View allAll Photos Tagged SINGING
There is an old folder holding many photos I took before joining FlickR. Now I don't get out so often, I will share these old shots instead.
Singing honeyeater, Dryandra Forest, Western Australia, 2009.
A red-whiskered bulbul (pycnonotus jocosus) singing out loud. Photographed in Trou D'Eau Douce, Mauritius.
Green-tailed Towhee. Convict lake, Eastern Sierra, CA.
There were plenty of this species around, but tough to get a decent image. I got lucky here when this bird lingered in the shrubs around the Lake for a just a few shots.
Yellow Warbler dancing and signing away in the bushes at Humber Bay Park. Although I'm impressed with the IQ of the camera the auto focus is poor to say the least with the adapter. I guess I'll stick to my 7d mk II until sigma or tamron makes an affordable long lens for the FE system!
...Never to be wrong
Never to make promises that break
It's like singing in the wind
Or writing on the surface of a lake...
I went to track down the Firecrests I found a few weeks ago. As you can see this very active and showy male was singing in the sunshine.
We visited this place a couple years ago. While the house has significantly deteriorated, I was happy to hear the windmill still singing as it revolved in the breeze.
Happy Windmill Wednesday!
(I have been away from Flickr a few days as I have been busy processing images taken at a fundraiser and a memorial. Still have more to do but had to stop by for a little Flickr fix.)
Thank you most kindly for stopping by to view my work.
If you find you have a few words to say about what I have done they will be much appreciated.
My best regards to you.... Martin
The Singing Tower ot Luray Caverns contains a carillon of 47 bells. The largest which weighs 7,640lbs & is 6 feet in diameter, the smallest just 12.5lbs. There are 45 min recitals throughout the day during the spring, summer, & fall. The tower is 117 feet in height.
A male white-rumped shama (Copsychus malabaricus) lands on an exposed branch away from the thick understory it likes to inhabit and launches into its melodious, flute-like song proclaiming its established territory and mating availability.
American Tree Sparrow on an Arctic willow branch on the North Slope tundra along the Dalton Highway.
The lights are on in our living room.
The Tulips stand tall in their vase
The street are silent
And I feel at peace and full of happy joy.
Hope you do too, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
It was a magical scene, a flock of little Serin birds landed in my orchard cheerfully chirping. I heard them but didn't see them until I took my camera and this lens. The little yellow birds looked like leaves fluttering in the wind, that's why I called the picture Singing Leaves.
(distance over 30m)
To see the birds better, click in the middle of the picture.
Spring is here, and everything alive is out and singing and making a fool of itself! It's Spring!
Filoli Gardens, Woodside, Ca. April, 2023. Amazing gardens this time of year, BTW.
One of a number of tree pipits seen at Prestbury Hill nature reserve in Gloucestershire yesterday morning. This one was singing its heart out at the top of a tree in the Bill Smyllie field.
Female black-collared starling (Gracupica nigricollis) being very vocal. Owens Aviary of the San Diego Zoo. Conservation status: Least Concern
" Mockingbirds don't do one thing but make music for us to enjoy. They don't eat up people's gardens, don't nest in corncribs, they don't do one thing but sing their hearts out for us. "
They are singing day and night. I've heard them imitate Phainopeplas, Yellow-chevroned Parakeets, Red-tailed Hawks, Cassin's Kingbirds, auto alarms.... "In the nineteenth century, people kept so many mockingbirds as cage birds that the birds nearly vanished from parts of the East Coast. People took nestlings out of nests or trapped adults and sold them in cities such as Philadelphia, St. Louis, and New York, where, in 1828, extraordinary singers could fetch as much as $50." allaboutboids
$1 worth of 1828 dollars is now worth $25. theinternet
Singing Honeyeater, Gavicalis virescens
+=================+
Not noted for their melodious songs, none the less they recieved the Singing name.
A very early start to Dartmoor this morning and I was rewarded with the sight of this lovely Yellowhammer singing in a small holly bush just a few feet away.
As they say I was up with the larks to get this one. The open fields in Ashridge where these little birds nest attracts a lot of visitors during the day and the heat haze make ground shots like this almost impossible.