Nick Tardif Photography
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A snowy owl leaps from a hydro pole to survey the surrounding fields. ~2018
Making good on this attempt. This Osprey plucked his catch from the Atlantic Ocean along the shores of Prince Edward Island, Canada. 2017
Frontenac Provincial Park - 2017
Frontenac Provincial Park 2017
Leaping from a cattail, a blackbird carries its catch back to its nest. 2017
A Black Bird searches the reeds looking for more food as it clutches its catch. 2017
A Red Tail Hawk suns himself a top a wire on a cold winter's day on Wolfe Island - 2017
A Bald Eagle soars above a fresh water pond in P.E.I. National Park.
An adult Bald Eagle sits perched and alert, ever watchful of his surroundings.
An adolescent Bald Eagle with his catch in P.E.I. National Park, Canada
A Barred Owl sits a top a fence post at dusk on Wolfe Island, On. 2017
A male Snowy Owl atop of a telephone pole on Wolfe Island On. Male Snowy Owls can be told apart from the females by their almost pure white feathers. - 2017
A Yellow Warbler sits still just long enough for me to grab a few photos. - 2017
An endangered Piping Plover chick searches for critters to eat on Cavendish Beach, P.E.I. National Park, Canada.
Four Raven chicks perched precariously on a cliff’s edge eagerly await mom and her mouth-full of fishy goodness in Fundy National Park, New Brunswick – June 2016.
Nesting Herons in Frontenac Provincial Park 2016.
Two Grey Jays perched in a Pine Tree in Algonquin Provincial Park 2013. The Grey Jay was recently announced as Canada's National Bird by the Royal Canadian Geographical Society.
Huntington Beach State Park, South Carolina, U.S.A.
A white horse gallops to shelter from the wind and blowing snow on Wolfe Island, Ont. - Dec 2016
A deer hides behind a tree as he moves in for the delicious fallen apples on Wolfe Island 2016.
A Northern Water Snake fishing at Brewers Mills Lock along the Rideau Canal.
This Garter Snake wears the scars around its face and eyes from what appears to have been this frogs last push for survival. There is no mercy in the wild, as the death of one provides life for the other
A Black Bear feeding along the road in Forillon National Park, Quebec, Canada. Forillon National Park is known for having a large population of bears. The belief that no bear is born bad and it's us who make them that way is being put into practice there.
A black cat named Shadow.