog, prairie dog town, grasslands national park, saskatchewan
Black-tailed prairie dog, Grasslands National Park
 I also enjoy photography, rock climbing, and playing the violin. I am currently making a photography web site that will hopefully be up and running soon! Another big project of mine is to create a field guide to edible plants in the Canadian Prairies. This started when I failed to find such a guide in print; most guides are to all of North America and I wanted something more specific to my new home. I'm hoping to organize it by season, and include some recipes and preparation methods. This might take a while but it'll get done eventually :)

Stay tuned for lots more photos and stories and fun stuff!