View allAll Photos Tagged Catching
Catching his breath in between the acts. He is half of a breeding pair and this is in between the copulations of which there were many. Also have a lot of those shots to from a lot of different angles.
Off beanbag. 20D W/ 170-500mm lens.
10/461-6168C.
A catching hook on display inside the Gravensteen castle in Ghent. Such hooks were commonly used during prison riots, to seize a prisoner by the neck and lead him back to his cell or dungeon. The long handle made it virtually impossible for the captured prisoner to cause injury to the guard who captured him.
A GP40-2 hitches a ride in an unusual spot, holding onto the rear DPU on an eastbound freight between Odessa and Monahans, TX
Wall-E tries to catch some snowflakes
Photography by Amanda Rose
This photograph is © amanda rose and must not be syndicated to any other publication or website, or permanently archived, without the permission of Amanda Rose. +44 (0) 7958 288 323; theworks@amandarose.co.uk.
Since yesterday the boys were doing housework, I'm thinking Catching Cookies is definitely a way to...
Daily Dog Challenge 639. Always Live Better Than Yesterday"
… plus I love their...
Our Daily Challenge - July 31, 2013 - "Facial Expression"
… as they do so.
Stop on by Zachary and Henry's blog: bzdogs.com
catching basketball - A young boy getting ready to catch a basketball. To Download this image without watermarks for Free, visit: www.sourcepics.com/free-stock-photography/24706754-catchi...
I was shooting the sunset at Vasona Lake and Sam (my husband) texted me right about this time to say "I hope you're catching those God rays!!!" I'm sure I didn't get them as well as he would have, but I did catch some of the beautiful rays.
The guy busy doing the fish catching at shore. There are seen many around the beach doing the activity either through the string or the net.
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Whare karakia means house of prayer.
Catching up on some back shots from the beginning of the year.
In Akaora with my Flickr and blip friend. February 22, 2016 Akaora, New Zealand.
The day was cold and felt like rain but it didn't. We had a good look around Ōnuku.
This small church on the Onuku Maori reserve near Akaroa is the only tangible reminder of the once thriving Maori community. Completed in 1878 the church was planned to accommodate sixty people and though primarily for the Maori local, Pakeha settlers were also welcome.
A plain timber building with steeply pitched shingle roof its religious purpose is denoted by the tiny bell turret and surmounting crosses. It is picturesquely set in the bay on Akaroa Harbour and is enclosed by a delightfully unregimented picket fence.
Despite infrequent use the church is carefully maintained and is in excellent order. It is important as a memorial to the Onuku Maori and as the only Maori Church remaining on Banks Peninsula.
For More Info: www.localist.co.nz/l/ftjomo
Catching small fish on the Tonle Sap Lake. Fish levels have gone down drastically since several years. Dam construction in the upper stretches of the Mekong River in China are blamed for this.
Maharishi School alumni catching up with each other after the celebration. From left, Gemma Cassells, Deborah Evans, Bonnie Mercer, and William Marriott.
In the Queen's Garden, Kew Palace
The Queen's Garden was conceived in 1959 by Sir George Taylor, then Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, and officially opened by H.M. Queen Elizabeth II ten years later.
The design involved the recreation of arcades and steps associated with the Dutch House. It also contains several pieces of sculpture including a marble satyr, a venetian well head and five 18th century terms, commissioned by HRH Frederick, Prince of Wales in 1734/5 and considered to be the oldest pieces of sculpture remaining at Kew.
There is also a wrought iron pillar from Hampton Court Palace and a gazebo on a mound. One element is a parterre enclosed in box hedges and standing in the pond in the centre of the parterre is a copy of Verocchio's 'Boy with a Dolphin', the original of which is in Florence's Palazzo Vecchio.
[Royal Botanic Gardens website]
Kew Palace (also known as the Dutch House) is the second building on this site; the first was a gift to Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, from Elizabeth I.
The Dutch House (so called because of its Dutch Gables) was built by Samuel Fortrey in 1631, and eventually passed into the hands of Samuel Molyneux, secretary to George II. In 1728 the house was leased by George II for his daughters, and then taken on a long lease by Frederick Prince of Wales (George II's son) in 1731. The Dutch House became the independent household and school for his sons, Princes George and Edward. George III would eventually purchase the house for his wife, Queen Charlotte, in 1781. The palace was the household and school for George's own children, although later George III was confined here from November 1788 to April 1789, and again in 1801.
In 1802, work began on a new palace, a gothic "castellated palace" designed by James Wyatt and (in part) George III - the work was halted by the Prince Regent, and the new palace finally demolished in 1828.
In 1833, the house passed on to the Dowager Duchess of Kent (widow of George III's grandson, Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn), but she refused due to the condition of the property. The palace was presented to the nation by Queen Victoria in 1887.
Cleveland Cavaliers legends Austin Carr, left, and Campy Russell, center, talk to former Baltimore Bullets star Phil Chenier, who now broadcasts Washington Wizards games, outside a suite at the then Gund Arena
Coming from the other end of the river which is not the site pala. I hurried
to this place to capture the light in the clouds
Zachary rarely misses.
Our Daily Challenge - Aug 11, 2014 - "Rush(ed)(ing)"
The Cookie rushing toward its grisly fate.
Déjà vu?
Tomorrow, I promise to try very hard to come up with an idea that has nothing to do with Zachary Catching Something.
Daily Dog Challenge 1017. "Speed Setting"
Zachary has excellent reflexes and is surprisingly nimble given that he's packing a few Cookies too many. Any excuse to exercise that big brain of his is reason enough to get him moving.
At the opposite end of the spectrum is Henry, whose mind (and body) slips into neutral easily and often. :)
Today's Post: www.bzdogs.com/2014/08/catching-cookies.html
Stop on by Zachary and Henry's blog: bzdogs.com
Another theme day today. This time its what I call, "Riding the Invisible Bus." This involves the camera on the outside of the bus window to get some interesting reflections. Essentials are a nice reflective window, a wrist strap so you don't drop the camera, camera set to continuous shooting mode and lots of trial and error. Here's a sample of what I liked. Warning: keep your head inside the window.
A young fisherman in action - Cardiff State Beach, California
{ L } Lightbox view is best
© All Rights Reserved
Since yesterday the boys were doing housework, I'm thinking Catching Cookies is definitely a way to...
Daily Dog Challenge 639. Always Live Better Than Yesterday"
… plus I love their...
Our Daily Challenge - July 31, 2013 - "Facial Expression"
… as they do so.
If you look closely, you can even spot the cookie.
Stop on by Zachary and Henry's blog: bzdogs.com