View allAll Photos Tagged Constantly
~ aziza "likey?"
For Judy.. Just because:)
After reading all the good things you guys wrote about my work over the month of march I am truly touched.. thank you so much my beautiful friends.. I wouldn't have done anything without your constant support and inspiration:)
HGGT to you all
Explore# 327
One of my favorite features of Fall colors is constant change - at least until all the leaves are down. In this particular spot, it was mostly orange, which, despite the overcast sky, gave the scene a lovely warm light.
The Was A Roman Emperor Who Never Aged After He Turned 19.
His Name Was Constant Teen.
Arr Arr...ahem
And, constant stars, in them I read such art
As truth and beauty shall together thrive,
If from thyself, to store thou wouldst convert;
Or else of thee this I prognosticate:
Thy end is truth’s and beauty’s doom and date.
(from William Shakespeare’s Sonnet 14)
Deep in the Andean altiplano a wind and water sculpted stone tree (Árbol de Piedra) reaches to the dark sky filled with stars, including the Milky Way, the Magellanic Cloud, a dwarf galaxy orbiting the Milky Way, as well as the planet Jupiter. This was by far the darkest sky I have ever seen, far away from any human settlements at 15,000 ft/ 4600 m in the dry atmosphere of the Andes.
The image is a compilation of 13 shots, one for the light painted Árbol de Piedra, and a stack of 12 images (15 secs at iso 6400) of the sky to minimize noise.
Palm Warbler hunting for insects in the leaf litter alongside the Marsh Rabbit Run Trail in the Circle B Bar Reserve located in the City of Lakeland Polk County Florida U.S.A.
Subtly patterned brown-and-yellow warbler, known for constantly bobbing its tail. Often forages on the ground, unlike most other warblers. Breeding plumage shows a rufous cap. In fall and winter, look for pale eyebrow and dark line through the eye, diffuse streaks on underparts, and bright yellow undertail coverts. Two populations: “Western” is browner overall, brightest on the undertail coverts; “Yellow” is more suffused with yellow overall; they overlap extensively in range, especially during fall migration. Breeds in bogs and clearings in the boreal forest. In migration, found in a variety of open, shrubby habitats. One of the more common warblers wintering in the southern U.S.; also winters in the Caribbean and Yucatan Peninsula. Source: eBird
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After being run ragged for the last week, I'm taking Dakota & heading north briefly - hopefully there will be some autumn leaves to enjoy!
The skies on Friday were constantly changing between total overcast to clear blue and everything in between. This was the scene at midday. Five exposure HDR processed with Nik HDR Efex Pro 2
Based on online information I think this is a short tailed weasel.
We first noticed it in the yard about 5 days ago, raing through the grass, up and down trees and bushes and burrowing around our little water feature.
Rondeau Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada, May 27, 2022.
Mustela genus(?)
As nocturnal animals, weasels sleep during the day and are active at night. Most of a weasel's time awake consists of hunting, storing excess food and eating. Their bodies don't store fat, so they need a constant supply of food to provide enough energy. In fact, the least weasel eats 40 to 60 percent of its body weight every day, according to the Nature Conservancy.
Though weasels can dig their own burrows quite quickly, they sometimes take over other animals' burrows and make them their own. They have even been known to take over termite hills.
source - Live science.
Another journey.
The familiar whir of the suitcase wheels against the ground sounds like a prelude to the new adventures about to be embraced. The stairs of the plane look like an invitation to the sky. Perhaps that's why, despite the weariness I hide behind my sunglasses, I feel a flutter inside.
The phone in my hand holds the last memories of the city I left behind. Am I smiling? Sometimes I think this life is a stage play. Shiny dresses, sunglasses, private jets... All part of my role. But at this very moment, as I am about to climb the stairs, my mind is somewhere else entirely. Or maybe not my mind, but my soul.
No matter where the plane takes me, the only thing I take with me is this feeling of the unknown. A little excitement, a little sadness, and a little of the question, "what will happen?" So, this photo is not just a memory. It's the story of being on the road, of constantly rediscovering myself, and sometimes, just stopping to breathe. And now, the new chapter of that story is beginning.
You can see information about my outfit my blog.
Thank you for being my constant in this chaotic world.
--------------------------- <3
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The constantly and rapidly changing weather is a feature of life at an altitude of over 2000m on the edge of the Himalaya. After a sunny afternoon yet another thunder storm passed overhead on this night. These storms are a regular occurrence in this part of the Dhauladhar Range.
This was shot from the balcony of my guesthouse room in the small town of Bhagsu Nag, just behind Mcleodganj.
Un bello Pelícano sobre su roca, rodeado por el golpeteo constante del Océano Pacifico, en el norte de Chile...
Fotografia inspirada en trabajos de los artistas Richard Wolf y Vicente Valdes.
USAFE Boeing WC-135 Constant Phoenix climbs out from RAF Mildenhall, Suffolk, England.
The WC-135 Constant Phoenix is a special-purpose aircraft derived from the Boeing C-135 Stratolifter and used by the United States Air Force. Its mission is to collect samples from the atmosphere for the purpose of detecting and identifying nuclear explosions.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Candid eye contact street photography from Barnsley, England. On the first day of my assignment I faced a bitterly cold and dark day with constant drizzle - I thought this shot summed it up well. Enjoy!
I found this male, white-tailed deer walking through the wooded area of an urban park. Around the same time, there were a couple coyotes in the same area. One walked very close to this guy, but they seemed to ignore each other, acting casually. However, I'm sure they were very aware of what was going on. Couldn't manage a photo of the encounter due to it being deeper into the wooded area and the constant movement of the critters. Oh well, I still have memories.
As I often do on summer evenings, I went for a short drive around Kneehill County. On this particular evening I was captured by the rays of the setting sun as they reached across the sky. When I compare just how much sky is in this photo compared to how small the house and barn are in the bottom right corner, it makes me feel very small in comparison.
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© Bob Cuthill Photography - All rights reserved
This image may not be copied, reproduced, published or distributed in any medium without the expressed written permission of the copyright holder.
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On January 30, 1996, after a major snowstorm, the one-time Chicago & North Western/Fox River Valley Railroad line south of Campbellsport, Wisconsin was plugged with drifts. A past C&NW manager now with the Wisconsin Central decided they would plow the line with a plow extra like they used to—get a couple of locomotives and run like a bat out of hell through the snow. Here, the plow extra is flying blind through the white stuff, horn blaring almost constantly because of the limited (none) visibility and the grade crossings on the line. I guess it proves a locomotive equipped with a pilot plow run at speed can be just as effective at removing snow from the track as a wedge plow! At least it was on this day… For the record, the locomotives being used as battering rams against winter plowing through Rockfield were Wisconsin Central EMD GP35 No. 4007 and a former C&NW GP7.
Darss, Germany, 2019
From my point of view very characteristic scene of the baltic coastline in northern Germany. In that area, the sea is literally eating its way into the land. Some of that sand is then deposited at the northern tip of the Darss Pensinsula. Beautiful place in a constant change.
Even through the darkest phase
Be it thick or thin
Always someone marches brave
Here beneath my skin
And constant craving
Has always been
Winter has us in its grip. The 9th of January, and the 8th day of constant freeze and frequent snow showers. We had a similar New Year event a couple of years ago, so I found some shots from then ... as the garden now is a bit too deep in snow to try any camera work ❄️😊
Very close to nature's own monochrome world, this needed little adjustment. Shot with the Lensbaby Sweet 50 and an 8+ macro ring.
Happy Monochrome Thursday 😊
and Happy Monochrome Bokeh Thursday too
B/W Tinted and Mono Here
The colours of winter: Here
Lensbaby Sweet 50: Here
The winter garden: Here
Winter through the lens Here
This was the view from the Cheese Press Stones high up on Keld Head Scar, looking South towards the distant Lancashire coastline.
I was out in the Yorkshire Dales with John Bleakley and we had ended up here late in the day, where we were treated to, more or less, constant displays of the suns rays in the distance, as the winter sun kept piercing the cloud cover.
I do admit this was'nt the best composition, but I tried to get the distant rays and the stones in the same shot. Such was the position of the rays, it made it difficult to get the two gigantic rocks separated sufficiently and in doing so they actually look quite small too.
“Our life is a constant journey, from birth to death. The landscape changes, the people change, our needs change, but the train keeps moving. Life is the train, not the station.”
― Paulo Coelho
The forest constantly reconstitutes itself by recycling every single thing back into new life. We could learn a thing or two...
A trio of Elgin Joliet and Eastern SD38-2s were pushing Canadian Pacific interchange traffic around the connector at Rondout on a perfect spring morning in Lake County.
Since this photo, the tower has closed, the EJ&E is part of Canadian National, interchange is no longer performed here, that searchlight signal has been replaced, and the J yard is no longer filled with cars since CN pissed away the traffic.
The rails still exist, but this type of activity will never be seen here again.