The Seton Centre
Carberry, Manitoba

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Ernest Thompson Seton: The Trail of the Sandhill Stag near Carberry

 
Herbarium storage cabinet at The Seton Centre houses museum plant specimen collection
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Crocus Panorama Interpretive Panel created for the musuem interior
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Invitation to Opening of Quiet Voices Wildflower Trail at Spruce Woods Provincial Park
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Gerry Oliver gives interpretive talk at the opening of Quiet Voices Wildflower Trail
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Trailhead for the Quiet Voices Wildflower Trail at Epinette Creek, Spruce Woods Prov. Park
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Interpretive sign for voice of the wind at Quiet Voices Wildflower Trail in Spruce Woods Prov. Park
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The voice of the Sun at Quiet Voices Wildflower Trail, one of the trail markers
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Details from the marker for the voice of the sun at Quiet Voices Wildflower Trail.
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The voices of the plants of the Carberry Sandhills, much loved by Seton
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Sandflowers, in 1882 Seton observed what he called billions of them, a purple haze.
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Formerly called the Sandflower, Prairie crocus, anemone patens, harbinger of spring in Carberry area
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Seed heads of Big Bluestem grass, andropogon gerardii, in Quiet Voices Wildflower Trail
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An expanse of Little Bluestem grass, andropogon gerardii, native to Carberry Sandhills.
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Side-oats Grama, bouteloua curtipendula, a grass native to the Carberry Sandhills
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Western red lily, lilium philadelphium, native to the Carberry Plains
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Wild onion, allium stella, common to Carberry Plains, important food source for early residents
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Wild Bergamot, monarda fistulosa, native to Carberry Plains and Sandhills.
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Showy ladyslipper, Cypripedium reginae, found near Quiet Voices Wildflower Trail
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