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(Explore) Thanks for the favs! This belonged to my Granny who would have been 100 yrs old next month. She passed away at age 96. Very chuffed that people like this! :)

... went out for a walk yesterday AM with the aim of some wildlife photography. Great walk but nothing about (that could be photographed) so decided to try "Flickr Friday" instead!

Coucou toi ! Désolé mais tu es trop costaud, je t’ai vu caché derrière ton arbre. Mon coup de cœur pour ce brame 2021, cette image me fait trop rire ! 😂

 

Image brute, aucun traitement ni recadrage

 

Image non libre de droit.

Toute reproduction interdite ©

Olympus Stylus Epic & Ilford HP5

Minolta AF150BF & Ilford FP4

Feuille de plaqueminier au soleil couchant. Les couleurs de l'automne et l'orangé du kaki.

Ma ferme des animaux

2024-09-13, Day 7

Golden Willows intermingle with the red foliage of Dwarf Birch and seem to glow with inner light in the late afternoon under gathering storm clouds, Kluane National Park, Yukon.

 

Cache Lake sits at the headwaters of Copper Joe Creek in a valley that begins about 850 feet above the Duke River. I can only imagine that the Creek would be named differently if the naming were to be thought about today. Regardless, most of the elevation must be gained in about ⅔ of a mile as the crow flies, and the route description led us to believe that an old mining road that once connected Cache Lake to the Duke River offers a reasonable grade to negotiate the ascent if it can be found. Alas, the features for which the route description instructs one to look from the riverbed to locate the old road appeared to have been erased from the landscape, perhaps shoved, bullied, and rearranged by the tumultuous and chaotic energy of flooding currents. As a result, we found ourselves pushing upward through steep Willow once more, feet looking for purchase on a rapidly climbing slope.

 

The larger trees thinned out and disappeared as the slope finally crested, and we were afforded a look down the valley toward Cache Lake. The route description suggested good campsites could be found around the Lake, but it looked to us like the storm clouds were coalescing ever more densely and the environs immediately round the Lake offered scant protection from wind. I have slept in a tent in the wind, and like Bartleby the Scrivener, I would prefer not to. We thus elected to continue northward along the creek bed, hoping to find a more sheltered place to pitch the tent, cook dinner, and learn what this weather system might deliver.

Cyclop85/1.5 + Canon 60D

 

Morning mist on the Teton River reflects the rays of the morning with the "four Tetons" providing a nice backdrop in Teton Valley, Idaho.

Linda and I were driving through Cache Creek Canyon in 1989 and had no idea people were rafting the creek. We were able to get close to the action for lots of shots of people getting more than they bargained for in the high water. This was scanned from an old slide.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Gut versteckt unter dem vertrockneten Gras haben sich die Narzissen ans Licht gedrängt.

Réserve ornithologique de Pont de gau

Red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) maintaining one of its caches.

 

Wiewiórka (Sciurus vulgaris) konserwująca jedną ze swoich kryjówek.

Photographer: Vincenzo Travino

Model: Hérodiade Chatnoir

Camera: Canon AE1

Film: Ilford HP5 400 35mm

© 2020 Vincenzo Travino photography

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You can see this complete uncensored set only here: www.patreon.com/vincenzotravino

 

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a cache, not only for squirrels. Already opened to see the treasure inside

 

Geöffnetes Nuss-Versteck - nicht nur für Eichhörnchen. Bereits geöffnet, damit man den Schatz im Innern sehen kann.

Lightings playing hide and seek with the trees

A rather surrealistic look at Cache Valley shortly after sunrise. (Thanks to the magic of Photomatix which makes it easy to push photos to the extreem. This is a four exposure blend.) It does intensity the stratified haze layers which indicate a temperature inversion in the valley. This is a problem during cooler weather that gives more air pollution at times than we like. I'll not show this one to the local chamber of commerce. This was taken from a vantage point in the Wellsville Mountains to the west of the valley and is shot towards the southeast end of the valley with the Bear River Mountains in the background. My home is nestled up against the mountains near the left edge of the photo. View large.

Poseïdonia Nova : exoplanète aquatique

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