View allAll Photos Tagged FEMALE
Each obstacle is always possible to overcome and even if you have to fall twice on the same stone you can always get up...
DIRTY MARK ON FACE AND BODY
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A backlit female Rufous Hummingbird sipping nectar from our Zinnia flowers. Photo taken August, 2024, in our backyard in Camas, Washington.
An adult female Horned Lark (Eremophila alpestris) perches upon a post to get a good view of the prairie landscape near the
Great Sandhills Reserve south of Leader, Saskatchewan, Canada.
18 May, 2018.
Slide # GWB_20180518_1209.CR2
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Posed nicely for me to take It's photo at Himley Hall and park - South Staffordshire...
Best viewed large...
Species: Turdus torquatus.
Derbyshire, UK.
Ring ouzels are roughly the size and shape of a blackbird. Males are mostly black, with a broad white crescent across the breast and white edging to the wings and some body feathers, which gives them a scaly look. Females are similar, but the black is often more brownish, and the white parts duller. Info: The Wildlife Trusts.
Many thanks to people who view or comment on my photos.
This is the first Female Indigo Bunting I have seen. Did not know what this was until I looked it up in a Field guide.
I was fortunate to have this sweet female red winged blackbird following me around by the edge of the lake. I was looking for my usual landscape compositions and she 'bout had to hit me over the head telling me to take her picture. The only problem was that she was way too far away with my little 300mm lens but I gave it a shot anyway. They file was so dinky with few pixels after the huge crop but Adobe's Super Resolution came to the rescue and I was easily able to double the file size and have something to work with.
Thank you for your warm and kind visits and comments my filckr friends. You are all very much appreciated! 💖
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Species: Turdus torquatus.
Location: Derbyshire, UK.
Ring ouzels are roughly the size and shape of a blackbird. Males are mostly black, with a broad white crescent across the breast and white edging to the wings and some body feathers, which gives them a scaly look. Females are similar, but the black is often more brownish, and the white parts duller. Info: Wildlife Trust.
Many thanks to people who view or comment on my photos.