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The only Jacana or Lillytrotter in the Australasian region. This attractive species occurs from the Philippines south through Wallacea to north and east Australia.
Great Blue Heron Florida.
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This piece, made of brass and glass (the red piece in the middle is made to look like a gemstone, but is glass), dates to the 1830s-1840s, and was worn to accentuate to hairstyles of the time - when women always, well almost always at least, kept their hair long and as an adult had it pinned up in intricate fashions. The label in the museum didn't clarify, but I think it is a Swedish piece.
On display at Nordiska museet (the Nordic museum), Stockholm.
Al I wanted was one comb but these combs came in a package
I had to buy them. for some colorful inspiration :-)
Late in the day, from a campsite in Comb Wash, the light was leaving the cottonwoods but highlighted Comb Ridge.
Bears Ears National Monument
This is from my archives, it was a dull day.
So i decided to experiment & add some frost to it ,
to make it look wintery.
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Macro for Macro Monday's theme "Vibrant Minimalism."
THANK YOU all in advance!
I do so enjoy the weekly challenges for MM!
Taken at Sandy Camp Rd Wetlands Reserve, Lytton, Queensland.
Aka Lotusbird.
With its long legs and oversized feet, at first glance the Comb-crested Jacana appears particularly ungainly. However, anyone who has watched one nimbly picking its way across precarious platforms of floating aquatic vegetation would disagree. Similarly, those strangely elongated appendages would seem to render any attempts at long-distance movements problematical. Again, this is incorrect. They have been occasionally recorded as making very long distance journeys.
Birdlife Australia.
I just loved finding these lovely birds again at the same reserve I saw them 13 years ago on our last Australia trip.
The view towards Combs Moss from the path between South Head and Brown Knoll with Chapel-en-le-Frith in the valley below.
The shelling was good over the weekend. I came home with a another bagful myself. Have a great 4th everybody.
This was one of my target species for eastern Australia. A delightful little wader with enormous long toes and feet to enable it to stand on floating vegetation, hence their nickname, Lily-trotter. Females are the dominant sex in this family and are much larger than the males. The females maintain a territory with 3-4 males and they lay eggs in each male territory for them to bring up. Judging by the size of this bird, it is a male.
Lasts three months and produces a good-sized basket of dog fleece.
One of the models doesn't know I'm taking a picture.
The top of Combs Moss on a sunny evening. Been a while since I have been out. The dull and windy weather never ends.