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Mmmm....a tasty confection if ever I saw one. It's a shame to let beautiful lingerie hide out of sight all the time....so I make sure to air Daisy's out from time to time. ❤️️
You know, I can hardly believe it's almost time to run the clocks forward again. I don't know about you folks....but Daisy and I are VERY pleased to get this crummy winter behind us! 😊
Yellow Oxalis Field is my exclusive item for the Spring Fling event going on right now!
Event is here:
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Malus/200/54/29
While you're there check out my 10L gift!
♥ Pixie
Purity Spring sits in a small park along the Hillsborough River in northern Tampa, not far from Sulphur Springs. This unheralded site is a surprising spot to view a well-flowing spring with a nice creekbed as it flows a short distance out to the river.
Slowly but surely, spring is coming.
In the few hours sun we had the latest days, I went out to capture the Spring Crocus.
First test with the TTArtisan F2.8 100mm, which is a completely manual lens.
I've added the lens model and aperture value later via an exif tool, because I like to show fully exif information.
Handheld, using Live View for point of view and composition.
The first of the four equinox posts for 2023. Each will feature snippets from The Seasons of Stories published by the Stepping Into Nature project led by the Dorset Area of Natural Beauty team.
"Ash before the Oak
expect a soak,
Oak before the Ash
expect a splash"
"When you hear the cuckoo shout, it's time to plant the tatties out"
"When early blooms dapple old hedgerows,
young clusters on rides and banks thrive.
Whilst in pasture, ditch, meadow and woodland
all is glossed wet in wild lime surprise"
Bonus...with a verse from the lyrics below!
A replay for bithbox # 215
Ninebarrow "Hour of the Blackbird"
"Above the oak tree’s lofty frame
Heavy clouds that threaten rain
But below that lonely darksome gloom
The early daffodils in bloom"
Slowly but surely spring is arriving in the Netherlands.
The Blackthorn is in full bloom now. It attracts a lot of insects/butterflies.
Last Saturday I focused on Honey Bees in flight while they were feeding from the Blackthorn.
Pumped up the ISO to get a very high shutterspeed.
Also note the pellet on the hind leg.
To collect and transport pollen, honey bees mix pollen particles with regurgitated nectar and form the mixture into pellets, which cling their hind legs.
This is a handheld shot.
"Les plantes et les animaux tout autour de nous s'éveillaient d'un long sommeil, et notre jardin s'est lentement transformé en un tapis de vert tendre, et les cieux au-dessus de notre maison se sont à nouveau remplis de chœurs de chants d'oiseaux."
***
"The plants and animals all around us were waking from a long sleep, and our yard was slowly transformed into a carpet of soft green, and the skies above our house were filled with choruses of birdsong once again.”
Cit. by Arlene Stafford-Wilson
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(I speak french, italian and a little bit of english).
wild flowers near Corny -
Lorraine - France -
Le Printemps est arrivé -
fleurs sauvages du coté de Corny
en Lorraine
I love the bright white flower against the green background. That is why I picked this photo to be spring kickoff photo.
Behold, the former things have come to pass, and new things I now declare; before they spring forth I tell you of them.
Isaiah 42:9
Texture by: Shadow House Creations
Have a blessed day and thank you for stopping by!
Copyright © 2015 Wendy Gee Photo~Art
This image is protected under the United States and International Copyright laws and
may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without
written permission.
Busy day today but I will be back later to check your beautiful works my friends ... Have a wonderful day !
Picture taken in Tokyo - Japan
Photographed in Sanpete County, Utah.
Newly plowed alfalfa hay fields lay below snow-covered mountains in central Utah. We estimated over two-thousand Mule Deer foraging in these fields over a thirty-mile span of US-89 which runs through the Sanpete valley.
Since settlement(1850s), Sanpete County's economy has been based on agriculture. In its first few decades it served as Utah's granary. Sheep dominated the local economy from the 1880s through the 1920s, and the county played a prominent part in world markets for a time. Turkeys, grown casually as a farmyard animal, became a cooperative, integrated industry in response to the 1930s Great Depression. Today they rule the roost in Sanpete, which ranks among the top ten turkey-producing counties in the country. Sanpete's location at Utah's geographical heart masks its isolation. Much interstate and recreational traffic bypasses it. The small, scattered towns with their long and interesting rivalries have never allowed the development of a dominant county economic center.