View allAll Photos Tagged Buzzing
This is not my joke – it's from a decades-old 'Bizarro' cartoon by Dan Piraro. I re-stumbled across it yesterday and thought it might translate well to a Second Life shot. :-D
I feel so sorry for the butterflies. They are constantly harassed by wasps and bees but after being pushed off the flowers they fly in a circle then return for more nectar.
Four Monongahela Super 7-23B’s lead a northbound train of coal from Consolidated Coal Company’s Blacksville Number 2 mine across the trestle at Buzz, Pennsylvania.
Bee beneath the Yellow Palo Verde blossoms. Dedicated macro lens. Full Frame. No crop. No post processing.
©dragonflydreams88
www.fluidr.com/photos/dragonflydreams88
you can listen here www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Rufous_Hummingbird/sounds
…Can’t you see I’m buzzy! 🐝
Photo taken at Grosmont train station in Yorkshire. We were waiting for the steam train which was delayed, so I whipped out my camera to do some macro of the beautiful flowers on the platform. This little guy wasn’t happy with me interrupting him at work 😅
Travelling down the Monongahela Railway’s Waynesburg & Southern branch, two clean Conrail SD40-2’s cross the trestle at Buzz, Pennsylvania
Following `Banadrama' (www.flickr.com/photos/pogspix/28949881111/), our garden has been literally buzzing with wasps, and they were taking every opportunity to get into the kitchen to buzz in the fruit bowl!
In an attempt to encourage them to stay outside, we've placed a bird feeder with raisins on a wall further away from the house, and have been `supplementing' that with drops of honey on the wall.
I'm not sure whether the plan has worked, or whether I've just attracted more wasps than we would have seen otherwise; we're seeing up to 30 feeding at once on the wall.
Yesterday morning, I noticed the wall being lit by the morning sun, with bokeh from the feeder behind it, so I dashed out with the honey, and placed a blob so I could catch the wasps in some pretty light.
Apollo 11 landed on the moon on July 20, 1969, ten days before my sixth birthday. It was a big deal, and hit me at a very impressionable age, ensuring a lifelong interest in space. This famous shot of Buzz Aldrin on the surface of the moon was taken by Neil Armstrong, the only other person on the moon at the time.
A Bumble Bee flies to its next feed of nectar on Viper's bugloss.
There were many Bumble Bees feeding all day long in the flowers. Unfortunately I couldn't identify the species of Bumble Bee but I loved watching and tried MANY times to capture an image of them in flight.
The real challenge was that they took off by flying backwards and up so most shots were out of focus. I also couldn't predict where they might land. I am quite pleased with this shot though.
Image created at Murphy's Point Provincial Park, Ontario. Cropped for composition. Canon 7D Mark II + Canon 100-400mm Mark II lens @ 340mm.
So zu hören und zu sehen im Werbefilm vom Hersteller dieser vollelektrischen Fahrzeuge.
Auf dem Foto auf Wagons verladen und gezogen von der CFL Cargo 188 065. Letztes Ziel dieser Fuhre, in Deutschland, ist der Seehafen in Emden.
Welcome to "What the Buzz" – a haven for bees and pollinators in Second Life! Immerse yourself in a vibrant landscape as you wander through our preserve. Take a moment to pause and discover how you can contribute to saving our little, but mighty, pollinator friends. Stay tuned for exciting events, including informative sessions on native bees and beekeeping classes.
Join us as we celebrate the beauty and importance of bees and other pollinators. Let's make a buzz for a better tomorrow! 🐝
Visit What the Buzz in Second Life
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Join us Sunday March 24th at 9 am SLT for Beekeeping 101
and join our Discord for more info!
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Silphium perfoliatum, the cup plant or cup-plant, is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae, native to eastern and central North America. It is an erect herbaceous perennial with triangular toothed leaves, and daisy-like yellow composite flower heads in summer. Wikipedia
Species: S. perfoliatum
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Silphium
Order: Asterales
Wild Flowers of North America