View allAll Photos Tagged Facts,

Despite the fact that there are around 20,000 species of this large family of Longhorn beetles there a few to be found living in the UK. Just proves that you don't have to always take a trip to a tropical rainforest to find some amazing looking bugs. Fond of damp grassland areas and chalky soils where the larvae of this beetle develop in the stem tissues of herbaceous plants such as hogweed. Can be seen from May to June and found widespread in the UK but local in eastern England.

Jellyfish have been possibly around 700 million years or longer, before dinosaurs lived on the Earth.

 

Jellyfish bodies are actually made up of as much as ~98 % water.

 

Jellyfish have no heart, bones, brain, ears, noses or even

eyes(some have eyes).

 

Jellyfish mouth is found in the centre of its body, they use mouth for both eating and pooping.

 

Some Jellyfish's may never actually die (Theoretically Immortal!).

 

Some jellyfish are clear, but others are vibrant colours of pink, yellow, blue and purple.

 

Jellyfish produce their own light!

 

texture by ipiccy.com

Some Facts-

 

1. Inexperienced young woodpeckers frequently crash into windows: this is a major cause of death of juvenile birds.

 

2. An unpaired male may drum as many as 600 times a day; a paired male just 200 times.

 

3. Drumming has been recorded on many objects other than trees, ranging from weather vanes to metal poles.

Skin by: 7DS - RITUALS ~BOM in Pineapple @ Dubai

Face Moles by: 7DS - Face Moles ~BOM #01 @ InWorld Loc.

Body Moles by: 7DS - Body Moles ~BOM @ InWorld Loc.

Necklace by: #MG - Secret ~Jewelry Set @ Level

Tattoo by: [ATI] - Becky Tattoo ~BOM @ InWorld Loc.

Top by: Amataria - Top "Luna" [Fatpack] @ InWorld Loc.

~More info/photos on blog

(copy/paste in google. I can't add direct link)

Blog:https://myslphotocreations.blogspot.com/2020/09/846.html

P1620960 - Little Egret - Size - 55-65 cm

# 361 - 20 Jul '2019 - 21:12 (15:42 GMT)

 

WONDERFUL FACTS - How many bird species are endangered ...

According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) at least 12% of the world's bird species are threatened with extinction and an additional 8% are near threatened ...

Number of bird species is between 9,800 and 10,400 depending on the taxonomic classification methods 🌼

 

Possible - Have A Look At -- My Creative Galleries -- Thank You Dear Friend 💞

 

Happy birding 💧

 

In the back on the right hand my better half was looking for herons. In fact she found about 20 sitting in the treetops of some scotch pines.

www.flickr.com/photos/mirjana_sesar/

 

She had the 300mm on MFT that I was missing on my smartphone. I have to admit in this regard these little wonder devices can not compete and will not in the near future.

I love that look! Jaguar - Pantanal, banks of Cuiaba River.

 

Facts: The jaguar (Panthera onca) is a big cat, a feline in the Panthera genus, and is the only extant Panthera species native to the Americas. The jaguar is the third-largest feline species after the tiger and the lion, and the largest in the Americas. The jaguar is a threatened species and its numbers are declining. Threats include loss and fragmentation of habitat. Press L.

  

Happy Sunday!!!

 

Thanks a lot for your visits, comments, faves, invites, etc. Very much appreciated!

 

© All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written explicit permission. All rights reserved. Please contact me at thelma.gatuzzo@gmail.com if you intend to buy or use any of my images.

 

reading fingers have left almost invisible traces on the letters. the story is very old.

what is readable, what can we know...just some shades and hints of the forgotten lives.

 

Amazing Facts About the Seagull

Seagulls are very clever. They learn, remember and even pass on behaviors, such as stamping their feet in a group to imitate rainfall and trick earthworms to come to the surface.

Seagulls’ intelligence is clearly demonstrated by a range of different feeding behaviors, such as dropping hard-shelled mollusks onto rocks so that they break open so they can eat them, and following plows in fields where they know upturned grubs and other food sources will be plentiful.

Seagulls are attentive and caring parents. The male and female pair for life and they take turns incubating the eggs, and feeding and protecting the chicks!.

=========================

 

Thank you for your visit and kind comments!.

You all have a wonderful weekend!.

An interesting fact of Babimost is location the market sguare with town hall outside the current residential zone.

Originally, the wooden buildings of Babimost did not survive due to the fires several times consuming the city. It was not until the 1830s that masonry buildings were built, some of which have survived to this day.

-

Ciekawostką Babimostu jest położenie rynku z ratuszem poza obecną strefą mieszkalną.

Pierwotnie drewniana zabudowa Babimostu nie przetrwała ze względu na pożary kilkukrotnie trawiące miasto. Dopiero w latach trzydziestych XIX wieku powstały budynki murowane, spośród których część przetrwała do dziś.

 

Music:

"Sports Hazardeux" by ALBERT MARCOEUR, in 'Sports et Percussions' (1994)

open.spotify.com/track/27pWS2up3iNu37QVv3Zic9

Fun Fact: They are named after German explorer Gustav Fischer.

Some facts: The ocelot, also known as the dwarf leopard, is a wild cat distributed extensively within South America including the islands of Trinidad and Margarita, Central America, and Mexico. It has been reported as far north as Texas. North of Mexico, it is found regularly only in the extreme southern part of Texas,although there are rare sightings in southern Arizona.

 

The ocelot is similar in appearance to a domestic cat. Its fur resembles that of a clouded leopard or jaguar and was once regarded as particularly valuable. As a result, hundreds of thousands of ocelots were once killed for their fur. The feline was classified as a vulnerable species from 1972 until 1996, and is now listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ocelot

 

Photographed at Pousada Santa Teresa, Mato Grosso at the end of the day.

 

Have a wonderful Tuesday!

  

Thanks a lot for your visits, comments, faves, invites, etc. Very much appreciated!

 

©All rights reserved. Do not use without my express consent. Please contact me at thelma.gatuzzo@gmail.com if you intend to buy or use any of my images.

Hi, Me again...

 

In April 2021, I received my first 35mm as a gift from a fellow photography enthusiast. I seriously had no idea what I was doing but I immeditely knew I enjoyed it. The sound alone was enough to give me shivers!! Since then, I have shot a few rolls of film, find myself in possession of 5 new cameras, managed to process 2 rolls at home, 'scan', and now I'm ready to put them out there.

 

I don't ever profess to be a perfect photographer. If fact, I'm usually incredibly insecure. Digital photography always had me seeking perfection. It is silly because life isn't perfect, but regardless, I feared things like proper exposure and unconventional subjects. (Yes....insert eye roll here!)

 

The thing about film though, it has given me freedom it be imperfect, appreciate 'flaws' and embrace everyday life in an authentic and unpolished way. Film has given me permission to love the imperfect and see it for all its beauty. Also, the fact that my hands are on it from start to finish....well that... that alone gives me immense satisfaction.

 

So.....I'm saying be ready for the perfectly imperfect. And just to prove it...I resisted the urge to edit out my chicken pox scars. :-) I'm going to be brave and start sharing what I've been working on and what I love.

 

Here goes....

  

**

  

Nikon FM10 | Ilford HP5 400

 

Digitized with Sony A7riii | Skier Sunray Copy Box 3 | 135 Skier Sunray Film Holder

 

Home developed in Cinestill Monobath | 3 min, 80 F

 

Negative Lab Pro v2.2.0 | Color Model: B+W | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: LAB - Standard | WB: Auto-Neutral | LUT: Frontier

  

“It is easier to forgive an enemy than to forgive a friend.”

 

William Blake

Take your pick.

Helios 44M-7 at F5.6

ursus arctos

 

length: 1 to 2.8 m

weight: 139 kg (male), 95 kg (female)

lifespan: 20 to 30 years

predators: humans

habitat: boreal forest, mountain alpine, arctic tundra

yukon population estimate: 6,000-7,000

 

they breed for the first time around their 8th year and reproduce every 3 to 4 years

 

bears routinely distinguish between threatening and non-threatening human behaviour

 

bears are not mean or malicious; they are very gentle, curious, and tolerant animals

 

shih shòh (gwich’in)

shär cho (hän)

dlēze (kaska)

srà cho (northern tutchone)

akłaq (inuvialuit)

atsìá sho (big grandpa) (southern tutchone)

shash chō (tagish)

shüh choh (upper tanana)

xóots or xûts (tlingit)

A combination of moments,

light and shadows.

Lines and dots.

All inconspicuous and at the same time quite clear.

 

🎧Ghost of Johnny Cash

"The fact that people are born with two eyes but only one mouth,

suggests that they should see twice as much as they should talk".

- Marie Marquise de Svign -

A sample of some of the books on my bookshelf. Taken with a vintage Canon AE-1-Program camera with a FD 55mm S.S.C f1.2 lens using a Konica VX400 Monochrome film that expired in October 2005.

Some interesting facts about the Roseate Spoonbills...

 

The Roseate Spoonbill is one of the newest birds to join the Birdorable family. Here are some fun facts about this unique species.

 

1. The collective noun for spoonbills is bowl. Have you ever seen a bowl of Roseate Spoonbills?

 

2. Roseate Spoonbills get their pink color from their food! They feed on crustaceans who in turn have fed on algae.

 

3. In parts of their range, especially in Florida, Roseate Spoonbills are sometimes confused with another large pink wading bird: the flamingo.

 

4. There are six species of spoonbill in the world; the Roseate Spoonbill is the only one with pink plumage. Roseate Spoonbill

 

5. The Roseate Spoonbill is also the only spoonbill species found in the Americas.

 

6. The beaks of chick spoonbills are straight; the spoon-shape grows as the chick develops.

 

7. Spoonbills use their specialized bills to feed. They sweep their open bills through the water, and when a prey item like a fish or insect comes between the mandibles, the bill snaps shut.

 

8. The oldest wild Roseate Spoonbill was discovered in the Florida Keys in 2006. The bird had been banded in 1990, and was an amazing 16 years old. The previous known longevity record for the species was seven years.

 

9. Roseate Spoonbills are highly social. They feed with each other and with other wading birds. They also nest in colonies and fly in flocks.

Once a genius, always a genius

The animal is ignorant of the fact that he knows. The man is aware of the fact that he is ignorant.

 

In a country full of spectacular waterfalls, and despite the obvious drawback in that one can never expect to experience this place alone, Skógafoss has been the one to set my pulses on red alert each time I’ve visited. Ok, so that’s only twice - well three times if you count the very brief pit stop we made here on the long journey east to Stafafell - but the mere sight of it makes for a display of extraordinary power. Not only in terms of the improbable physics that are happening right there in front of you, but also in the hold that it will take on your senses as you stand here at the bottom. Sixty metres tall and twenty-five wide, this is where the highlands end abruptly as that huge curtain of water crosses the divide and plummets down to earth in a resounding crescendo right there in front of you. There are bigger waterfalls in Iceland, but you can’t stand underneath many of them like this. And this one has such pleasing dimensions, that clean and uncomplicated single drop perfectly proportioned and surrounded by clouds of vapour that make you wonder whether you should have brought some shower gel and a bath towel. And a thermos full of piping hot coffee to help with the hypothermia afterwards.

 

We’d come here after breakfast on our third morning in the area, having agreed that the misty grey conditions would suit the subject well. Ironic that when we’d passed through here a week earlier, there had been a bright rainbow right in front of Skógafoss. There had also been a large number of visitors, taking endless Instaselfies as they tripped from their coaches and raced excitedly towards the action. That day we had to wait for a space in the large car park, such was the popularity of the place. Finding the visitor numbers too distracting, we soon moved on, although perhaps we should have photographed that rainbow and made merry with the clone tool later. At that stage we were getting rather blasé on the subject, having spent the previous day photographing a particularly fine example at Háifoss. But there were no more waterfall rainbows for the rest of the trip, and little did we realise we’d missed our chance.

 

Arriving in the middle of the morning seemed to have paid off. Although far from empty, the car park was noticeably quieter than last time, and with the aid of that trusty pair of welly boots I was soon paddling about in the shallow river, setting the tripod low to bring that foreground rush of water towards the bottom of the frame. And miraculously in these moments there were chances to get the shot with only minimum numbers of stragglers to contend with. There’s always someone standing as close as they dare to, but I only had to airbrush two spectres from the scene here. Bring your wellies and you can often go to places where others can’t.

 

Last time we came to Iceland, on that final night before heading back to Reykjavík, I got what became my favourite shot of the trip in the form of “Sandwich Bags, Spray and Spectators,” where I was that person standing as close to the white wall as I dared to. And now, an hour after this, I took my favourite shot of this second adventure with “The Watchers.” Very possibly my two most loved images of all time in fact - from a personal point of view anyway. I’m starting to wonder whether or not it’s a coincidence the place delivers pictures that make me feel this happy. I’m quite content with this one as well for that matter. While Skógafoss keeps giving me moments like these, I’ll carry on coming back for more.

 

Sandwich Bags, Spray and Spectators: www.flickr.com/photos/126574513@N04/50702613408/in/album-...

 

The Watchers: www.flickr.com/photos/126574513@N04/52420303660/in/album-...

 

Minarets, Eastern Sierras, California.

Virginia City, Nevada

This is Will sitting on a bench on a snowy 'beach' out at the far end of the Grossglockner High Alpine Road. Despite the fact we visited in June there was still a lot of snow about.

Among my favourite classical composers is Rachmaninov. As I post this image I am listening to his piano concerto No 2, from 1901. Within the melody, another familiar tune is revealed in the form of "All by myself", by Eric Carmon in 1975. A mistake that cost him dearly for using that same melody.

 

He thought it was public domain, when in fact the family had retained ownership. This scenario reminds me of that situation, but for the opposite reason. Believing for an instant that I own this moment, it is instead a public one. All will enjoy this melody that continues to play for others to capture.

 

www.photographycoach.ca/

Here are another picture of the very nice cascades near Soubey (Jura, Switzerland). With all the snow melting above, in the Franches-Montagnes, it was a real flood.

 

As you can see on this shot, the framing is rather unperfect : the left side is kind of messy and blurry, there's this perspective in the upper right corner that could have been intensified. Moreover, it's not totally at horizon level : all I had to do was to go a little lower with the tripod rotate the camera. That was my first plan.

 

The problem was : I wore shitty shoes and I stood upon a slippery rock covered with moss. What had to happen happened : I slipped, the tripod slipped and my 100D fall directly in the water in a very nice "sloosh".

 

Fortunately, it remained in the water less than 5 seconds and the screen was still showing this picture when I removed the battery. It is now in a kilogramme of long grain USA parboiled rice, and will stay there until tomorrow evening. I hope it will manage to dry it completely. I have some hope to save it ...

 

However, saving the lens would probably be a miracle, but I try anyway with the same trick ... Now I just have to wait, pray and see ...

 

So I am happy to show you this very last shot of my (maybe) dead buddy. I hope I did not became a photographer without a camera ...

 

---------------------------------------------------------

This picture was explored on the 2nd of March 2016 ! Thank you really much for your kind messages !

 

And now : the end of the story : I tried the camera this morning. The body seem to work perfectly fine. The lens AF and stabilizer work as well, but there's some dirt on the lenses inside, so I'll probably have to make it clean. Then, it's always possible to have some rust on electronic components. I'll see in the future.

 

So the rice trick works, but I definitely think that what saved my camera is the fact that I removed the battery very quickly. What you don't want is some short-circuits on electronic components that heat and burn after a few seconds (they are small, so it can happen really fast). Without electrical power, much less risk to get damages.

 

Thank you anyway for your support !

Le tranquille acque del Lago di Antorno nel territorio di Auronzo di Cadore (BL) contornate da foreste di conifere, godono tutto attorno di gruppi Dolomitici conosciuti in tutto il Mondo. Alle spalle di questo piccolo lago vi sono infatti le Tre Cime di Lavaredo, il simbolo per antonomasia delle Dolomiti Patrimonio Unesco.

 

The calm waters of Lake Antorno in the territory of Auronzo di Cadore (BL) surrounded by coniferous forests, enjoy all around the Dolomite groups known throughout the world. Behind this small lake there are in fact the Tre Cime of Lavaredo, the symbol par excellence of the Dolomites Unesco World Heritage Site.

Unguided missile launcher from the 1800's or earlier. Dropped in favor of the larger wooden wheel models. Less hernias, while moving said unit, were endured as a result.

IMG_9778 2021 05 08

57 Chevy Higlights

Buddy at about 3 months going on 4. He likes the fireplace - in fact, one of his first kitten moves was to push his way through the closed screen and get stuck behind it. Since he was also chilling in the wood bin, I just put a kitty bed there for a little more comfort. He's doubled his weight, btw, to 2 lbs.

 

Based on current Flickr friends activity feed problems (mine at least), who knows if more than a handful of folks will see this cat follow-on to the cheetah I posted yesterday. I have logged a trouble ticket.

Just messing around with one of those new fangled camera apps that lets you add some fun to the picture after the fact....and then threw some tonal music underneath cause it seemed like it needed it :)

Taken in oxymoron

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Oxymoron/130/78/29

As the name for this fine dining restaurant suggests, the building was once a schoolhouse. In fact it was the original home of the Launceston Church Grammar School established in 1846. The Quill & Cane is now part of the large Colonial Hotel complex (formerly the Colonial Motor Inn). This attractive building was completed in 1847.

Vyšehrad is the oldest seat of Czech princes; in fact, the local settlement was established in the mid-10 th century. Situated on a rocky promontory above the Vltava River, it offers stunning views of the city, and the park area holds hidden architectural treasures including the rare Romanesque Rotunda of St Martin, the neo-Gothic Church of Sts Peter and Paul, the national cemetery Slavín, and the underground casements housing the some of the original Baroque statues from the Charles Bridge.

A few days ago, the above art work appeared overnight on an outside wall of Reading Prison which has stood empty since it closed at the end of 2013. There was immediate speculation it was the work of the street artist Banksy whose identity has never been confirmed despite the fact his numerous works have appeared at various locations over a long period of years.

 

The paintings often form a social message and can be controversial. Reading Prison is very much a controversial place – it is owned by the Ministry of Justice who have been trying to dispose of it for the last 7 years. For them one of the problems is the property is designated a grade II listed building which means it cannot be demolished or substantially altered without prior consent from the Local Authority – Reading Borough Council. There have been calls for it to be used as a public amenity such as a theatre or arts facility and a deal to redevelop it has fallen through so in effect there has been little or no progress for 7 years.

 

Yesterday Banksy confirmed it was his art work although he did not shed any light on who the figure was supposed to be. Much of the local view is that it is a representation of Oscar Wilde, the Victorian actor, writer and poet who was incarcerated there from 1895 to 1897 – probably the prisons main claim to fame.

 

It is questionable as to whether the painting helps or hinders the current deadlock although it has provided some amusement for local residents in what is otherwise a depressing time!

 

———————————————————————————————--

 

Grateful thanks to everyone who has looked at my photostream and commented and/or faved this photograph. Your interest is very much appreciated.

 

Most important of all, continue to keep safe during these uncertain times!

 

————————————————————————————————

Ricoh R1

Expired 400asa unknown film taken from a disposable camera and shot at 100asa

Homemade C41 and Bleach

Epson V700

The Lorenz attractor is, without a doubt, the emblematic figure of chaos theory and probably one of the most popular mathematical figures. It was at the beginning of the 60s when the mathematician Edward Lorenz discovered in his laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Boston that small variations in the initial conditions of a system of differential equations that simulated the state of the climate in a certain region, produced large divergences in the results. What he had discovered is what later became known as the "Butterfly Effect": a flap of a butterfly's wings would be enough to trigger a cyclone. The Lorenz attractor is the representation in space, through numerical methods, of the solution curves of the system of three differential equations with three variables studied by Lorenz.

This is a photograph showing the Lorenz attractor generated with a simple code from the free software Octave.

Photograph of the monitor taken with Nikon D5600, 55 mm.

As written previously some strange encounters and experiences only hit the full impact mark with some delay.

 

On a recent event I was viciously struck, once again, by the fact how people are trying so hard to stand out from the crowd.

 

Clutching for recognition haunted and conforming to some distant paradigm.

In an almost perverted way of begging for attention, they act just merely all the same…

Waiting for a miracle to get noticed, dwelling around (could be a side effect of too many mojo-cocktails though) with eyes closed to their own originality.

 

Peculiar fact: they want to stand out and simultaneously being simply slightly different from the crowd terrifies them …

 

Exhausted by too much conversation, by all those attempts to come up with jokey and lively epigrams as the hours and the evening evolve, they seem to fill less and less the room, a kind of emptiness silently surrounding them. Awaiting some miracle solution or advice on how to navigate the crowd.

 

Wouldn’t it be more simple, every now and then, just to merciless avoid the crowd and just stand tall, against the wind …

 

XXL On Black

  

Richard is still on my speed dial

Eastern Gray Squirrel ponders over the fact that I don't have feeders up anymore. Now it has to forage for natural foods, like maple seeds, or what I scatter on the ground. I am considering putting up a suet feeder...maybe. I do want to see the chickadees and the bushtits.

¿Qué prefieres leer? ¿Realidad o ficción?

1 3 4 5 6 7 ••• 79 80