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A piece of abandoned cone, belonging to either some bees or hornets, hangs from the old oak trees infront of the Klippe Rivier Country house in Swellendam - www.klipperivier.com
Explore #86 11/08/2009
The Cone Nebula is an H II region in the constellation of Monoceros. It was discovered by William Herschel on December 26, 1785, at which time he designated it H V.27. The nebula is located about 830 parsecs or 2,700 light-years away from Earth. The Cone Nebula forms part of the nebulosity surrounding the Christmas Tree Cluster.
Date of shoot: 3/2/15
Ha: 21 subs @900s
RGB: 11 subs @450s 1*1
Camera Starlight Express SXVR-H694
Filter Wheel : Starlight Express Mini Wheel
Mount : Avalon
Scope: FSQ85
Filters : Astrodon LRGB, Ha 5nm
I was going through some photos and I noticed that there was almost a cone of light enveloping this flower bud and I thought it was somewhat interesting.
The Hot Shop of Tacoma's Museum of Glass.
Architecture by Arthur Erickson.
I took this shot because I thought the clouds looked like smoke coming out of the top of the cone. Also, the rest of the clouds seemed to frame it nicely. The cone was in shadow which allowed me to shoot it without blowing out the highlights.
Haleakala National Park, Maui.
This is another shot I took a long time ago with my Pentax Spotmatic ES.
The NGC 2264 region in Monoceros includes the Cone Nebula, the Christmas Tree Cluster and the Fox Fur Nebula.
This is a reprocess of RGB and H-alpha data I collected in 2018 (it's hard to believe 5 years have passed). My original finished version can be found here www.flickr.com/photos/124244349@N07/28107500639/in/dateta...
I have taken some liberties with color and contrast to add drama, but the biggest differences stem from using AI image processing tools to sharpen and tighten distorted stars and reduce noise.
Tech Stuff: Borg 55FL astrograph with ZWO ASI1600MC using Astronomik CLS and Ha Filters on iOptron Cubepro 8200 unguided mount. SharpCap Livestacks of 8 second exposures 1hr CLS + 3hrs Ha integrated into HaLRGB image with PixInsight. Imaged from my yard 10 miles north of New York City in January, 2018 and reprocessed April, 2023.
Spending time with our youngest, Phoebe at Oxford Uni this weekend, have a great one and will catch up in December!
Fishing cone hot spring, formerly a geyser in West Thumb Geyser Basin, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA.
Fishing cone is actually the rock formation that sticks out into Yellowstone Lake in the center right of the photo.
From Wikipedia: "The name Fishing Cone can be traced back to tales told by mountain men of a lake where one could catch a fish, immediately dunk it into the hot spring, and cook it on the hook."
Photographed in our garden.
Echinacea is a genus, or group of herbaceous flowering plants in the daisy family. The genus Echinacea has ten species, which are commonly called coneflowers.
I was able to get this shot during a still moment out in the garden. I had the camera mounted on my tripod for this 20 second shot. No post processing done.
Cones from the spruce trees along west edge of my backyard
Camera Used: Canon EOS Rebel T6i
Lens Used: Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 Macro USM prime lens
The new pine cones are dripping sap. I've learned not to touch them.
This squirrel seems to be enjoying it.
She ate the whole cone.
The Fishing Cone geyser at Yellowstone National Park's West Thumb Geyser Basin. The geyser received its name due to accounts going back as far as the Washburn Expedition of 1870 that people could catch a fish in Yellowstone Lake, dip it in the geyser, and cook it without having to remove it from the fishing line--September 2, 2009