View allAll Photos Tagged PROUDLY
Australasian Grebe (Tachybaptus novaehollandiae) juvenile
This young one was looking very proud as it paddled about on the Vic Uni Pond on this day last year. Mum and Dad were not very far away.
After watching his off-spring feed it is now his turn and he gives me that proud look. I know how he feels.
Male Blackbird (Turdus merula), one of a pair breeding in my garden.
Copyright embedded in EXIF Data
Wild South Africa
Kruger National Park
Red-headed Weaver.
The nest is built solely by the male, consisting of an upside-down bottle-shaped structure with a vertical entrance hole at the base, made of leaf midribs, twigs, grass stems, broad leaves and tendrils. Once it is approved by the female she lines the interior with bark fibers, feathers, dry grass or leaves. It is typically strung from a few twigs beneath the canopy of a tree. It often nests in the vicinity of other weaver species or even raptors. What is interesting is that the non-breading male as well as the female are yellow on the head.
Photographed in the wild near Mica, Limpopo, South Africa.
The proud Rooster was looking at me. And I was the only one there...
Photographed during Expo Keerpunt 2020 (Expo Turning Point), an initiative by De WAR, the Amersfoort based breeding ground for research an innovation, now based in this former factory.
Captured in my local park a few days after the cygnets hatched. This is a new pen for the cob, as he lost his previous lifetime mate at the beginning of the year. This was such a welcome sight as I had been following the previous pairing for many years and looked forward to their little clutch of cygnets each year.
An adult burrowing owl poses as the kids play beneath. Is it pride or a brief respite from the chaos?
Thanks so much to everyone who takes the time to view, like or comment on my photos!
© 2019 Craig Goettsch - All rights reserved. Any unauthorized use without permission is prohibited
My, what a lot of goslings you have. I don't know if this is all one big happy family or not. Maybe two? Redwood City, California.
There weren't many birds seen in the Everglades, nor in Arthur R Marshall Loxahatchee NWR, but Paul and I found a small tree near a water feature with a warbler flitting amid the thick foliage at Loxahatchee.
I took several pictures and so did Paul. I kept saying Northern Parula; he kept saying Yellow-throated Warbler. Those two birds look nothing alike. We didn't compare pictures at that time to see who was right. Well, BOTH of those warblers were in the tree, as well as this beauty (in the picture), a Prairie Warbler :-))
It is little wonder why this bird species is our national symbol.
Photographed in Pasco County, Florida, USA.
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This photograph/image is copyrighted and may not be used in any way without my permission. If you would like to use it, please contact me via Flickr mail.
If you'd like to see more of my eagle images, go to schockenphotography.com. I have many images of eagles and other raptors as well as owls, woodpeckers, hummingbirds, songbirds and an interesting set of images of a bobcat with prey. I also have a full section on birds in flight which is my specialty.
Our gorgeous grandson and chief consumer of time...one week old today and the light of my life! ❤️
Thank you for your lovely comments and for understanding my absence from Flickr recently. I am just managing to keep up with challenges but have little time for commenting at the moment...busy having lots of baby cuddles!
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Created for Mystic Tribes Challenge April / May 2023
Terzo posto in Mystic Challenge Group "Tribes"
Credit: risposte360
Edited with LunaPic
This shot was taken at the Marker Wadden (see my previous post). It was already late in the year, and the spectacle of spring and summer was over, but it is THE place to see bearded tits (gentlemen and ladies). To have at least one decent picture was the goal.
Elsewhere they are difficult to spot, and because they always jump through the reeds at high speed, many times the results on camera look awful.
We arrived in the fog, and I brooded a bit about the chances of seeing them. Somewhere near a reed bed I decided to call on technology to help, and played the sound of a bearded tit. After just 5 seconds one of the tits decided that this intruder should be taught a lesson and he started to shout fanatically.
It was the start of a real party, because they showed up everywhere, often in groups of 7 in, on and between the reeds.
Where they are normally shy birds, here they were quite easy to photograph. And then you have the stress of choosing again, which of all those beautiful photos should you post? In the end I chose the first proud gentleman!
“Accept the challenges so that you can feel the exhilaration of victory.”
-- George S. Patton
There is a special kind of exhilaration one feels looking down at a majestic mountainous landscape, especially when getting the opportunity has involved the challenges of long and strenuous climbing. The man in this picture did not have to climb much - the top of the rock he is standing on is maybe 20 feet above the walking path, very close to the parking lot. That's what I thought before studying the photo in detail. And then I had noticed that apparently the man's arms are missing. That, of course, changes everything: the picture gets a new meaning with the depth of the man's life story; his proud stance suddenly becomes real - and inspiring.
(photo taken at
Grand Canyon North Rim, Arizona, U.S.A.)
Brenthis hecate
Barna gyöngyházlepke
***
Thank you very much for your time and for your faves!
(Just giving a fave is perfect if you like the photo, thank you!)
KP Treat This 352 ~ November 2025 thanks to
abstractartangel77 for these source images shown in the first comment box flic.kr/p/2rzGR8m and flic.kr/p/2rzH8rz
this man asks me if I want to photograph him ... of course I want that!
He is standing in front of my camera with a radiant smile
The station was built under the direction of architects H.G.J. Schelling of NS, the principal railway operator in the Netherlands, and John Leupen of the City of Amsterdam. The railway station was opened on 15 October 1939