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Pine Top Winter Intermediate Horse Trials

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

Harry B. Hutchins Intermediate School, located on the north side of Detroit, was part of a new wave of education in the city when it opened in 1922.

  

Despite the strong academic performance of the school, enrollment continued to decline. In 2007, the Hutchins program and its 372 students were moved to the newer McMichael School on McGraw and 16th Streets, about 20 blocks southwest. Many parents decided to switch schools rather than have their children walking such a long distance through dilapidated neighborhoods. The Hutchins building became the new home for the Crosman Alternative School, which moved out of their old building a few blocks away. The program started out with 309 students in 2007, but had fallen to 229 students by 2009. Crosman at Hutchins closed that year. Two years later in 2011, the once successful Hutchins at McMichael program closed as well.

 

Scrappers found their way into the building in the summer of 2013, and within a few months had stripped it clean of most of its metal.

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

Graffiti in Kozienice, Poland

Intermediate/Advanced volunteer needed ||| We tell our volunteers: "For all you know that foot you've been tempted to remove may be the last remaining 'image' of a loved one. That pot you're dying to clone away may have been where dad hid mom's wedding ring. That bag or bush or beer can may have significance we're not aware of." This family brought us a brick of stuck together photos. We were able to separate a mere 6. None feature people, but the images contain great meaning, for whatever reason, to this family.

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

non-breeding plumage at Devankere Birur

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

The Intermediate Egret, Median Egret, or Yellow-billed Egret (Mesophoyx intermedia) is a medium-sized heron. It is a resident breeder from east Africa across tropical southern Asia to Australia. It often nests in colonies with other herons, usually on platforms of sticks in trees or shrubs. Two to five eggs are laid, the clutch size varying with region. This species, as its scientific name implies, is intermediate in size between the Great Egret and smaller white egrets like the Little Egret and Cattle Egret, though nearer to Little than Great. It is about 90 cm tall with all-white plumage, generally dark legs and a thickish yellow bill. Breeding birds may have a reddish or black bill, greenish yellow gape skin, loose filamentous plumes on their breast and back, and dull yellow or pink on their upper legs (regional variations). The sexes are similar.

Some taxonomists put this species in the genus Egretta or Ardea.

The Intermediate Egret stalks its prey methodically in shallow coastal or fresh water, including flooded fields. It eats fish, frogs, crustaceans and insects.

 

~Ranganathittu Bird Sanctuary~

 

All photographs taken with a Canon 400D with a Sigma 70-300 lens from a boat.

Minor editing on the iPad and uploaded via Flickstackr for the iPad and iPhone.

Mesophoyx intermedia

Intermediate Egret

Ardea intermedia

 

This was taken near Mavathur Lake near Kanakapura, Bangalore.

Intermediate egret breeding plumage at Thalangama tank, Colombo, Sri Lanka

Editorial

Less Magazine

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

Intermediate Egret at the Botanical Garden in Cairns.

 

www.nolanwhitephotography.com

Intermediate Egret at Warriewood Wetlands

Copyright - All Rights Reserved. Not for reproduction or use of any kind without my written permission

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

camera- nikon D80,

lens - sigma 70-300

 

Details :- The Little Egret, Egretta garzetta is a small white heron. It is the Old World counterpart to the very similar New World Snowy Egret.

The adult Little Egret is 55–65 cm long with an 88–106 cm wingspan. It weighs 350–550 grams. Its plumage is all white. It has long black legs with yellow feet and a slim black bill. There is . In the breeding season, the adult has two long nape plumes and gauzy plumes on the back and breast. The bare skin between the bill and eyes becomes red or blue. Juveniles are similar to non-breeding adults but have duller legs and feet. The subspecies garzetta has yellow feet and a bare patch of grey-green skin between the bill and eyes, whereas nigripes has yellow skin between the bill and eye and blackish feet.

 

Little Egrets are mostly silent but make various croaking and bubbling calls at their breeding colonies and produce a harsh alarm call when disturbed.

The Little Egret nests in colonies, often with other wading birds, usually on platforms of sticks in trees or shrubs or in a reedbed or bamboo grove. In some locations such as the Cape Verde Islands, the species nests on cliffs. Pairs defend a small breeding territory, usually extending around 3–4 m from the nest. The three to five eggs are incubated by both adults for 21–25 days to hatching. They are oval in shape and have a pale, non-glossy, blue-green colour. The young birds are covered in white down feathers, are cared for by both parents and fledge after 40 to 45 days.

  

Kingdom: Animalia

Phylum: Chordata

Class: Aves

Order: Ciconiiformes

Family: Ardeidae

Genus: Egretta

Species: E. garzetta

JMP Autowerks Streets of Willow Track Day 7.11.20 - Intermediate Group

Sk8r Bash at Mount Trashmore Skate Park | October 20, 2012

Winners it the intermediate division of the Premier Exhibitor contest at the Youth Sheep Show during the Alabama National Fair in Montgomery Oct. 13 were Madelyn Alldredge of Blount County, first place; Nicole Williamson of Cleburne County, second; Riley Van Pelt of Cleburne County, third; Leeanna Burkhalter of Fayette County, fourth; and Harley Weathers of Cleburne County, fifth. The intermediate division is for youth ages 13 to 15. The Youth Sheep Show judge was Terry Burks with the Kentucky Department of Agriculture. Alabama Farmers Federation and Alfa Insurance sponsored all youth livestock shows at the fair.

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