View allAll Photos Tagged MUD
We visited Donna Nook yesterday and spent a pleasant, sunny and relatively mild day watching the Grey Seals and their new pups. The pups we saw were all fairly new - we've usually visited a few weeks later, when there are more of the slightly older, barrel shaped ones but there was still plenty to see. This one was enjoying splashing around in a rather muddy looking pool at the edge of the dunes.
The small fractures in the mud are caused by ice crystals which melt as soon as the temperature gets above freezing.
Full run replay:
That was quite a fun ride. Lotsa bumps, rain and mud. :YouKnowILoveIt:
===DiRT Rally, PC
1080p cropped to 1920x720; in-game Replay mode===
-LightRoom color presets & filters
Mud, Glorious Mud!!
Green-winged Teal dabbling on the mudflats at E B Forsythe NWR, NJ on 1/23/2020
2020_01_23_EOS 7D Mark II_2931-Edit_V1
There was a fair amount of new erosion and recently-wet mud on my visit to Death Valley earlier this month, and a lot of it was rained on again on Monday. I can't wait to get back there in a few days to see what's growing where!
this is my little princess making mud pies in a fancy sun dress and hat!!! ;)
I processed this into a sepia tone as well (see it below). But I think I ended up liking this one better. I like the bright sunshine...over exposed look. What do you think? hope I made the right choice? I took this at 9:30 a.m....it was amazing how bright the low sun was already shining!!
I think this is a Yellow-legged Mud-dauber wasp with her ball of mud. In late July and mid-August of 2020 I watched the female carry and patch incredible amounts of mud onto the nest. I photographed her every day that I could. I read somewhere that the male stays inside guarding the nest from any predators but I never saw him. Thank you for taking time from your busy day to view, fave and comment on my images. It is always appreciated.
The cracked mud when the path dries after a few days of sun is covered with fallen flowers (see large)
El barro cuarteado cuando se seca el camino tras unos días de sol se cubre de flores caídas (ver en grande)
1/400, F/8, ISO 100
Seems a long time since we saw blue skies and sunshine. It might be cold but it would be a waste not to ride in such lovely weather. Still very muddy and a few floods still about though.
Mud Volleyball Tournament was held at Ozo-cho, Kobe.
炎天下のどろんこバレーボール大会に行きました。
休耕田に水を張り数面のバレーコートで大会が行われました。選手達は泥まみれになって暑い熱い戦いをしておりました。このような場所での撮影は長靴が必須ですね。またあぜ道は滑りやすく歩行には要注意です。
Mud and shadows, Bisti Wilderness. Shot with a Hasselblad 205tcc with 50mm Zeiss Distagon on 120 Kodak T-Max 400 dev. in Kodak HC 110-B and scanned with an Epson V500.
Mud Lake is part of Bear Lake National Wildlife Refuge in Idaho and is a beautiful place despite its unattractive name. I thought this tree looked pretty good against the water reflecting a bright blue sky.
This entrance to the house looks like a mud room. A place where you stop to remove your muddy boots or shoes before entering the cinderblock house. I doubt there are hardwood floors inside that need to be protected from wet boots.
However, I can’t figure out what else that strange entrance could have been for.
Of course, now are aren’t many windows or even a full roof so it is a moot point. It doesn’t look like siding was used to cover the plywood either. It looks like it was just painted white.
I’d love to know the history of some of these old places.
Taken off a back road in the Northern Neck of Virginia.
The waterhole was predominantly mud, which the bull elephants loved... They waded into the pan, stirred up the mud, flung it around, over and on themselves, making it difficult for other animals to utilise the little water that had risen to the surface of the mud.
It rained at last after a long dry spell....This blackbird,was digging in an old pot and flying off with a beakful.. of what looked like mud. He made several visits. I can only assume it was to replenish its nest, and not to feed its young....
The tide is out and the foreground is Mud Bay where migrating shorebirds stop to take their fill of creatures living in the mud as the tide rolls in and out. The birds follow the tides edge as it uncovers and then covers back up the mud. In October there are no migrating shorebirds here to take advantage of the resources. Kachemak Bay is the deep water between the mud and the glacial fields of the mountains across the bay.
Taken 16 October 2021 at Homer, Alaska.