View allAll Photos Tagged buffed
191) Buffed Necked Woodpecker
Buff-Necked Woodpecker, Meiglyptes tukki, Belatuk Leher Kuning
Woodpecker that can usually be seen in forest edges, especially near orchards. This species will moves from branch to branches looking for insects and larva. Can be found in southern Thailand, Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore. Inhabits broadleaved evergreen forest and also secondary growth up to 760 m.
Belatul Leher Kuning lazimnya ditemui di kawasan pinggir hutan terutama di kawasan dusun buah buahan.
Exif: f5.6, 1/8, ISO 1600, focal length 800mm, Cik Canon EOS 50D, lens Canon 400mm, TC 2.0, tripod Feisol
It is easy to spray with Buff Monster
Buff Monster
Stops Buff
Pink is Power
2011 The melty Misfits
Caution! Flammable, vapour can be harmful
Contents under pressure
See cautions elsewhere on label
A pleasant surprise to see this cute birdie today! Usually they stay secluded and hidden, this one couldn't care less about me standing nearby.
Back to the macro for this one. Unfortunatly found this dead bee on the windowsill over the weekend.
This was using a D800 with reversing ring, extension tube and a Pentax 28mm I have but haven't used for ages.
25 frames stacked.
Still learning on extreme macro.
From Germany.
The only other macrolepidopteran caterpillars I found yesterday: a buff-tip (Phalera bucephala Linnaeus, 1758, Notodontidae) nest on oak. These caterpillars were certainly shot a thousand times before, but I thought contributing another photo was adequate to their nice appearance.
Canon EOS 5DIII, Canon EF100mm, natural afternoon light
field shot, 1/160 sec, Æ’/11, ISO 800
Buff-rumped thornbill.
Callum Brae, Australian Capital Territory, June 2014.
(Current wet weather is a good time to trawl the archives.)
From the moth trap in my garden. This is the earliest I've had one of these. Normally they appear in July.
Taken at RSPB Frampton Marsh, which has certainly attracted some rare waders over the past two weeks...
Hypotaenidea philippensis. Mapleton Lilyponds. Q'land. I had no plans to visit this place. Too noisy and overdeveloped... houses and a restaurant closely bordering one side and a lively children's playground on the other. But, with a couple of hours to spare and Victoria recommended it... give it a go. I was so glad I did, walked in and met a white headed pigeon, a lifer. Then this guy was doing cartwheels across the grass, waiting for me to notice them. So thank you Victoria.
Buff-breasted Babbler (Trichastoma tickelli) on the Island of Pangkor Laut, Malaysia.
The buff-breasted babbler is a species of bird in the family Pellorneidae. It is found in Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forest and subtropical or tropical moist montane forest.
Ref: www.thainationalparks.com
Ref: zR23H1906
Buff-breasted Sandpiper looking for food on the grassy field
Tri-state region, East Coast, USA
www.greggard.com/blog/2021/8/buff-brested-sandpiper-ct-nj...
Unlike most shorebirds, Buff-breasted Sandpipers forage in dry, grassy habitats, not wetlands.
Also unique to Buff-breasted Sandpipers is having a lek mating system. Males gather fairly close together and display for females. After mating, females raise their chicks without any help from the male. Lekking behavior is common among grouse but very unusual in shorebirds: the Ruff and Great Snipe of Eurasian are the only other lekking shorebirds. - source: CornellLab
This photo was taken at the location described on page 12 of my Shorebirds of the Tri-state Area (CT, NJ, NY) during Fall Migration guide (link in the bio). In this guide not only I’m providing detailed information on 15 locations but also information on how I’m finding these spots, how I’m deciding when and where to go for the best photographic opportunities, how I approach photography there and many more tips that can be applied at other locations. All that to help you improve your photography.
Thank you in advance for kind comments!
You can also follow me on:
- Instagram: www.instagram.com/greggardphoto/
- Facebook: www.facebook.com/greg.gard.9
- YouTube - www.youtube.com/user/gregsthings
Buff-banded Rail
Gallirallus philippensis
August 9th, 2018
Wantirna South, Victoria, Australia
Canon EOS 1D X Mark II
Canon EF 600mm f4L IS II USM lens
Canon EF 1.4x III Extender
Canon 600EX II-RT flash with extender
This little beauty was a regular at a local sports field adjoining the Dandenong Creek & a remnant patch of bushland not far from my work. I popped down for a session once lunchtime on a cloudy day.
A confiding bird which spent its time feeding on short turf close to the coastal footpath on St Agnes, Scilly.
Decor: Hope neons by Afterparty www.flickr.com/photos/afterpartysl
Top: Sheer Tube Top (buff) by Villena www.flickr.com/photos/stay__gold/
This could easily be mistaken for a piece of Birch tree but it's a Buff-Tip moth. I love its camouflage!
Fairly common in humid tropical lowlands. Favors forest edges, plantations, and dense second growth. Usually seen singly or in pairs, foraging quietly in flowering or fruiting trees. Buff throat patch is bordered by black moustache stripes. Birds from western Panama north also show black chest band around buff throat. Note less contrast between head and back than larger Black-headed Saltator, and longer white eyebrow of Green-winged Saltator.
Tico Rainforest B&B, Horquetas de Sarapiqui, Costa Rica.