View allAll Photos Tagged Bush
Innocent looking Manzanita bush, isn't it. Yet it kept reaching out and trying to grab me while I was backing up to close to the edge of this sheer cliff early this morning about 3:00 a.m. or so. I love manzanita, it's so beautiful, especially at night when your driving by, how it lights up at night, very cool.
I kept hearing these little rustling sounds in the brush back in the woods, just out of sight. But it was pitch black so you couldn't see a thing, except these little eyeballs peering out at you from the under brush, and over the edge of the cliff. I love night photography, but I sure miss my sleep as well.
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I called this one "Grasshopper", in the meantime Mike (MEaves) suggested, and I think he is right, that this is a bush cricket. Thanks!. - Click here to see it LARGE on black. July 2008.
© Horst Bierau. - All rights reserved. Please do not use without permission. If you would like to use any of my images, please contact me at: foto@bierau.net
Red Clay - Jojoba Bushes And Saguaros is a digital photo watercolor painting with editing and texture.
IMG_9707wct
I've decided my new spirit animal is the "Bush Stone Curlew" socially awkward, freezes when looked at, and has the general disapproving demeanour of "Grumpy Cat"
Australian Bush at Territory Wildlife Park, Berry Springs, Northern Territory, Australia, 29.01.2017
Buckley’s Hole Conservation Park at Bribie Island
Bongaree, Queensland, Australia,
Melaleuca is a genus of nearly 300 species of plants in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae, commonly known as paperbarks, honey-myrtles or tea-trees (although the last name is also applied to species of Leptospermum)]: They range in size from small shrubs that rarely grow to more than 16 m (52 ft) high, to trees up to 35 m (115 ft). Their flowers generally occur in groups, forming a "head" or "spike" resembling a brush used for cleaning bottles, containing up to 80 individual flowers.
Desert Bush - Kashan - Central Iran - Mid 80s
For the best results, please view this image on black background by clicking on this link.... Thanks
BEIJING.- El presidente George W. Bush posa con Kerri Walsh del equipo de Volleyball de Playa femenil. FOTO REUTERS
The Christmas Bush is losing it's colour. Here are three photos that were taken in the lead-up to Christmas when it looked sensational!!!!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=6HKtU-w6Bho
'Suddenly my feet are feet of mud.
It all goes slo-mo.
I don't know why I'm crying.
Am I suspended in Gaffa?
Not 'til I'm ready for you, *
Not 'til I'm ready for you hoo hoo-oo-oo *
Can I have it all.'
kate bush
Fall photography showing autumn at its finest ... A burning bush as seen through the window of a bed and breakfast farmhouse in Ithaca, New York.
Some of my favorite shoots are the ones that aren't planned! The lovely Rosie Bush (@the_rosie_bush ) and I were taking a break from filming 'In the Kitchen with Rosie' (find it on YouTube & subscribe) when we found ourselves in a lovely little garden with just the right lighting. What a perfect moment to snap these gorgeous photos!
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Either from my burning bush or a neighbor's—not sure which. The photo is from a 2010 file, and I used a texture, my first one I believe, to see if it would enhance. Not sure that it does. Maybe the effect will grow on me.
(for Poetography, Theme 111—Balance)
I know there is a story to this helmet. I spotted it in the bush during a paddle on Cultus Lake. It sits on a rotting mossy stump at the edge of the lake, among blackberry canes and dense bush, looking out over the lake. I couldn't get a shot that included the lake.
Glen Wills Cemetery
VIC, Australia
From a plaque at the site:
"Between August 1894 and August 1920, ninety-seven burials took place at the Glen Wills Cemetery, on the Omeo Highway, North of Omeo and South of the Mitta Mitta township. This Cemetery is now cared for by the people of the near by Glen Valley.
During those 26 years this Cemetery served the mining areas of Sunnyside and Glen Wills. To stand on the site of the long gone township of Sunnyside is an eerie feeling. "Sunnyside is situated on the Sunny side of nearby Mt Wills and is approximately 4000 feet above sea level. Today there is little more than blackberry bushes and a few very ancient fruit trees to mark the place where once was a thriving township. A Hotel, Stores, Catholic Church, School and Mechanics Institute and a population of around 600 people.
Sunnyside was reached by a rough bush track from Omeo known as the Knocker Track. Mail was delivered by coach and heavy goods by Bullock Wagon. Farmers from Benambra would make trips to the township with fresh meat, vegetables, butter and other produce, which was much in demand. Mr George Fitzgerald of "Shannon Vale" supplied oats to feed the horses. By 1924 the ore had become difficult to treat financially and water was also causing a problem, and not long afterwards the town was abandoned.
The Cemetery records illustrate the hardships experienced during these years - isolation, the severe weather conditions in winter, primitive housing and no doctors. Of the 97 persons buried, 40 were infants - sometime twins, sometimes a mother had died and soon after her baby. No baby formulas to feed a motherless baby, whooping cough and other illnesses would account for young children dying. Several young men were buried "by order of the Police In Charge" - I wonder what the story behind that would reveal? These truly were the Pioneers of this land.
Some years ago, due to the efforts of Mr Cecil Cooper, a sign was erected denoting Glen Wills Cemetery and a fence along the roadside. By this time only two graves were marked - one unknown and another marked by a fence in which a tree denoting the grave of Mrs Phillis Emmer Bittner, aged 43, who was buried in 1916.
In recent years (1985) a firm of bridge builders were constructing a new bridge over the Mitta Mitta river at Glen Valley. The mother of the bridge builders (of Croatian descent), was visiting her sons and was amased that there were no crosses in the Cemetery. Before leaving the area, they built a large cross on a square slab and promised that one day they would come back and erect crosses to commemorate the grave sites. This they did in the summer of 1991. As there is no plan of the actual sites of the graves, they were placed in a double row consistent with the two graves visible."
Names of those buried here are at members.pcug.org.au/~chowell/glenwill.htm
NB geo-tagging is approximate only.
After EMR reported that engineering work was being undertaken between Wellingboro' & Kettering, I decided to see if the outstanding snags from my last visit had been dealt with.
Here, at Bush Bridge O/B, the recent addition of the contact wire on the Down Slow can be seen (it still hadn't oxidised!); when I last visited, the drop-down registration arm wasn't attached to the mid-point anchor portal (structure no. SPC3/106/842).
Note that blue construction earths are still in place, indicating that the wires are still dead.
my currant bush is finally getting red! I'm so excited! you can only find them as a jelly, but I found nursery in Princeton that carries those european berry bushes.... so of course I bought them... they are sooo good in pies....