View allAll Photos Tagged FOREST_WHITE

Once an 8 acre flat oat field, my husband was inspired to create this amazing acreage we called Bluebird Estates with a log house, a man made lake stocked with rainbow, cutthroat and brook trout, hills, trees etc in Alberta, Canada.

La Ceja, Colombia; Central Andes; 2.300 meters above sea level.

 

Turdus ignobilis (Black-billed Thrush / Mayo)

 

Turdus ignobilis is a widely distributed thrush species throughout northern South America and the Amazon, inhabiting a diverse set of habitats ranging from floodplain forests, white sand “campinas”, to highland forests (Andes and Tepuis). There are currently six known subspecies of T. ignobilis, which vary extensively phenotypically and also ecologically.

 

www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S105579031600021X

 

Silver Birch on Ambersham Common, South Downs National Park

( penultimate day before the military ordinance - one month today )

Thank you very much for your visit , fave and comment !

Panoramic of Silver Birch Trees on Ambersham common.

 

Canon EOS 750D | EF-S18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS II

ƒ/5.6 | 25mm | 1/60 Seconds | ISO 100

töss valley in the winter. sooo nice!

La Ceja, Colombia; Central Andes; 2.300 meters above sea level.

 

Turdus ignobilis -juvenile- (Black-billed Thrush / Mayo)

 

Turdus ignobilis is a widely distributed thrush species throughout northern South America and the Amazon, inhabiting a diverse set of habitats ranging from floodplain forests, white sand “campinas”, to highland forests (Andes and Tepuis). There are currently six known subspecies of T. ignobilis, which vary extensively phenotypically and also ecologically.

 

www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S105579031600021X

 

the effect of an instant snow avalanche falling from the branches

La Ceja, Colombia; Central Andes; 2.300 meters above sea level.

 

Turdus ignobilis (Black-billed Thrush / Mayo)

 

Turdus ignobilis is a widely distributed thrush species throughout northern South America and the Amazon, inhabiting a diverse set of habitats ranging from floodplain forests, white sand “campinas”, to highland forests (Andes and Tepuis). There are currently six known subspecies of T. ignobilis, which vary extensively phenotypically and also ecologically.

 

www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S105579031600021X

 

In a woodland turned to various shades of black, white and grey, I stumbled upon this one area where colour still remained.The lost colour of Winter discovered.

Yellow river, Finland.

Le massif du Mont Blanc avec une vue sur le Mont Blanc du Tacul et le coeur de pierre entre les deux glaciers. Vallée de Chamonix Mont Blanc France

The Mont Blanc range with the view onto the Mont Blanc du Tacul in the center and the Heart of Stone inbetween the two glaciers, Chamonix Mont Blanc valley France.

La Ceja, Colombia; Central Andes; 2.300 meters above sea level.

 

Turdus ignobilis is a widely distributed thrush species throughout northern South America and the Amazon, inhabiting a diverse set of habitats ranging from floodplain forests, white sand “campinas”, to highland forests (Andes and Tepuis). There are currently six known subspecies of T. ignobilis, which vary extensively phenotypically and also ecologically.

 

www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S105579031600021X

La Ceja, Colombia; 2.300 meters above sea level.

 

Turdus ignobilis (Black-billed Thrush / Mayo)

 

Turdus ignobilis is a widely distributed thrush species throughout northern South America and the Amazon, inhabiting a diverse set of habitats ranging from floodplain forests, white sand “campinas”, to highland forests (Andes and Tepuis). There are currently six known subspecies of T. ignobilis, which vary extensively phenotypically and also ecologically.

 

www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S105579031600021X

La Ceja, Colombia; Central Andes; 2.300 meters above sea level.

 

Turdus ignobilis (Black-billed Thrush / Mayo)

 

Turdus ignobilis is a widely distributed thrush species throughout northern South America and the Amazon, inhabiting a diverse set of habitats ranging from floodplain forests, white sand “campinas”, to highland forests (Andes and Tepuis). There are currently six known subspecies of T. ignobilis, which vary extensively phenotypically and also ecologically.

 

www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S105579031600021X

 

– Bristlecone Pine, Bristlecone Pine National Forest, White Mountain, Eastern California, U.S.A. October 15, 2017.

BUY THIS PHOTOGRAPH HERE timothysallen.smugmug.com/Natures/Trees/i-PxNJrqf/A

See more of my photographs here timothysallen.smugmug.com

A new chapter begins.

Happy New Year

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