View allAll Photos Tagged SINGING
A beautiful Willow Warbler Singing his cascading jingly song in the Gorse today on Dartmoor,hardly any crop here so shows how close he was .
A beautiful male singing his heart out, just a few feet away from me, on a Dorset Heath a few days ago in some lovely morning light.
Taken near Poole.
a 100% cropped view of this robin singing
In the original photo you could see the branch etc ... because I was not near to the bird ... but I wanted this framing so I did a 100% cropped view despite of the High ISO (because done in the shadow of trees).
Sony A7S
Tamron 150-600
LA-EA4 Adapter
600mm
F7.1
ISO 5000
1/800s
(DSC07553-denoise3040-600mmF71ISO5000-800s-41600+B901710+crb-denoise1500+crb)
There were choruses of them on the forest floor, joined by others singing the pinks, whites, yellows and a few purples.
They're only here for a short time each Spring so it was good to catch their recital.
This beautiful Bunting singing its famous " Little bit of bread and no cheese " song early one morning on Dartmoor.
La Ceja, Colombia; 2.300 meters above sea level.
Hypopyrrhus pyrohypogaster
(Red-bellied Grackle / Cacique candela)
I believe that those who sing are a family. On the left the female, in the middle the father and on the right a "teenager" son. Notice that its orange color is somewhat more subdued.
Above Burnley, Lancashire
This is one of 4 panopticons that are scattered around Lancashire. In the right conditions the tubular poles hum hence the name!
D&RGW engineer Jim Hammond throttles up his F9s as the Rio Grande Zephyr twists and turns through Spanish Fork Canyon near Mill Fork, Utah on June 19, 1977.
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He is singing, a diana, or sung prelude, establishing the mood before the Yambú dance (a form of Cuban rumba) starts; a single couple slowly and respectfully dance within a circle created by the conga drummers, singers, waiting dancers, and spectators. Afro-Cuban ritual dances form a huge group of Cuban dances and reflect the four main groups of Africans that were transported to Cuba.