View allAll Photos Tagged Scratch
Scratching Post - Young Bobcat entering her prime marks her territory. I have been having a slow time with photography lately so I actually was not planning on going out this evening.
However, I made a last minute trip out to try to see if any Bobcats would show after the rain. Boy did that decision pay off - within 30 seconds I spotted a Bobcat within the brush.
After I identified that it was the individual Bobcat that is most comfortable with me, I quietly walked around and sat about 30 feet from her for 30 minutes. This is a strategy I use with this species - finding a distanced place where they have clear line of sight to me and just sitting and acting normal. After the 30 minute period she got up and actually stalked towards me within 15 feet, and started marking her territory and scratching. I did not realize how large this particular individual had gotten and it was pretty awe-inspiring to watch her reach up and scratch the trees.
Scratching is not a behavior I have photographed well with Bobcats so this was truly a treat. I had to switch to vertical orientation, adjust my exposure compensation and zoom out to 300mm all in one motion to capture this image and I am very glad I didn't fumble anything. After this, she headed on for her hunt. Definitely grateful for this experience - was truly my #1 wildlife experience of 2022 without a doubt.
Species: Bobcat (Lynx rufus)
Location: Northern California, CA, USA
Equipment: Canon EOS R5 + EF 100-400mm IS II
Settings: 1/400s, ISO: 1600, f/5.6 @300mm, Electronic Shutter, Handheld
Black-headed gull (chroicocephalus ridibundus) standing by a water and scratching its head.
Śmieszka (Chroicocephalus ridibundus) stojąca nad wodą i drapiąca się po głowie.
Three sandhill cranes amid corn stubble adjacent to White River Marsh State Wildlife Area just doing what they do.
White River Marsh State Wildlife Area
Green Lake County, Wisconsin between the small cities of Berlin and Princeton
Thanks for viewing.
MA409180
Deux photos => deux questions.
Que cherche-t-on à gratter avec ces jeux de la fameuse FdJ ? De l'espoir ? Une amélioration de son confort de vie ? Un petit frisson d'adrénaline ?
Tout ça à la fois ? Et peut-être même tout autre chose...
A scratch effect that works on almost any color!
Pastie: pastiebin.com/?page=p&id=4f02aa0118957
Credit me if used
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Scratched photo inspired by the work of Daido Moriyama (slightly off kilter, ruined, blur and scratches)
A barred owl was photographed after it had just scratched an itch under it's chin in Osceola County near Kenansville, Florida.
Prints, and many other items, are available with this image on my website at www.tom-claud.pixels.com. Click on the link and thanks for visiting.
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My photos are copy right protected with all rights reserved.
En 1941, au cours d’une promenade dans les bois, l’ingénieur et inventeur suisse Georges de Mestral fut intrigué par les capitules de plantes uniques, les bardanes, qui étaient restées accrochées aux poils de son chien.
Conscient du potentiel des propriétés de fixation uniques des centaines de « crochets » microscopiques des capitules de bardane, Georges de Mestral a travaillé sans relâche pour mettre au point un procédé permettant de les reproduire sous forme textile et de créer ce que nous connaissons aujourd’hui comme le système à crochet et boucle. Velcro : velours et crochet. Autre nom connu : le scratch.
n 1941, during a walk in the woods, Swiss engineer and inventor Georges de Mestral was intrigued by the flower heads of unique plants, burdocks, which had remained clinging to his dog's hair.
Realizing the potential of the unique attachment properties of the hundreds of microscopic “hooks” of burdock flower heads, Georges de Mestral worked tirelessly to develop a process to reproduce them in textile form and create what we know today like the hook and loop system. Velcro: velvet and hook. Another known
Common starling (Sturnus vulgaris) female scratching herself while standing on a grassy ground.
Samica szpaka (Sturnus vulgaris) stojąca na trawiastej ziemi i drapiąca się.