View allAll Photos Tagged Nectar

The hummingbird hawk-moth, a great pollinator.

 

La esfinge colibrí, un gran polinizador.

Monarch butterfly taking nectar from a cluster of native Goldenrod florets.

A rainbow lorikeet (Trichoglossus haematodus) feeding on a flowering gum (Corymbia)

 

f/5.6 ISO 400 1/800 100mm Pentax DFA f/2.8 Pentax K-5

... with a really rare customer in our garden - only seen about 3 times in more than 20 years!

 

Hummingbird hawk-moth / Taubenschwänzchen (Macroglossum stellatarum) at one of the last dahlia blossoms ‘Bishop of Canterbury’

in our autumnal garden - Frankfurt-Nordend

'Apricot Nectar' floribunda rose.

Photographed, at Roxborough Park, Castle Hill (Sydney), in December of 2021 but never before processed or posted.

 

Previously, in March 2023, I posted an image of a cluster of Apricot Nectar roses, but not an individual rose like this one.

These are floribunda roses, not hybrid teas, and so they grow in clusters and they do not appear, as much, as individual blooms.

 

'Apricot Nectar' is a floribunda rose that was first grown in 1964, in the USA, by Eugene Boerner. It was then introduced to the world in 1965 by US rose cultivators Jackson and Perkins. It won the prestigious 'All American Rose Selection Award' in 1966. It is, arguably, one of America's greatest roses. It is currently (2023) the third best selling rose in Australia.

 

Photographed at the Roxborough Park Rose Gardens.

Castle Hill. The Hills District. North-western Sydney.

 

My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon EF 100mm f/2.8L lens.

 

Processed in Adobe Lightroom and PhotoPad Pro by NCH software.

 

No filters.

Boisson au goût de miel, destinée aux dieux qui confère l'immortalité aux hommes qui en consomment...

Je sens que je vais aller me rouler dans l' herbe de mon jardin 😂...après cette journée au bureau !

Miss Phoebe, one of our resident female Anna's Hummingbird, sipping nectar. This time she chose our Amistad Salvia for her after dinner snack!!

An 'Apricot Nectar' floribunda rose photographed at the Roxborough Park Rose Gardens, in the Hills District of Sydney.

 

'Apricot Nectar' is a floribunda rose that was first grown in 1964, in the USA, by Eugene Boerner. It was then introduced to the world in 1965 by US rose cultivators Jackson and Perkins. It won the prestigious 'All American Rose Selection Award' in 1966. It is, arguably, one of America's greatest roses. It is currently (2023) the third best selling rose in Australia.

 

Photographed at the Roxborough Park Rose Gardens.

Castle Hill. Hills District. North-western Sydney.

 

My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon EF 100mm f/2.8L lens.

 

Processed in Adobe Lightroom and PhotoPad Pro by NCH software.

Miss Penelope, one of our resident female Anna's Hummingbirds, sipping nectar! She is enjoying our George Davidson Crocosmia flowers.

Apricot Nectar hybrid tea rose photographed in the late afternoon at Roxborough Park Rose Gardens, Baulkham Hills, north-western Sydney.

Canon 5D Mk IV with a Canon 100mm macro lens.

A male Anna's Hummingbird enjoying the nectar from a Red Flowering Currant plant. Photo taken near Shillapoo Lake, at the end of Lower River Road!

Female sipping some nectar on a sunny day.

 

A Silver washed Fritillary butterfly (Argynnis paphia) Sips nectar from a bramble flower.

  

Even nectar is

poison if taken

to excess

 

- Proverb

Sipping nectar from my petunias. I have about 5 baskets of petunias hanging where my hummingbird feeders are. That way I can get the occasional hummer that is drinking nectar from the flowers rather than the feeders. I particularly liked this shot.

 

These birds are probably one of the biggest challenges to photograph. Their speed is so incredible, their movements so erratic, they of course very rarely stay in one spot for long and they are so tiny.

 

I've said it before and I'll say it again, large subjects are simple to photograph in action, but these guys make one take action photography to a whole new level

This photo was taken milliseconds after yesterday's Rufous hummingbird photo. The Rufous Hummingbird is ambushed by a Black-chinned Hummingbird.

In my garden. La Ceja, Colombia; 2.300 meters above sea level.

 

Coeligena coeligena (Bronzy Inca / Colibrí Inca bronceado)

 

Despite being a member of one of the most striking groups of hummingbird, the genus Coeligena, the Bronzy Inca is one of the drabbest hummingbirds. It is distributed in humid montane forest from the northern Andes in Colombia and Venezuela south to southeast Bolivia.

 

neotropical.birds.cornell.edu/portal/species/overview?p_p...

RHS Hyde Hall

24th October 2018

"A flower's fragrance declares to all the world that it is fertile, available, and desirable, its sex organs oozing with nectar..."

 

-Diane Ackerman

 

Whoot, Congrats USA Women's Soccer 2019 Champions!

 

my favorite lily is blooming :)

 

happy sliderssunday!

I took this last year on a visit to Amsterdam, in the botanical gardens there. I asked this butterfly if it minded if I took it's picture and it was only too happy to oblige. It even posed for me while it was having it's lunch. Sometimes all you have to do is ask!

 

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

There's nectar deep down there. And pollen grains on the way. A secret purple world. A look inside the cotton thistle flower of the previous image:

www.flickr.com/photos/lesc/52226547561/in/photostream/

  

A female Anna's Hummingbird sipping nectar from one of our Salvia Elegans plants.

“...lepidopterists give the noun a gerund's push toward the verb, and say that butterflies are nectaring...”

― Sue Hubbell

 

I am off to get my hair all cut off, it's too hot! :)

will come visit your photostreams a bit later

 

have a fabulous weekend my friends,

  

Yesterday this beautiful Swallowtail Stayed long enough for me to take 50 shots my the pond.

recogiendo néctar

mejor en grande

GAMBIA FEB 2019

================

LIVELY MALE SUNBIRD, with a broad violet brest-band. Habits coastal scrub, attracted to small flowering bushes, probing for nectar always on the move, flies with rapid wing beats and a dipping flight, am very happy to have nailed this one, because its no easy job. Zoom in to see its amazing plumage !

====================

THANK YOU FOR YOUR VISIT AND KIND COMMENTS, it is very appreciated, and find encouraging. Stay safe, God bless..........

.............................................Tomx

 

'Apricot Nectar' hybrid tea-rose at Roxborough Park Rose Gardens, Baulkham Hills, northwestern Sydney, New South Wales. Photographed some time ago now with a Canon 60D and a Canon 100mm macro lens. Re-edited this evening, Thursday 20th May 2020, in my new Adobe Creative Cloud 'Lightroom' software.

Cheers from Sydney!!

An 'Apricot Nectar' floribunda rose at the Wahroonga Park Rose Gardens in northern Sydney.

Corner of Millewa Avenue and Coonabarra Road, Wahroonga.

 

My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV, with the Canon f 2.8 L 100mm macro lens

Green Grass Dart (Skipper) (Ocybadistes walkeri)

 

I don't often see the Skippers in the front garden. This one was sipping nectar from an African Daisy today.

You can see just how long its tongue is here.

 

Happy Wing Wednesday!

Bee having a drink.

Thanks for your faves and comments.

I captured this male Anna's Hummingbird as he hovered in flight. I can see a little bit of his tongue sticking out, finishing up the nectar from the flower he just visited.

 

Taken 14 February 2018 at San Marcos, California.

Photo by Lynn. . .fewer butterflies this summer, hotter, drier, more farmers spraying weed killers that also diminish wildflowers and natural bee and butterfly habitats. . .

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