View allAll Photos Tagged Spring
Lucky to view two mothers with spring cubs in 2014 at Lake Clark National Park. Only saw these little guys a couple times, but they were active and entertaining.
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Ah, Spring breezes. The beginning of May.... it was actually close to 90 that day!
Michelle as Samus Aran - Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Lets' hope we'll soon be seeing lots of these......(taken today in my kitchen as it's too horrid to go out...). You might like to try full screen in lightroom if you have the time; I'm quite pleased with the detail. Nikon D700 with 70-200mm F2.8 at 112mm, F5.6 and 12mm extension tube. Tripod and remote release 1/5 sec.
The blossoms and flowers were out in force as we visited Temple Square in Salt Lake City, Utah.
View the entire LDS Temples Set
View my - Most Interesting according to Flickr
The meadow flowers and grasses here in Rutland are just starting to show well here in our little wildflower meadow on the edge of Empingham Village.
The afternoon sun causes shadows and light to play across the surface of Blue Star Spring just to the north of Old Faithful Geyser in the Yellowstone National Park’s Upper Geyser Basin. The vent, enclosed by a thin, overhanging ring of orange-grey sinter, produces a small stream of water that flows a short distance north and down into the adjacent Firehole River. Blue Star has been know to have small but rare geyser activity where it erupts a small dome of water a couple of feet high.Usually it is a calm, gently rippling pool. Because of the proximity to the crowds at Old Faithful, some thoughtless or self centered visitors throw coins and other liter into the spring. Besides being illegal, such activity can block the throat of a spring and cause damage to the thermal feature. During the park’s early history, before we understood just how fragile thermal features can be, concessionaries as well as visitors from the nearby tent camps and lodges threw their trash into this spring, In 1946, Park Naturalist, George Marler, decided to ‘clean’ out the spring. The resulting pile of rubbish measured 6 feet long and 3 feet wide! Please refrain from throwing anything into the thermal features.
Animals can ocassionally fall into the thermal features. For a while one could see bones in Blue Star Spring from a a bison calf that fell into the spring sometime in the 1980’s. Look and you may see bones in a few of Yellowstones’ hot springs.
Snow White (mixed breed), 08.03.2014.
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Olympus E-400 Digital Camera.
I painted these tulips a couple of years ago. They remind me of Spring...Perhaps it's just around the corner.