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Hazel just spotted this nest wedged above next doors drain pipes. Can see a couple of chicks at least.
Photo of 2 Bald Eagles captured via Minolta RF Rokkor-X 500mm F/8 lens. Higgens Point. Lake Coeur d'Alene. On the North Idaho Centennial Trail. Coeur d'Alene Parkway State Park. Northern Idaho Hills and Low Relief Mountains section within the Northern Rockies region. Kootenai County, Idaho. Late December 2019.
Exposure Time: 1/250 sec. * ISO Speed: ISO-1000 * Aperture: F/8 * Bracketing: None * Color Temperature: 5850 K * Film Emulation: Fuji Vivid 8543
Took this shot when I got to the tree. The white bird poop streak under the opening indicates this was indeed an active nest up until recently. Rains a few days prior would have washed it away. So I guess I am looking at a well fed snake. This is normal behavior for rat snakes. Circle of life.
Western Rat Snake (Pantherophis obsoletus)
My photos can also be found at kapturedbykala.com
Streptopelia decaocto _Turkse tortel _ Collared dove
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This nest was too high for me to see into (this is a blind shot), so I don't know if it had a hamburger or hot dog bun in it.
Two American Bald Eagles were seen at their nest in Bradenton, Florida. Prints, and many other items, are available with this image on my website at www.tom-claud.pixels.com. Thanks for visiting!
The nest of the paper wasp is a series of cells shaped like an inverted cone made from saliva mixed with wood fragments. When it dries the mixture is quite paper-like, and gives these wasps their name
Pair of Bald Eagles,
Kamloops, B.C.
I first noticed the nest at the beginning of March but didn't see any birds around it then. I did assume it was an eagle's nest though because of its size. In the two or three times I've been back there, I have seen one but not both of the eagles flying around or perched on the branch but not on the nest. Though I've no idea if I'd even see them if they were in the nest.
From some reading I've just been doing it seems that the eaglet(s) might still be in the nest but about ready to leave. The eggs were probably laid early April and hatched early May which would mean the eaglets are almost ready to learn how to fly and to hunt for themselves.
I do wish I had a more powerful lens but in this case I guess I can settle for getting the pair and the nest all into one shot, :-)
2015-05-05 0584-CR2-L1
Eagles were busy at the nest on Saturday morning, it is good to see the activity start back up.
Not the greatest shot as it was very foggy and no sky to speak of, but just excited that this season is upon us again.
#AbFav_EASTER_CHOCOLATE_🐰
#AbFav_PHOTOSTORY
Another of my 'creative' images, while I had everything out... I always experience that one idea brings on another and then I am feverishly working away, time flies and nothing goes fast enough... my actions can't follow my brain, tee hee, it's not easy being a 'creative', nor to live with one... day crosses into night, I forget to eat or drink, I'm in my own world.
Easter is upon us, with all the sweetness and brightness...
I had to be creative for a client and come up with different ideas, here are some of the more 'cockamamy' ones.
Happy to have some of the child still in my heart and mind!
LOL, and thank you for your visit! M, (*_*)
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chocolate, eggs, yellow, speckled, white, nest, feathers, decorations, Easter, fun, black-background, design, studio, colour, square, "Nikon D7200", "magda indigo"
there are 3 chicks in this nest, the smallest one is not being fed now and will not survive. the eagle on approach has grass in her claws which she used to cover the salmon to the right of the other adult
The instant I saw this old log truck, I was reminded of the old Buzz Martin song, "My Used Log Truck".
Was walking near the nest and there were loads of jackdaws swooping at me and making quite a noise, turns out one of them had fell from the nest and wasn't strong enough to fly and they were just warning me off.
Large Jackdaw flocks, with their characteristic 'chack-chack' calls, can be an impressive sight when coming to roost on winter evenings.
The Jackdaw is a smart looking bird with black plumage, and a contrasting light grey nape. The eye is a piercing silver yellow in adults, but a stunning blue in young birds. This omnivorous species prefers open countryside in which to forage for food, but will nest in towns to take advantage of the warmth and cavities of chimneys.
A resident species, the number of Jackdaws breeding in the UK has increased sharply since the 1960s, although this trend is more stable in Wales and Northern Ireland. Numbers in winter are supplemented by birds visiting from northern Europe.
This is the second active nest in our back yard, This is the first time we spotted the beaks of the chicks. This golf ball-sized nest is about 8 or 9 ft (~3m) off the ground so hard to get a good vantage. Fun to see more more little hummingbird lives come into being.