View allAll Photos Tagged DRIP
New Hydrangea Garden (D1) 2018. Installed drip irrigation for the 15 new plants, mostly Hydrangea. Chamaecyparis obtusa 'Lemon Twist', Ligularia 'Bottle Rocket', Geranium 'Brookside', Heuchera 'Pertty Perrine', Hydrangea arborescens 'Annabelle', Hydrangea arborescens Invincibelle® Mini Mauvette 'NCHA7', Hydrangea macrophylla 'Blaumeise', Hydrangea macrophylla 'Forever Pink', Hydrangea macrophylla 'Glowing Embers', Hydrangea macrophylla Cityline Venice® 'Venice Raven', Hydrangea macrophylla Kaleidoscope™ 'Hobella', Hydrangea macrophylla LA Dreamin® 'Lindsey Ann', Hydrangea quercifolia 'Pee Wee', Rosa 'BAIrage' Easy Elegance® All The Rage™, Spiraea japonica Double Play® Candy Corn® 'NCSX1'
In which an MP claims high principle for some less than principled legislative manoeuvring.
He also appears to be wrong about the creation of new powers, but hey ho.
I watered this calle lilly yesterday, and this morning saw drips on each flower....it must be because I watered it too much? I love the color of this variety: red to orange to yellow to green.....
Henry has a fixation on water. He drinks from the faucet, will walk into the shower if one leaves the door open, routinely soaks his head when I am brushing my teeth and loves to swat at drips from the faucet. Henry's predecessor, Harry, Lived to be 15 and could not stand getting his feet wet. Go Figure!
This drinking fountain (or bubbler, as we call them here in Boston) was dripping and this bird was catching each drop. On Redondo Beach.
Advertising Agency: TBWA\Santiago Mangada Puno Makati City, The Philippines
Executive Creative Director: Melvin Mangada
Creative Director: Manuel Villafania
Copywriter: Bryan Siy
Account Supervisor: Kara Filamor
Art Directors: Manuel Villafania, Melvin Mangada, Denise Tee
Photographer:G-Nie Arambulo
Print Producer: May Dalisay
Final Artist: Momay Quiroz
Production House: Adphoto
Camera Canon EOS 1000D
Exposure 0.005 sec (1/200)
Aperture f/10.0
Focal Length 200 mm (Tamron)
ISO Speed 100
Exposure Bias 0 EV
Flash On, Fired
this series is better that the other ones, I just corrected my mistake by focusing and they seems to be really sharp.
Drops are Ink, Glycirin 50% and water 50%
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Taken with:
Camera model:Canon EOS 1000D
Exposure=0.005 sec (1/200)
Aperture=f/10.0
ISO=100
Focal length=200 mm
Flash:On, Fired
Exif info added with simashin flickr tools
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We bought some new flowers at the weekend for our back garden, so I decide to take some macro shots of them shortly after watering.
This has been post-processed to give it a slight 'vintage' tone.
My last shot with the Carl Zeiss Makro-Planar T* 2/100. The texture on here is all natural (I shot through the screen in my window). Color is unprocessed. Nikon D700 + Carl Zeiss 100mm The journey is the reward. Please, no group invitations or badges.
2012 March
Using drip irrigation in raised bed. This is drip line is "in-line emitter soaker. (This is not laser cut drip, nor, typical soaker hose.) Within the bed, the drip line is connected to a shut-off valve. You can have multiple planting beds on the same timer zone and shut off the watering on the beds that are unplanted (fallow/resting). Emitter soaker drip is ideal for uniform-sized plantings: (1) seeds/ seedlings; (2) annuals/perennials; (3) landscape natives and evergreens. It is not recommended to mix categories.
Water drips from a leaking faucet off the side of a pier into a marina, May 9, 2014. The irony alone is mind bending but the reasons behind the need for Americans to conserve water is eye opening. The U.S. population has doubled over the past 50 years, thus the thirst for water has tripled. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, at least 36 states are already facing water shortages and the need to conserve water is becoming more and more critical. H2O is the one thing humans can live without. Spread the word and conserve water. (iPhone Photo by Kenny Holston)
Lowered the dripper to only about 10" above the bowl, and put on a slightly larger nozzle. That got me much more consistent drops, as you can see here. It's interesting to see how the drops start off totally consistent, and become more and more chaotic after the initial splash. I actually took about a hundred more frames than I included in the video, but by that point it was total chaos- no apparent continuity frame-to-frame. Maybe I should increase the delay between frames, to let the water completely settle between shots.
This video is at 10 FPS, with each frame delayed by an additional millisecond between releasing the drop and taking the picture. So this video covers a span of about 1/10 of a second.
Tubes providing drip irrigation leading to a bell pepper crop.
Manoli Village, Sonipat District in Haryana, India.
Photo credit: Katrin Park / International Food Policy Research Institute / 1 June, 2016
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Taken with:
Camera model:Canon EOS 1000D
Exposure=0.005 sec (1/200)
Aperture=f/10.0
ISO=400
Focal length=200 mm
Flash:On, Fired
Exif info added with simashin flickr tools
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