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This is a picture of Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca on the North Tract of the Patuxent Research Refuge near Fort Meade, Maryland.

False Creek at sunset from Granville Island in spring 2007.

Not sure who's who

 

October 1999

This shy little lady has made herself at home in my conservatory. Apparently she has quite a venomous bite which she uses to subdue her prey. The False Widow could give you a nasty bite akin to a wasp sting but they are very shy and certainly won't do so unless provoked.

False walls were built in various rooms that covered the heritage windows and prevented natural light coming into the building.

 

False walls were created for many different reasons. In some instances it was to store new services, other times it was to add a new room, and in this instance it was to block the windows to provide an exhibition environment for the art gallery which opened in City Hall in the late 1970s.

 

All fo the false walls are being removed to bring the spaces back to their original design intent and so heritage windows can be reinstated to provide natural light back into the building.

Shot on Fuji Velvia 50

© Aurora Santiago

  

Riding the False Creek Feries

The Strand on a hot, thick, humid day

Or something like it :)

Cuban False Chameleon

(Chamaeleolis chamaeleonides)

Nashville Zoo 11/25/2006

 

Range: Cuba

Habitat: Forests

Diet: snails and insects

 

Closely related to the Anoles. It has many of the characteristics of Chameleon but does not have color changing ability.

 

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Farsus dubius (Coleoptera, Eucnemidae) female. Body length: 7 mm.

 

Found under the bark of a dead oak (Quercus pubescens).

Photographed with handheld EOS 5DII and the MP-E65 macro lens. The foreground was lit by a diffused flash. Settings: f/10, 1/50 sec., ISO 400.

 

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Looks like I forgot to upload this one. I took it last February. I still like it enough to publish it now.

For more information on my photography, please visit me here:

Clayton Perry

 

Thanks for the comments and "faves" :)

One more look. I love the colorful stripes on this one.

Blue Horizons, October 2008

Blue Horizons, October 2008

Vancouver BC Canada

Some time ago, someone told me I should check out the hummingbird aviary at the San Diego Zoo. That person implied that the aviary there was had many more hummingbirds than at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum. Being a bit hummingbird deprived in the Chicago area, that was one of my objectives when we visited the zoo back in March. I wandered in...but where were the hummingbirds? There were lots of colorful birds, they were just a little too big. Maybe I was missing something; I went back later in the day.

 

I asked the docent in the aviary where the hummingbirds were, and she informed me it was still too cold for the hummingbirds.

 

Huh? But it wasn't too cold outside for native hummingbirds.

 

Turns out, the San Diego Zoo hummingbird aviary is too small for the native hummingbirds, as they are very territorial. They tried having native hummingbirds in the past, but the birds didn't survive as they all fought too much. In order to have at least 5 (!) in the aviary, they needed to have species from further south, and it was still too cold in San Diego at the time for them to survive.

 

Ironically, they released hummingbirds later that afternoon, but I had left by then. Unlike what someone implied, this is one of the areas that the little Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum certainly does better. Their aviary is larger and houses all native hummingbirds. The San Diego Zoo docent agreed with me on this point (and also agreed that the Taronga Zoo in Sydney was quite special!)

 

Oh well, the rest of our visit to the zoo was quite fun. We saw the baby panda, and I did see a hummingbird...a wild Anna's hummingbird singing away in the trees. :D While I was a little disappointed in the aviary, I knew I'd be seeing a plethora of hummingbirds in the wild in a month.

 

BTW, this is a Paradise Tanager (in the hummingbird aviary). Colorful, beautiful, but NOT a hummingbird. I sort of wonder if the other people in the aviary thought they were seeing hummingbirds...

Vancouver Night Set I Steve's Website I © Steve Rosset 2009

 

False Creek - Vancouver, BC Canada

A false door on the left side (west wall) and also on the rear wall.

The rear (north) wall is badly damaged, but still can be seen the remains of the beautiful false door, depicted on the right side of the three rectangular sections that depicts two linen bundles and two vertical stripes (I am not sure what they are)

 

Tomb of Meru, TT240

11th-12th Dynasty, El-Assasif

Luxor

Pickering from the UK false starts in the first sem-final....

Press L to view on a black background.

  

PPDOTCOM

 

500px

 

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This image is mine. You may not use it anywhere or for any project without my express permission. Rates for commercial applications are available on request.

 

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