View allAll Photos Tagged Cheek

The Spiny-cheeked Honeyeater is still in Royal Park. I took a number of shots of it today, but also 4k video. This series of three images are all from the 4k video.

We have enjoyed seeing it in the garden. We have two similar honeyeaters visting. The White-cheeked honeyeater and the New Holland honeyeater.

 

The main differences between the two is that the White-cheeked honeyeater has large white patch on its cheek, brown eyes, and a yellow panel on its wing.

 

The New Holland honeyeater has a white eye, smaller cheek patch and yellow wing panel.

Photo: Fred

ムクドリ

 

@Shinjuku-Gyoen in Tokyo, Japan

 

OLYMPUS OM-D E-M5 Mark II

M.ZUIKO 14-150mm f4-5.6 II

Meliphagidae (Phylidonyris niger)

while on a stroll through Huntington Central Park i saw this beautiful Orange-cheeked Waxwing. Their natural habitat is the African Continent but they can be found now at other places of the world like California too. Huntington Central Park, CA

Meliphagidae (Acanthagenys rufogularis)

Setophaga chrysoparia

  

On our way home from the chicken run a couple of our group members opted to join our trip extension to photograph Golden-cheeked Warblers. We started out birding new Stephenville and by the time we headed out we had seen about eight Golden-cheeked warblers including at least two females. The weather wasn’t ideal when we started with the sky dark and overcast and it was very difficult detecting the presence of any species of bird. Undaunted we kept searching and just about the time we were going to give up a beautiful male swooped in above us. It took a while but everyone walked away with a good photo.

  

www.texastargetbirds.com

 

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Welcomed this migratory gray-cheeked thrush into my back garden early afternoon Sept 7. A first sighting and photograph for me. I saw it again just before 8 pm (this photo) after a heavy rainfall as it was foraging in the soft earth.

Do not use without permission, please.

Copper-cheeked frog (Hydrophylax chalconotus)

 

Hydrophylax chalconotus is a species of frog in the Ranidae family. It is endemic to Indonesia. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests, rivers, intermittent rivers, freshwater marshes, intermittent freshwater marches, plantations, rural gardens, irrigated land, and seasonally flooded agricultural land. Formerly known as Rana chalconota, that taxon was applied to what is today named Hydrophylax raniceps. In the 1990s, it became generally agreed that Hydrophylax raniceps applied to specimens in northern and western Sumatra, Peninsula Malaysia and Borneo. Hydrophylax chalconota's range is limited to Southern Sumatra, Java and Bali (From Wikipedia article Hydrophylax_chalconotus)

 

Other names: Chalcorana chalconota,Hydrophylax chalconotus,Hylarana chalconota,Rana chalconota (Schlegel, 1837),Schlegel's Java frog,Schlegel's frog,copper-cheeked frog

 

The Blue Tit is an easy to recognise garden favourite. With it’s small size and distinctive blue and yellow plumage , the Blue tit is a regular garden visitor that’s wide spread throughout the British Isles and mainland Europe. The Blue Tit is a member of the Tit family of birds , Paridae . Usually resident , the bird does not migrate and in fact most stay within a short distance from where they hatch , typically less than 20 miles.

 

The Blue Tit is around 12 cm long with a wingspan of 18 cm and weighs between 11- 20 g . With a blue crown and dark line passing through the eye, with white cheeks to the chin. The forehead and a bar on the wing are white. The nape, wings and tail are blue and the back is yellowish green. The underparts is mostly yellow with a dark line down the abdomen. Both male and female adult birds have a similar appearance.

Fat Cheeks

 

Chipmunk with its cheeks filled with food

 

2019_10_29_EOS 7D Mark II_3154-Edit_V1

 

Grey cheeked thrush, Rondeau Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada, May 10, 2018

 

One of the less common thrushes in our area.

First time I was able to get a recognizable photo.

 

Catharus minimus

Gray-cheeked and Bicknell's thrushes were only recently recognized as separate species. Most of the information published in the last century on "Gray-cheeked Thrush" concerned the Bicknell's Thrush instead of the Gray-cheeked. Although Gray-cheeked Thrush has a much larger range across North America, the Bicknell's Thrush's small range is closer to centers of human population, and therefore is the more accessible species.

source - www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Gray-

Melanerpes pucherani

 

Selva Verde, Costa Rica.

A male calls from above its nest hole.

 

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"Spankings. Because cheeks were made for blushing"

 

Taken with Lumipro in Black Dragon

 

Outfit: Crybunbun Sleepless Top and Shorts Strawberry

Shoes: Crybunbun Cutemochi Heels

Hair: VCO Niel

Pose: Versuta Sugar

Copper-cheeked frog (Hydrophylax chalconotus)

 

Hydrophylax chalconotus is a species of frog in the Ranidae family. It is endemic to Indonesia. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests, rivers, intermittent rivers, freshwater marshes, intermittent freshwater marches, plantations, rural gardens, irrigated land, and seasonally flooded agricultural land. Formerly known as Rana chalconota, that taxon was applied to what is today named Hydrophylax raniceps. In the 1990s, it became generally agreed that Hydrophylax raniceps applied to specimens in northern and western Sumatra, Peninsula Malaysia and Borneo. Hydrophylax chalconota's range is limited to Southern Sumatra, Java and Bali (From Wikipedia article Hydrophylax_chalconotus)

 

Other names: Chalcorana chalconota,Hydrophylax chalconotus,Hylarana chalconota,Rana chalconota (Schlegel, 1837),Schlegel's Java frog,Schlegel's frog,copper-cheeked frog

In Poplar, the looming glass and steel towers of Canary Wharf's financial district are never far but they can feel like a world away.

 

Poplar High Street

Here is another image of Rozi Cheeks and this is a bit different from the one I posted before, shot at the same location but at a different time of the day (sunset).

 

P.S: I'm still looking for a name for this image, if you have any ideas please share :)

 

My FAcebook | My 500px | My twitter | My Instagram

 

Strobist Info:

 

4 x YN560 in 80cms wide Octabox camera right

 

Gear Used:

 

Nikon D7000

50mm 1.8D

80cms Wide Octabox

www.texastargetbirds.com

  

Who doesn’t enjoy seeing a woodpecker? I know our group was pretty excited to see this Black-cheeked Woodpecker during our visit to Costa Rica this month. I got a chuckle out of how this one decided he was going to keep all the bananas for himself.

 

We will be doing this trip again next spring, if you think you might be interested more information is available here: www.texastargetbirds.com/group-photo-trips/2018-costa-ric...

  

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Melanerpes pucherani

 

Lincoln Park Zoo

Chicago, IL

May 2014

 

Follow on Instagram @dpsager

Location : Toji, Kyoto.

 

ムクドリ

Thank you all for your comments and faves.

polaroid week day 1

a cheeky bum stained glass and an ivy plant

Austin, had he lived, would have one day been my Son-In-Law. Instead, he gave his life on August 3, 2007, fighting a structural fire as a member of the Noonday Volunteer Fire Department. Austin was a hero, not for how he died, but how he lived. He was a good son, a best friend and soul mate to my daughter TJ, and most notably for his unashamed faith in God. Always smiling, ready to lend a hand, or just hang out, he was loved by all who knew him. He will be missed, but we don't say goodbye, but "See Ya Later."

White-cheeked Honeyeater, Boambee Headland

6/7/17

Teller Road, Nome, Alaksa

A photo I took a few days ago of a so-called 'White-Cheeked' or 'Storm' Wigeon.

White-cheeked Honeyeater in the Belmont Wetlands State Park

I added a photo of these same two birds back in 2019. Being quite territorial, and mating for life, it's nice to have them keep me company from time to time outside my office window.

Feeding on a Banksia flower

Explored #16 © Brian E Kushner -

Chipmunk stuffing it's cheeks with peanuts.

 

Type: Mammal

Diet: Omnivore

Average lifespan in the wild: 2 to 3 years

Size: 4 to 7 in (10 to 18 cm); Tail, 3 to 5 in (8 to 13 cm)

Weight: 1 to 5 ounces (28 to 142 grams)

Did you know? Although chipmunks hibernate, they do not store fat. Instead they slowly gnaw away at their summer bounty throughout the winter.

Size relative to a tea cup:

© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved

 

Candid street photography taken in Glasgow, Scotland. Besides the obvious two smokers perched cheek to cheek on a small concrete bollard, there was a Peruvian panpipe player actually playing Chris de Burgh's 'Lady In Red' at the time I took the shot and my title for the shot was sealed with some laughter from me. Enjoy full screen by pressing 'L'.

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