View allAll Photos Tagged DOUBLE
Shot the Dahlia first. Then added the white wash cloth out of focus. The double exposure dark setting was used for the exposures, so the wash cloth didn't totally burn out the Dahlia image.
Spent a few days at the Double Tree By Hilton Hotel in Queenstown. There was snow on the Remarkables but only at higher altitudes.
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©2018 Fantommst
In the beautiful evening light over the Batsumer valley, a heavy roaring from-the-distance combination of 2TE116UM and 2TE25KM locomotives pulled a 6800tn train to the capital.
The north part of the Trans-Mongolian railway.
©2021
A few seats left in our next summer railfanning group tour!
The tour will follow the highlighted photo places along the central and northern parts of the mainline! An early-bird discount is still available until late April 2023!
Tour date: 18 - 28.JUNE 2023!
Additional tour for branch line: 28. June - 02. July
Contact us: monrailpic@gmail.com
Double-crested Cormorants at the Susquehanna River in Spring 2019
2019_04_08_EOS 7D Mark II_8230-Edit_V1
Always impressive to see there in Arches National Park is the pretty Double Arch. Here under cloudy conditions.
Plains zebras in the Masai Mara National Reserve, Kenya
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Double-crested Cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) are perched in the late afternoon sun at the Leonabelle Turnbull Birding Center in Port Aransas, Texas. The photo was taken 6 years before the Birding Center was heavily damaged by Huricane Harvey. Repair plans are underway.
For more information regarding the Birding Center:
www.cityofportaransas.org/Leonabelle_Turnbull_Birding_Cen...
The Double-crested Cormorant is the most numerous and widespread North American cormorant. It's also the only one that occurs in large numbers inland as well as on the coast. Growing in numbers throughout its range, this cormorant is increasingly being blamed for declines in sport fisheries and for devastating fish farms.
Found this a few days ago on my garden gate.Hope I have the id right
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A Double-crested Cormorant in breeding colors and plumage
Photographed at Fish Haul Beach, Atlantic Ocean, Hilton Head Island, SC, USA
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The double-banded plover, known as the banded dotterel or pohowera in New Zealand. They breed in New Zealand's subantarctic Auckland Islands, and generally migrate in winter to Australia.
Not a great shot as I had to zoom in a very long way to photograph them, but I was very excited to see them.
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Due soffioni si stagliano alla luce del sole che tramonta, in un magico abbraccio per esprimere lo stesso desiderio. Padova, stasera...
#dandalions #soffioni #tramonto #padova #desiderio #soffio #luce #backlight #macro
Beaumaris Lake, Edmonton
The double-crested cormorant is a member of the cormorant family of water birds. It is found near rivers and lakes and in coastal areas and is widely distributed across North America, from the Aleutian Islands in Alaska down to Florida and Mexico. Measuring 70–90 cm (28–35 in) in length, it is entirely black except for a bare patch of orange-yellow facial skin and some extra plumage that it exhibits in the breeding season when it grows a double crest in which black feathers are mingled with white.
Five subspecies are recognized. It mainly eats fish and hunts by swimming and diving. Its feathers, like all cormorants, are not waterproof, and it must dry them out after spending time in the water. Once threatened by the use of DDT, the numbers of this bird have increased markedly in recent years. (Wikipedia)