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Caboose No. 25889 sits on the south leg of the wye as UP 2354 rolls through the yard at Cache Junction, Utah the morning of Oct. 7, 1994. UP 2354 was built Kennecott Copper GP39-2 No. 783 in Jan. 1977.
Un problème majeur: la compression jpeg abime les bords et coins supérieurs de l'image...sur le Tiff tout est ok. Savez-vous comment gérer ça?
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I know that hundreds of Northern Hawk Owl images have been posted, over the last couple of months, but I wanted to share this one as well. I hope that you don't mind.
It shows the behaviour of caching. If prey is abundant, Northern Hawk Owls will take advantage of this by caching food for later consumption.
This owl had caught a vole and flew to this branch. It spent nearly 5 minutes attempting to stuff the vole into the crack of this broken limb. It rotated the vole several times trying to make it fit. Ultimately it was unsuccessful and finally flew off to try another location.
Image created on Jan 8, 2020 west of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Image cropped slightly for composition.
FlickFriday theme: #Cache
10/52 Still Lifes – backlight
www.flickr.com/photos/luenreta/galleries/72157677736298294/
~Attire:
Rosary - Gia Bra, Top & Skirt
~Shoes:
[RHUDE] Traci (fatpack)
~Hair:
DOUX - Denise Hairstyle
~Accessories:
REIGN. - Heart Coin Purse
Parmi les nouveaux habitants que j'ai pu observer l'été dernier sur les bords du gave d'Oloron, une famille de visons a pris ses quartiers dans la végétation des berges de la rivière.
You can't make em look clean, but you can make em look powerful. These 90's AC workhorses of the Union Pacific have been tested throughout the years and most have scars. This particular one has blown up at least twice since 1995 and has not received a fresh coat since the early 2000's. As much as I hope she gets cleaned up, if the new paint scheme prevails I will gladly take the burn victim look.
A midweek PDOG banks the curve North at Cache JCT on the UP Ogden Subdivision. While the Cache Valley has been heating up in the sun throughout the morning, the witching hours are upon us. The Bear River Range (in view) and the Wasatch Range (behind us) are stirring up some fun with the available moisture and unstable atmospheric conditions.
More rain is not necessarily what Utah needs, but the flowers are happy to perform a superbloom after years of drought. What I suspect is Wintercress, or Yellow Rocket, is having a absolute hayday along the right of way. With no preference of growth medium, sandy to clayey, alkaline to acidic, add a little water and this forb will inhabit just about any free real estate.