View allAll Photos Tagged DOUBLE

"Explored" on April 28, 2009. #21

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.

www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Double-crested_Cormorant/id/ac

   

Shot glass (water not vodka) on a Dutch angle, given a double Dutch angle with a bit of camera tilt!

 

I set this up in the late evening gloom and stuck a cluster of LED fairy lights on one of our veggie trugs to get the red light!

 

Was watching John Wick Parabellum when processing, hence the look!

Found this a few days ago on my garden gate.Hope I have the id right

 

Thank you all who fave and comment on my photo'/video's,much appreciated.And thank you all for looking.

A Double-crested Cormorant in breeding colors and plumage

Photographed at Fish Haul Beach, Atlantic Ocean, Hilton Head Island, SC, USA

  

MANY THANKS FOR YOUR VISITS, COMMENTS AND FAVES

THEY ARE VERY MUCH APPRECIATED!

Deep Dream Generator

JixiPix Pastello

 

HSS!

  

Thank you all for your faves, awards, invites and kind comments. All are so very appreciated!

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.

 

Thanks for your visits, kind comments and faves, very much appreciated.

 

Best viewed full screen.

Tournepierre à collier (Arenaria interpres)

1959 Cadillac ~ Wappingers Falls, NY

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)

Smile On Saturday 20.10.2018 "(K)not so bad"

 

Focus stack

Laddie and I are Bobsitting again, I’ve known Bob since he was a pup when he was a playmate of Indy too. He has stayed with us on countless occasions and is always a welcome guest even if he is a bit of a rascal sometimes.

 

This Image was captured at Mareeba, North Queensland

Mammoth amounts of noise reduction as the iso was so high due to the fading light. Hence not the greatest detail by any standards. But to get to spend some time in the company of this gorgeous girl was a rare treat ☺️❤️

Makro Monday thema: seeing double / doppelt sehen

 

Doppelbelichtung eines Farnblattes mit 1x über Kopf gehaltener Kamera

double exposure by holding the camera for the second shot overhead

 

Thanks for all your views, *** and (critical) kind review :))

Please don't use my images on websites, blogs or other media without my written permission © 2015 Karins-Linse.de All rights reserved 2015-D90_32725-DSC_0149_1

Sculpture by Shayne Dark, Toronto

Sony a7rII | LAEA4 | Minolta 100 macro

Two little Scottish Blackface lambs from a couple of years back

Phalacrocorax Auritus

Philadelphia Navy Yard, PA

Double-banded Courser, Mountain Zebra National Park, South Africa

 

© 2019 Gerda van Schalkwyk - All Rights Reserved

Flourishing roadside weed patch gets a little colour from a couple of stray double-flowered daisies. Gold Coast hinterland.

I saw an eastbound move at 44th Avenue that did not appear to stop, and with no route on the Midway Sub, I deduced it was a UP from the Twin Ports going down the St. Paul side. I found a sliver of light at the curve along the Transitway just as the UP came under 280 and was able to get the shot. Three units, with the correct one in the lead, head for the Belt Yard down at the Bluffs.

Double Rainbow Landscape

Le vin, est-ce des maths ?

 

Vigne prise en photo vers Fronsac, au bord de la Dordogne.

Célèbre appellation de la région de Bordeaux.

 

Double stairs in the City Hall of Paris, France.

The crab fishing boat "Double V" at Sooke, B.C.

1936

 

A repost due to issues with yesterday's upload.

Ed R. Levin County Park

Milpitas, CA

  

Thanks for your visit, faves and/or comments.

A family tried unsuccessfully to corral their toddlers into a family portrait in front of Double Arch at Arches National Park.

Deux papillons "Citron" qui n'en forme plus qu'un ...

12;26am October 12, three frames and it exploded!

pic-épeiche vs pic-mar

Taking off at Peace Valley Park, Doylestown Pa.

This shot was taken looking up at Double Arch (at Arches National Park), a twin arch formation that is 112 feet tall, with a 144-foot span. The larger of the arches is the tallest in the park and the third widest. The smaller of the two is 67 feet wide and 87 feet tall. I combined about 4 or 5 images taken at 14.0 mm to get this shot.

1 2 4 6 7 ••• 79 80