View allAll Photos Tagged Hunting
1. October bear hunting, 2. October bear hunting, 3. Tracks, 4. The trestle, 5. hunting panorama, 6. Cherry Creek panorama, 7. buck tracks, 8. Small bear, 9. Bear hunting, 10. Bear hunting, 11. Tracks, 12. Bear hunting, 13. Bear hunting, 14. Tracks, 15. Bear hunting, 16. October bear hunting, 17. Apple orchard, 18. Tracks, 19. Tracks, 20. Ranger Station, 21. Deer, 22. Lion tracks, 23. October bear hunting, 24. October bear hunting, 25. October bear hunting
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This is one from a December day a few years ago.A lovely barn owl hunting at Lytham Moss.It didn’t catch on this occasion but gave nice opportunities for action shots
Hunting for anything for supper. Up on the mountainside where its mossy there is sure to be something up here!
Hunting Island Lighthouse, Hunting Island, South Carolina. Hunting Island received its name because it was once used for hunting deer, raccoon and waterfowl.
Berlage's St Hubertus hunting lodge (1914-1920
"Berlage's rational style didn't result in unimaginative designs. This is very well illustrated by the ground plan for St. Hubertus(1914-1920), a house built for the Kroller-Müller family as a hunting resort. It is in the shape of antlers, which clearly has a relation to the function of the house and with the legend of St. Hubertus. The colors used in the rooms also reflect the legend. The house is entered through a dark hall and every following room is lighter than the previous one. In the legend St. Hubertus was a hunter who lived carelessly until a deer with a lighting cross between its antlers warned him for his way of life. As a result he was converted to a life of virtue. "From the darkness into the light" is a well-known theme in Art Nouveau."
pagesperso-orange.fr/artnouveau/en/artistes/berlage.htm
scanned slide 1994?
A female reed bunting searches for scraps to eat during a cold spell. Taken at Old Moor RSPB reserve, South Yorkshire
Design in 1731 by William Adam; built 1732-43. This ornamental hunting lodge and "Dug Kennel" was built as an eyecatcher to terminate the grand south avenue of the grounds of Hamilton Palace. Only one room deep with a fantastic long baroque symmetrical façade that gave a strong silhouette that could be seen from the distant Palace. It became a roofless ruin after the Dukes of Hamilton abandoned Hamilton and demolished the massive Palace 1929. The family also oversaw the extraction of sand from under the Hunting Lodge which caused its remaining walls near collapse and one end of the building to subside some 15 feet below the original level. It was restored by the Scottish people (Historic Scotland, Buildings Division in conjunction with Hamilton District Council) from 1978 to 1987 at a cost of over £9million. The interior details of rich baroque plasterwork by Thomas Clayton were recreated from a few surviving fragments and photographs.
Volunteers preparing to hand spray orange hawkweed during the 'Hunting Hawkweed' program. This species threatens biodiversity and agricultural productivity. The National Parks and Wildlife Service has a dedicated program to manage the control and containment of this species.
Photographer: Jo Caldwell
For more information on the Hunting Hawkweed Program check out this link www.environment.nsw.gov.au/parkmanagement/kosciuszkoOHW.htm
Built in the early 1900's, the carousel ran until 1967 when it was moved to Cedar Point Park in Ohio and named "Kiddie Kingdom Carousel"
Jo Caldwell (Project Officer) and Geoff Renn (Field Officer) cross check treatment records at Fifteen Mile Ridge.
Photographer: Di Thompson (Volunteer).
For more information on the Hunting Hawkweed Program check out this link www.environment.nsw.gov.au/parkmanagement/kosciuszkoOHW.htm
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Gamekeeper Brian Twigger teaches Harriet Simes to shoot - the only one of the triplets to be lefthanded. The girls are wearing Realtree camouflage. Free use. Please Credit: FieldsportsChannel.tv
Woke up this morning to see this fellow hunting in our yard. We have several rabbits (and squirrels, birds, and other fox "treats" in our yard). While I hope he doesn't catch any, I guess it is part of the life cycle...
I square cropped this for the PCA111 assignment. The original aspect is in the first comment. Not sure which I like better. The original aspect gives more space for the eye to follow what he is looking at (off frame), though it feels a bit "compressed".
Thoughts?