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My son Roman found this Humming-bird Moth today, in the memorial garden that we planted for my parents. I've never seen one of these in person before, so I got pretty excited. Photographed in Maryland.
A single image, shot hand held. Canon 80D, Canon MPE macro lens, Canon twin macro flash. Aperture f/11, shutter speed 1/250, ISO 400, flash set to 1/16th power.
Here's my Hummer shot for today. Our Butterfly bush is having a late blooming, which is attracting the male Anna's Hummingbird (Calypte anna)
Macro Mondays theme: Look up
this is the humming bird that hangs in my window, it's a bit long in the beak for the minimum rule so I chose the tail over the beak. ;P
Thank you everyone for your kind comments and favs. All are greatly appreciated. HMM
For Monday Macro, here's my Hummer again. He came pretty close today!
A male Anna's Hummingbird (Calypte anna)
A beautiful Humming Bird approaches the flower - (possibly a female or immature Rufous)
F9,0, 1/1250th sec, auto iso (6400) Canon 7D Mark II, Tamron 150-600mm
Hummer ...
Female Anna's Hummingbird at Las Trampas State Park, California, USA.
Anna's hummingbird, named after Anna MassΓ©na, Duchess of Rivoli is a medium-sized humming bird species of the family Trochilidae and native to western coastal regions of North America.
Art - Texture added to photo image, enlarge for a better view.
Thanks to everyone that views and comments on my images - very much appreciated.
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Sony ILCE-7RM5
So I jumped into the WABAC machine with Mr. Peabody, perused my prior pics and procured this previous personal photograph to post for your pleasure.
In her poem, "Hum," Mary Oliver asks, "what is this dark hum among the roses?" About a year ago, I was wondering about the "dark hum" that I heard as I walked into a cherry orchard. I found the answer in cherry blossoms that were alive and ahum with the activity of hundreds (or thousands?!) of honey bees!
# 85 in Explore on June 12, 2020.
Another "hummer" image, and it will not be the last! :-)
No use of my hummingbird image without my permission!
Thank You!
Please see large for a much better viewing experience ...
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Kim had been sitting out on the back porch this weekend and remarked that the hummingbirds are back.
Time to dig out the old feeder.
I'm guessing that this is a Black-chinned hummer, as that has always been the most prevalent every year. I haven't seen a male yet to confirm, but it's the likely kind.
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The Humming Birds continue to show up at the feeder as well as the Hydrangeas, which are going nuts!
I can never seem to get a clean shot of them around the blooms, so the feeder will have to do.
Nice in LARGE view!
Los Angeles County Arboretum:
When I first photographed this male hummingbird, I thought it might be Rufous. When I showed it to Lou, he thought so too. The more I look at it, I'm thinking probably Allen's. He looks different in different lighting, oh well.
Not much action was happening in the wetlands the other day besides joggers and dog walkers So I thought I'd try to get a couple shots of the hummers while they were darting back and forth but I wanted them in the air. So for the next few days, That's what the subject will be. They move fast. Taken at Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve.