View allAll Photos Tagged Berry
Macro Monday - Theme " The Colour Red "
( Explored 14/03/16 )
Thank You everyone,for your views,faves and comments,much appreciated.
I'll be taking a break from posting for a few days. I will be back soon!
Processed with Midjourney, Photoshop, and Topaz.
All rights reserved. Do not download or use this image without my written permission.
A flock of cedar waxwings came out of nowhere and proceeded make a feast of these bright red Toyon berries!
Cuesta Park, San Luis Obispo
Wlodawa, Poland
Summer
I love to visit here in the eastern part of Poland. Its where my fiancees family resides and it is a pure experience of relaxation. Too much food, too much attention and way too much ice cream seem to make everything easy for a time. Walking to get more ice cream I couldn't resist this little colorful parcel of joy. Have a beautiful weekend and of course HFF. :)
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It rained most of the day yesterday and last night. This morning the juniper trees and their berries were glistening.
You may have seen them hanging out on power-lines or low hanging branches scanning the ground for prey. When hunting, they swoop down from their perches to catch bugs like grasshoppers, crickets, and beetles. Eastern Bluebirds are skilled hunters that occasionally can snatch bugs out of midair. They are also known to eat various types of berries in the winter.
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Gear: Canon 50D | Canon 24-70mm f/2.8 L
Settings: ISO 250 | ƒ/4.5 | 1/4 | 24mm
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© Faisal Al-Ali - All rights reserved | 2011
With 4 inches of fresh snow greeting me this morning, I actually went out early to shoot a few photos but it all looked too familiar to me...scenes I've shot many times before...so I returned to a more colorful autumn day on the lake. Plenty of snow pics ahead.
It was a particularly good year for these berries, soon to vanish as the birds seem to relish them. The birds are particularly active today with the woodpeckers, nuthatches, and chickadees at the feeders, and a large group of juncos pecking in the snow beneath. The flock of robins which makes its appearance annually about this time of the first snows is busy eating the rowan berries out front. It's always a pleasant surprise to see them now, gorging on these and other berries, before they make the trip south. Interestingly, the entire band is always composed of males, their red breasts prominent. I assume it's because the females have already departed.
Took this shot in Montauk on the path to the beach in August,
The Berries tasted great for me as well:-)
A very very happy Yellow Rumped Warbler has all the berries it can eat at the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge.
The Yellow-rumped Warbler is the only warbler able to digest the waxes found in bayberries and wax myrtles. Its ability to use these fruits allows it to winter farther north than other warblers, sometimes as far north as Newfoundland.
Yellow-rumped Warblers are perhaps the most versatile foragers of all warblers. They're the warbler you'd most likely to see fluttering out from a tree to catch a flying insect, and they are also quick to switch over to eating berries in the fall.
--- allaboutbirds.org
American Robin. (Mountain Ash berries) Best Viewed Large On Black The American Robin is widely distributed throughout North America, wintering south of Canada from Florida to central Mexico and along the Pacific Coast. It is the state bird of Connecticut, Michigan and Wisconsin. ( state bird in MIchigan) IMG_9544
So this is Berrys Bay, on the fringe of the city.
A backwater where few people visit.
It is a home for abandoned ferries, yachts that need repairing, and - if you look carefully - the secret HQ of 007 when he comes to Sydney, lol.
In the distance you can see the Crown Casino Tower at Barangaroo, on the far side of the harbour. And to the right you can see the 'South Steyne', one of the former grand Manly Ferries, now in retirement.
In the foreground is the Noakes Group Boat Repair facility.
This backwater was photographed at sunset from John Street, at Waverton.
My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS II USM lens.
Processed in Adobe Lightroom.