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Showing posts with label Percé. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Percé. Show all posts

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Popular Percé, Quebec, offers many mellow yellows






Photos by Kay Davies
Posted for Mellow Yellow Monday

I enjoyed visiting the town of Perce, on Quebec's Gaspe Peninsula, this past summer
on my train trip across Canada.

For many more mellow yellow subjects from around the world, please click


Monday, June 28, 2010

Gaspésie, Roche Percé, Bonaventure Island again


Above, the landward side of Bonaventure Island used to have human settlers, but is now parkland for the protection of the wildlife. However, visitors can walk the trail over to the viewing point to see the gannets "up close" -- too long a walk for the unfittie, however.

The cliffs on the seaward side of Bonaventure Island appear almost white with nesting gannets and gulls.
We passed two very fat seals when I was on deck and in a position to photograph them.
Below, the seaward side of Roche Percé with the last of the morning fog floating around it.

Monday, June 21, 2010

Gaspé Peninsula, a jewel in beautiful Québec










In search of the Northern Gannet

The markings and colors on the head of the Northern Gannet are beautiful.
Gannets swimming alongside Roche Percé near the Gaspé Peninsula town of Percé.
Just past the rock, the sky begins to fill with gannets.
Soon they're everywhere, except close enough to the boat to be photographed.
Smaller birds, black and white murres, share the rocks of Bonaventure Island with the gannets. Below, my favorite gannet picture is this shot I got of one "running" across the water to take off. I wish I'd been able to take a photo of a murre skipping across the water prior to taking off. TOO cute.

Because I'd so enjoyed "meeting" red-footed and blue-footed boobies in the Galapagos Islands, I decided my Great Canadian Adventure should include Bonaventure Island, where thousands of the boobies' cousins, the Northern Gannets, nest every year. The island is located off the Gaspé Peninsula in eastern Quebec, near the famous "pierced rock" or "Roche Percé" which is included in the boat tour from the town of Percé. I saw hundreds, maybe thousands, of Northern Gannets, but none up close. Unlike their Galapagos relatives, they want nothing to do with humanity. (Knowing what I know about humanity, I suspect they might often be right.) I had to find a public-domain photo online (top picture) to show you why I was so eager to see these beautiful birds.