View allAll Photos Tagged BUSH
Had to do a computer job for a mate and apart from feeding and buying me beer this is how he repays me, he puts me in a room with a bunch of venomous snakes and says you like photography...so take some pictures! ;)
Actually it's been on the cards for some time but I wanted to wait until I had the Macro lens before I photographed these beautiful snakes, this is one of the smaller ones, probably 8-10 inches in length and you really wouldn't want to get bitten by one!! hence I kept my distance and cropped the photo heavily.
Doug has been keeping snakes for a long time now, is very experienced, knowledgeable, and is a very successful breeder of all things reptilian ò¿ò
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On good days for watching birds, there’ll be up to five or six marsh harriers flying round this bush. When there aren’t any birds, I’m still captivated by the bush, the shape and colours are so nice. HTT!
Bush killer is troublesome weed. But flowers are favored by insects.
ヤブガラシは勢いのある厄介な雑草、でも花は虫たちには好評のレストラン
Bush Stone-curlew
Burhinus grallarius
September 27th, 2019
Lee Point, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Canon EOS 1D X Mark II
Canon EF 600mm f4L IS II USM lens
Canon EF 1.4x III Extender
Canon 600EX II-RT flash
A pair of Bush Stone-curlew were quite active at night in the carpark of our final accommodation in Darwin.
Decided to do some outdoor portraits of the girls today. Ripley's colors looked great with this smoke bush behind her.
This young holly bush was standing amongst some taller pines whose trunks were soaked from the recent heavy rain. In the background and to the right was a younger ballerina-like pine with its arms aloft in pose - at least that's what my eyes and imagination see...
This is my latest ICM shot. I'm pleased with this one and starting to get a feel for how I want them to look
A beautiful lilac bush grows in my backyard. in 2013 it got cut way back. 7 years later it is finally as full as it was then. I couldn't resist taking many photo images with my Canon, then with my IPhone 11 Pro I took a few more at different angles. My favorite photography is Macro with Bokeh thrown into the mix. Bokeh is when you focus on one item whether background or foreground, zoom in on it and blur the rest of the image. I also like to layer my Photo Images giving them a dimensional look. This makes for interesting and unusual photos. The lilac is my favorite flower besides the Poppy. I love its fragrance and the differentiating purple colors. Photo Images credited to Vickie L Klinkhammer of Vickielynne Photography and Designs (VLP&Designs). View my online Google Market with wearable art and home essentials created by my Photo Images at shopvida.com/vlp1 and shopvida.com/vlp2.
Posted with Photerloo
When a tree grows in the direction of the wind it is called a lazy bush. This one is influenced by prevailing westerly winds.
Could be Great-green... but! It was almost dusk when I took this, hence the slow shutter speed!
Sainte-Marie du Ménez-Hom - Finistère
Native to my area in the hills of Western Australia. A field of this bush among the Wandoo trees can look like low lying smoke.
Conospermum (family Proteaceae) is an endemic genus of Australia with its centre of distribution in south- west Western Australia. There are more than 50 species in the genus. Conospermum generally grow in well-drained sandy soils that have gravel incorporated. Some species are found at the edges of swampy sites.
Three Legged Cross, Dorset
Oak Bush-cricket [Meconema thalassinum]
ORTHOPTERA > ENSIFERA > Tettigoniidae (Bush-crickets / Katydids)
> Meconematinae > Meconematini
This bush tit spent some time pulling at this small branch - never did figure out why, and it gave up eventually and flew on.
Saw lots on Sunday (where I also saw the Conehead). In excess of 30 I reckon!
Male above and female in comments below (Viewable large).
Crudgington - Shropshire
Metrobus M901 enters the 1907 (and much rebuilt thereafter) garage off Wells Road in September 1984. This view is from the platform of Goldhawk Road (H&C) station.
Pentax SP1000/50mm
Ilford FP4
bullock bush (Alectryon oleifolius) catching the light of sunrise, boolcoomatta reserve, a bush heritage australia conservation property, outback south australia
(my 154th photo to make ‘explore’)
The pied bush chat (Saxicola caprata) is a small passerine bird found ranging from West Asia and Central Asia to the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia. About sixteen subspecies are recognized through its wide range with many island forms. It is a familiar bird of countryside and open scrub or grassland where it is found perched at the top of short thorn trees or other shrubs, looking out for insect prey. They pick up insects mainly from the ground, and were, like other chats, placed in the thrush family Turdidae, but are now considered as Old World flycatchers.
They nest in cavities in stone walls or in holes in an embankment, lining the nest with grass and animal hair. The males are black with white shoulder and vent patches whose extent varies among populations. Females are predominantly brownish while juveniles are speckled.
Within a short time the grasshopper has been decapitated. Comparing the size of its legs to those of its captor shows just what a big & impressive creature the bush cricket is.
Hadleigh Park CP, nr Benfleet, Essex
A former workplace of mine during the days when the World Service still broadcast from the building, this is Bush House.
These days it's part of the King's College campus but from this view it looks pretty much identical to how it did when I worked there ten years ago.