View allAll Photos Tagged Descend
What does Amae Wear?
Inconduite Dress @ Versois et Mailloux
Amandine Earrings @ Ysoral
Valentine @ Doux
Bettie Bangs @ She Said Destroy
Oscurial Coffin Nails @ Lexa
Standard on Amae:
Kaya @ LeLutka
Loli Skin @ Glam Affair
Reborn @ eBody
Skadi Shape @ Midori's (edited height and legs)
Gold Flower and Reflection Tattoo @ Vegas
the descending light.
sun setting under the pier. follow me at my website and blog @ www.lawsphotography.com
Le syrphe ceinturé Episyrphus balteatus, espèce indigène abondamment retrouvée dans nos agro-écosystèmes, possède de nombreux atouts en tant qu’agent de lutte biologique. En effet, ce Diptère, polyaphidiphage au stade larvaire, est retrouvé sur une large gamme de végétaux et se nourri de nombreuses espèces de pucerons. Particulièrement voraces au second et au troisième stade, les larves peuvent consommer jusqu’à 1200 pucerons. Les adultes présentent aussi un grand intérêt puisqu’ils participent activement à la pollinisation de nombreuses espèces végétales. Par ailleurs, les femelles d’Episyrphus balteatus peuvent pondre jusqu’à 1000 œufs pour assurer leur descendance. Très sélectives quant à leur site d’oviposition, elles privilégient les plants infectés de colonies de pucerons en pleine expansion : ceci assure une lutte biologique optimale sur le terrain et l’éradication des aphidiens dommageables à nos cultures.
Red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) looking at a photographer while descending a tree.
Wiewiórka (Sciurus vulgaris) patrząca na fotografa w trakcie schodzenia z drzewa.
Red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) looking around while descending a tree.
Wiewiórka (Sciurus vulgaris) rozglądająca się w trakcie schodzenia z drzewa.
Wet red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) descending a tree.
Mokra wiewiórka (Sciurus vulgaris) schodząca z drzewa.
This photograph of the mist descending down from Mt Olympus in the background, was a challenge to take. Both light and visibility had become poor up there and I was more than happy to be standing on the shoreline of Lake St Clair. Less than half an hour earlier the sun was shining, that's how quickly the conditions can change in this true alpine environment.
But there is nothing quite so invigorating as to be in touch with the elements in such a tangible way. I believe our desiccated modern souls cry out for it. We are reminded that so much of what passes as reality in our modern urban environments is simply not that at all. It is purely artificial.
It is beautiful to be in a natural environment like this, but nature has a wild side as well. And it is that very wild side that challenges us to face the reality of our Being. We are more than consumers, objects in the marketplace of our cities. We belong to Nature and our lives take on a fresh authenticity whenever we are in contact with our own essential nature.
Heading back down the Ammonoosuc Ravine Trail, after having climbed Mount Monroe.
thank you for visiting!
To help me start
All over again.
That would be just fine
I know it's gonna work out this time
Cause this time I am,
This time I am
I am
Changing.
I get my life together now.
I am changing
Yes I know how
I'm gonna start again.
I'm gonna leave my past behind
I'll change my life.
I make it up
And nothing is gonna stop me now.
As a river of ice slowly descends to Glacier Bay, a pod of Orcas finds their way into the rich feeding grounds inside the bay. The photo can only capture a portion of the enormous untouched-by-humans spaces of Alaska; located northwest of Canada, is the largest and most sparsely populated U.S. state. It's known for its diverse terrain of open spaces, mountains and forests, with abundant wildlife and many small towns. Alaska is as wide as the lower 48 states and larger than Texas, California and Montana combined. I was tracking the pack of Orcas and I framed the picture with the glacier as center piece hopping the pack surface on the center; I was off a bit.
The beauty of waterfalls and streams and rivers has always held a special place for me. There is a freedom that can't be captured and a peacefulness that is more profound than mere words can explain.....
A westbound Canadian Pacific grain train descends Kicking Horse Pass exiting the west portal of upper Spiral Tunnel at Yoho, British Columbia, on September 23, 2013.
The guy below was part of a bigger party, all of them did a diversion and ascended Angletarn Pikes with him so he could bag a Wainwright. Apparently the last time he was here he went to Angletarn's other summit which doesn't count. Good friends, but there was a bit of ribbing :-)
UP coal empties drift down the grade underneath US Route 6 near Colton, UT. Although not the Utah Railway crew we came to Solider Summit for, catching any train in good light on this railroad was good enough to make the day worth our troubles.
coming down the mountain we look back and get a glimpse of the drama that can unfold at any moment on these swiss peaks
The phrase 'Descending into...' generally refers to a deterioration of a situation, such as 'Descending into madness' or 'Descending into chaos'. This is also true here, as long as you accept that descending into order goes against the Second Law of Thermodynamics where the natural state of a system and its surroundings is to become more disordered. In knolling, similar objects are arranged as a method of organisation - but as I like a photograph to tell a story, I wanted to convey not just the arranged objects, but the process of doing the knolling.
For Macro Mondays theme 'Knolling'. This 9-shot focus stack has been cropped to be within the MM size limit.
*In Explore*
A recent winter storm arriving at Palo Duro Canyon. I was heading back to my car while the temperatures were dropping. This shows the park road where it makes its steepest descent into the canyon, on a road originally constructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s during the Great Depression.
Randall County, Texas, USA
Camera: Fujifilm X-T5
Lens: Tamron 18-300 mm
Settings: ISO 640, f/13, 1/40s, 28 mm
Shot handheld.