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Whenever I am in the area, I normally stop off at these trees.

This is one from the archives.

An Unusual Palm Tree with Multiple Branches.

 

At Botanical Garden in the state of West Bengal in India.

Lamington National Park, Queensland, Australia (2019)

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Jardin-Antioquia, Colombia

Berry Springs Park

Georgetown, Texas

   

Gooselake Prarie State Park

Grundy Co. IL www.christiangoers.com

 

Iona Beach Regional Park

Richmond, BC, Canada

Hastings, East Sussex

A different kind of farm...

Seen near Freilassing, Bavaria on December 1st, 2020.

Loved the shape of this tree at NT Rowallane.

Tree Hydrangea status: Green Flowers! A whole bunch of them. :-)

 

Barker the fox says: Care for the Earth, Share the Earth, Celebrate Earth Day Everyday!

Taken at Bempton Cliffs, UK

These guys have returned for the season and have been in the area for a couple of weeks now but until yesterday I would only see them in flocks skimming over the lake.

⭐️Thank you in Advance for your kind ‘Faves’ Visits and Comments they are so very much appreciated. 👍

 

I cannot always ‘Thank’ everyone individually, for their Visits and ‘Faves’ however, I will always try to respond and thank all those that leave a ‘Comment’. If I do not reply to your 'Comment', it is not because I am ignoring you, it's because I have not seen the 'Comment'.

 

Your 'Comments' do not always appear in 'Notifications' or Flickr mail, so, I am sorry for any delay in responding. Often your 'Comment' is only spotted 'On the Page' on the day, that I see it. (seen ONLY when replying to someone HAS 'Commented' on the image, and I see a notification)

A fallen tree trunk is slowly disintegrating back into the soil where it grew for many years. I was attracted to the dark tree trunk surrounded by backlit grasses. I cropped the image to remove distracting elements.

 

Haväng, Skåne, Sweden

  

Hasselblad 503 cw

Kodak T-max 400

T-Max developer 7 min in 20˚

trees / i´d like to THANK YOU ALL for your support over the last two years

...and thanks for 8 million views :))

Portrait of a Tree ..

Pic in my Trees Album

Pic taken 13 Nov 2024

Thanks for your views, faves, invites and comments ...

Trees in Shenandoah National Park.

 

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Timberline Lodge, Oregon

Enormous tree emerging from a rock at Tiburon Open Space, California

Il a survécu au passage du temps et il s'en montre fier. Il porte en lui les secrets du marais...

Tree - Ilford HP5 Plus 400 - home developed in D76 - Minolta SRT200 - Epson V600.

A selection of Lake District trees

Agfa Isoly with flipped Holga lens

The tree swallow (Tachycineta bicolor) is an eye-catching bird with a shimmering blue back and pure white front. The Tree Swallow inhabits fields and wetlands, usually near open water. The tree swallow breeds throughout North America and winters in the southern United States, south to Central America. It constructs its nest in tree cavities or human-made nest boxes. The tree swallow is an aerial forager and captures most of its prey while in flight. It eats a variety of flying insects, with its diet consisting mostly of flies, dragonflies, and mayflies. In poor weather, when its regular prey is lacking, it eats plants and seeds. This allows it to winter at higher latitudes than other swallows that rely solely on flying insects for food. The tree swallow consumes calcium-rich objects during the breeding season, such as fish bones, snails, and eggshells, to nourish its developing eggs and nestlings. The tree swallow is very social, gathering in huge migratory and wintering flocks. Breeding pairs make their nests near one another. Although the bird pairs up to mate, it frequently mates with extra-pair individuals in secret. A small number of males will even have two mates in different nests. This female Tree Swallow was photographed at Hagerman National Wildlife Refuge near Sherman, Texas.

 

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Long ago these trees had leaves and were vibrant. Now they are just skeletons.

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