View allAll Photos Tagged Tigers
Tiger from Copenhagen Zoo. Shot with the 2X III extender and 70-200 F2.8 II. The picture is a 100% crop.
Tigers (Panthera tigris) taken at the Wildlife Heritage Foundation
Read about my day with the cats in my blog.
Taken at the Colorado Wild Animal Sanctuary on May 27th 2013 with a Nikon D5100. It was looking right at me as I took the picture, so lucky!
Hogle Zoo, Salt Lake City, utah.
Not as sharp as I would have liked but when you are shooting through Glass what can you do? Not sure I have ever seen the Tigers out like this at the Zoo, pretty awesome today :)
“In the end, we will only conserve what we love. We will only love what we understand. We will only understand what we are taught.” Baba Dioum
Taken for Our Daily Challenge "You Can Quote Me"
The Tigers Nest is located 500 meters up the mountain on the edge of cliff.
The Tigers Nest is a prominent Himalayan Buddhist sacred site and temple complex, located in the cliffside of the upper Paro valley, in Bhutan. A temple complex was first built in 1692, around the Taktsang Senge Samdup (stag tshang seng ge bsam grub) cave where Guru Padmasambhava is said to have meditated for three years, three months, three weeks, three days and three hours in the 8th century. Padmasambhava is credited with introducing Buddhism to Bhutan
This image of the Prince of Bandipur, was created in Bandipur Tiger Reserve. This was our last safari, as my previous two safaris previous day didnt yield any cat sightings..I was not hopeful of getting any cats this safari too. As we entered the park, it was quiet...no alarm calls, could able to spot only herd of Chitals. But to our surprise..two of the safari vehicles in front of us were already stationary, we thought there may be a spotting, yes it was, none other than the Prince, who was taking his morning walk..:) marking his territory along the way. I could able to get a very good view of him as we were next to him as he was walking
butterfly at the red sea
more photos from egypt: www.ipernity.com/doc/29083/album
and still photos are left to come (as soon as it´s november)
I really enjoy visiting the Amur tiger section at Longleat, as I find them extremely beautiful animals. The tigers at Longleat are well looked after, and the zoo keepers are very good at feeding times as they occasionally hide the meat in the branches of trees so that when the tigers are let into their enclosure they have to search for their food.
Amur tigers are fully mature and able to mate from 4 years of age. Their cubs are born small, helpless and blind and depend on their mother for safety and for the mother’s milk. Tiger cubs grow very fast and will be almost 4 times their original size after just one month.
The Amur tiger is also known as the Siberian tiger, and are considered to be the largest of all of the big cats. They have many stripes; however no two tigers have the same stripe pattern. Amur tigers are now protected by law in the wild and are linked to conservation projects
_ Questo progetto nasce dagli scarti delle foto che ho scattato quest'anno. A volte tendo ad essere molto autocritico, cosa che mi porta poi a scartare degli scatti che, in fondo, non sono poi così male. Ogni anno creerò un set dal tema diverso che raggruppa questi "scarti". Quest'anno il tema riguarda i volti (FACES), un'argomento molto complesso e intrigante. Vediamo cosa salterà fuori. _
_ This project was born from the scraps of the photos I took this year. Sometimes I tend to be very self-critical, which then takes me to discard the shots that, after all, are not so bad. Every year I will create a set from different theme that brings together these "waste". This year the theme concerns the faces, an argument very complex and intriguing. Let's see what will come out. _