New Brunswick·Your Lens

Stopping in for a snack: Enjoy these photos from around New Brunswick

The wildlife of New Brunswick is out and enjoying the spring weather — and sneaking a treat when possible. If you snap any nice shots, be sure to send them to us at cbcnb@cbc.ca for a chance to be featured in next week's edition.

Send your best snaps and video from around the province to cbcnb@cbc.ca

A yellow and grey bird perched on the side of a cup of marmalade.
Shannon Earle says this female Baltimore oriole comes each night for a taste of marmalade in Apohaqui, about 65 kilometres northeast of Saint John. (Submitted by Shannon Earle)

The wildlife of New Brunswick is out and enjoying the spring weather — and sneaking treats when possible. 

If you snap any nice shots, be sure to send them to us at cbcnb@cbc.ca for a chance to be featured in next week's edition.

A woodpecker with its head looking inside of a tree.
A pileated woodpecker in Keswick Ridge, a drive of about 25 kilometres west of Fredericton, appears to be checking whether anybody is home. (Submitted by Mark Ellis)
Purple lupins sprouting along with greenery
The lupins are back in New Brunswick. This photo was taken roadside in Hampton, northeast of Saint John. (Submitted by Celia Jamieson)
A small duck in the water surrounded by 13 ducklings
A mama merganser with her baker's dozen of ducklings in Mapleton Park in Moncton. (Submitted by by Rick Murray)
An iridescent, green hummingbird with a spotted throat on a red feeder.
This ruby-throated hummingbird was photographed at a feeder in Grande-Digue, on the Northumberland Strait. (Submitted by Mélanie Allain)
A blackbird with a hint of red on its wing, perched on a branch.
Mark Warren was walking around Killarney Lake in Fredericton on one of the recent rainy weekends and spotted this red-winged blackbird. (Submitted by Mark Warren)
A great blue heron standing in a body of water
A great blue heron in Washademoak Lake, now part of the village of Arcadia in south-central New Brunswick. (Submitted by Roger Whitenect)
An angry-looking blue and black bird on a lake
This common grackle was bathing and looking for bugs at North Lake in western New Brunswick. Somehow, even when it smiles, it doesn't look happy. (Submitted by Chris Turner)
A white and black bird, with a red chest, sitting in a tree.
Joe Brooks captured this photo of a rose-breasted grosbeak in Grand Bay-Westfield in southern New Brunswick. Brooks says the birds have a spectacular song. (Submitted by Joe Brooks)
A raccoon balancing on a squirrel feeder
This 2 a.m. visitor was caught red-handed raiding a squirrel feeder in Sussex Corner in south-central New Brunswick. (Submitted by Ed McNeely)
A red and black cardinal with something in its mouth on the edge of a birdhouse.
A proud male northern cardinal has a snack in Douglas, west of Fredericton. (Submitted by Louella Woods)
A golden dog playing around in a stream
Rousseau the dog enjoys a stream in the southeastern community of Memramcook. (Submitted by Jamie Strahl)
A foggy tree-trop scene, with a purplish hue.
Smoke from the wildfires in Western Canada helped create a hazy horizon over the forest in Grand Lake in this scene captured by Rachael Blakey. (Submitted by Rachael Blakey)
A blue and brown Eastern bluebird sitting on a branch with white apple blossoms
This eastern bluebird paid a visit to Judith Palmer's apple orchard in the southwestern community of Baillie. (Submitted by Judith Palmer)
A golden sunset over a lake
The sun setting over a flooded area of Grand Lake in south-central New Brunswick. (Submitted by Debbie Cyr)

Send us your photos or videos by email to cbcnb@cbc.ca and put the words Your Lens in the subject line.

Please tell us your name and where the photo or video was taken, and provide a caption that tells us what's happening in your submission. And feel free to add any other information that would help us tell the audience about your photo or video.

If we don't use your photo in the Your Lens closest to when you sent it, it could be used in a future edition as we are experiencing a high volume of submissions. 

We don't publish black-and-white photos or heavily edited photos, such as anything over-saturated or with filters. Watermarks will be cropped out.

We'll share the photos and videos here and we might use them on our other platforms, such as our suppertime TV newscast. We'll be sure to give you credit.