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A Great Blue Heron brings in another stick for the nest, while its mate keeps watch. Seen at Kensington Metropark, near Milford, Michigan.

* Gannets doing some nest improvements on the top of the cliffs . I suspect Gannets do not have a great sense of humour . Taken at the RSPB reserve at Bempton in East Yorkshire

  

THANKS FOR YOUR VISITING BUT CAN I ASK YOU NOT TO FAVE AN IMAGE WITHOUT ALSO MAKING A COMMENT. MANY THANKS KEITH. ANYONE MAKING MULTIPLE FAVES WITHOUT COMMENTS WILL SIMPLY BE BLOCKED

 

You'll have a lot more respect for a bird

after you try making a nest.

~Cynthia Lewis

Stiver Lagoon, Fremont California

Bald Eagle.

After finishing the nest framework, this male Bald eagle is bringing in soft material for his mate. It is certainly no 'memory foam' but surely just as comfortable for them.

The Black Throated sparrows are gathering nest material in Desert Hills, Green Valley, Arizona, USA

 

Many thanks to everyone that views and comments on my images it's very much appreciated.

   

young Great Egrets still in the nest. Soon they'll have their "flying wings"...

Ready to fledge, they left the nest soon after this was taken.

 

This nest is in a concrete underpass where a desert sand wash goes under one of the main paved roads.

 

As seen in Desert Hills, Green Valley Arizona, USA

 

Many thanks to everyone that views and comments on my images it's very much appreciated.

I don't know what this Red-necked Grebe is transporting, it almost looks like a dirty net of some kind, but it ends up part of the grebe's nest. Makes sense!

 

Thought I'd give the ole 2X tele a try with the 600 and the new R5. I was curious to see how that combination works together and I think it looks great! What do you think?

 

Taken 14 June 2021 in Anchorage, Alaska.

NEFEKALUM TATTOO

Nefekalum - Spiritus Astral in 10 colors

Nefekalum Tattoos - The Marked Vampire in 3 intensities

Nefekalum Tattoos - Deprivation in 2 intensities

Nefekalum Tattoos - Eden Eyes (Devil)

Now available at the main store.

 

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Osprey nest at Loch Lomond.

 

Loch Lomond is almost 23 miles long and over 500 feet deep in the northern part with an average depth of 96 feet in the southern part making it the second largest loch in Britain after Loch Ness.

Wiki

 

Mediaeval Baebes - Return of the Birds

www.youtube.com/watch?v=YqpgiVAeUmY

Please right click the link and open in a new tab to view and listen. Thank you !

 

Rollingstone1's most interesting photos on Flickriver

© All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.

You may not download or use this

image in any way without express written permission.

Please contact me if you are interested in using my work.

This little lady was very busy. Hummingbird nests are so intricate and well designed. Caught this one first thing in the morning.

An abandoned hornets nest.

Thanks to Cheryl Dunlop Molin and ~~Chuck's~~Photos~~ for correcting me. This is a hornets nest not a bird nest.

These nests can weigh between several hundred pounds and upwards to a ton as the eagles add to the nest each season.

The mama Robin came back and now she has four eggs in the old nest. I don’t know if it’s the same Robin couple but here we go again.

Early April typically marks the return of our local Osprey. Both male and female have returned to this nearby nest which is getting a little updating as the female takes flight with some mossy grass.

 

Thank you for viewing

spruce cones babies

 

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-Hisa- Rustic Birdfeeders Gift

HISA LM

 

💻 More Info: Miru in SL blog

 

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Thanks for the visits, faves and comments its greatly appreciated.

Brian Piccolo Park, Fort Lauderdale, FL

 

I try not post picture of same bird in my gallery .

Like now : this park have many burrowing owl nest(burrow)

The arrival of spring brings the herons back to their nursery. It is lovely to accompany this movement and and fascinate me with the moments photographed

 

A chegada da primavera traz novamente as garças para construção do berçario. É adorável acompanhar estes movimentos e me fascina os momentos capturados.

  

Very grateful to everyone for the comments and visits

Obrigada à todos pelos comentários e visitas!

Artwork from my series "Shadows" showed at THE EDGE Art Gallery for the ARTISTRY Exhibition, the series was made in collaboration with my partner Eli Medier that made my works talk through his poems.

 

THE EDGE Art Gallery

 

The Exhibition is open till 23rd December 2019

 

"Ruins

Rubble

Not always ancient

Ruins

brand new

entire neighborhoods

degraded suburbs

Ruinous centers

of ruined cities

Million of people

wildly

piled up

Urban fabrics

inhuman

crowded oceans

of solitudes

Ruins

architectural

of buildings

poorly designed

poorly built

poorly localized

Ruins

romantic

beautiful ruins

ugly ruins

Ruins

melancholy

like uninhabited houses

ruined buildings

Ruins

natural

or produced

by human insanity

People

souls minds

ruined bodies

Ruins

inner

much more crumbling

of those on the outside"

 

© Eli Medier

  

What a wonderful experience watching this guy build a nest. He never stopped moving!

 

You can see more of this series on my photostream here:

flic.kr/p/Gm6QYj

flic.kr/p/Gm6PoL

flic.kr/p/Gm6SKf

flic.kr/p/24pQufh

George C. Reifel

Migratory Bird Sanctuary , Ladner BC.

 

www.reifelbirdsanctuary.com/index.html

Compositionally Challenged Week 22 - Rule of Thirds, Phi Grid, Fibonacci

Cropped for ROT

Jumping Spider

 

This one has started building her nest to lay her eggs. She was quite obliging and kept looking out at me.

Sparrow Bush, NY

 

This year I am trying to cross off as many bucket list images as I can. Light trails was high on my list. The curvy Hawks Nest Highway was the perfect subject. What would you like to shoot this year?

This is a Red-necked Grebe bringing nest material back to the new nest under construction back in May of this year.

 

Taken 19 May 2022 in Anchorage, Alaska.

Hooded crow (Corvus cornix) standing on a ground with a bunch of nest building material in its beak.

 

Wrona siwa (Corvus cornix) stojąca na ziemi z garścią materiałów do budowy gniazda w dziobie.

This little bird was building a nest in my garden. I patiently watched the to and fro, and took advantage of the return. I happened to be standing in the way as it waited for me to finish shooting and move out of the way.

"A nest egg is a substantial sum of money or other assets that have been saved or invested for a specific purpose. Such assets are generally earmarked for longer-term objectives, the most common being retirement, buying a home, and education. “Nest egg” has been used to refer to savings since the late 17th century." - Investopedia

Osprey (Pandion haliaetus)

 

Emigrant Lake - Jackson County - Oregon - USA

 

Habitat : Lakes and Ponds

Food : Fish

Nesting : Tree

Behavior : Aerial Dive

Conservation : Low Concern

 

"Unique among North American raptors for its diet of live fish and ability to dive into water to catch them, Ospreys are common sights soaring over shorelines, patrolling waterways, and standing on their huge stick nests, white heads gleaming. These large, rangy hawks do well around humans and have rebounded in numbers following the ban on the pesticide DDT. Hunting Ospreys are a picture of concentration, diving with feet outstretched and yellow eyes sighting straight along their talons."

- Cornell University Lab of Ornithology

  

 

Smile on Saturday - "Egg-celent". HSoS!

Common starling (Sturnus vulgaris) collecting nest-building material.

 

Szpak (Sturnus vulgaris) zbierający materiał do budowy gniazda.

This nuthatch flew to a tree right next to me and began pulling at this fine material for nest building. Completely ignoring me, allowing me to compensate for the strong back light.

A Paper Wasp standing guard over the larvae in it's nest. Photographed in Maryland.

Last summer's nest and now sitting empty in the middle of January. I'm glad the wild winterberries were still on the vine and uneaten, giving a nice balance to the image.

 

Enjoy.

Hooded crow (Corvus cornix) perched on a branch with a stick – nest building material – in its beak.

 

Wrona siwa (Corvus cornix) siedąca na gałązce z patykiem – materiałem do budowy gniazda – w dziobie.

Taken on the same day as the previous stork picture. That day we cycled along 4 different stork nests.

Another in a series of egrets building their nests at the W. 9th St. rookery in Santa Rosa, California

This bald eagle was moving sticks around in the nest to get it just right.

Lake Almanor Campground

Plumas County, CA

This little guy had just come out of the nest when he started getting attacked by a number of the Brewer's Blackbirds present. After a bit of fighting by the parents, the Blackbirds were driven off, allowing the youngster to relax on the ground and take his first steps on the ground. This is when I snuck behind a bush around 10 ft away to take a few intimate photos of the little boi who had just survived three (very weak, ngl) blackbird attacks.

Blue tit (Cyanistes caeruleus) collecting moss as a nest building material.

 

Modraszka (Cyanistes caeruleus) zbierająca mech jako materiał do budowy gniazda.

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