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Front yard feeder
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File Name: NZ6_6420
Seen in flight from below the osprey has white or slightly mottled underparts. The long wings are angled, bending at the 'wrist' which has a black patch contrasting with the white wing linings, and at a distance it could be mistaken for a large gull. This spectacular fish-eating bird of prey is an Amber List species because of its historical decline (due to illegal killing), and low breeding numbers.
It wanted to be a lighthouse, but it was only a modest bulb from a camera flash - and an old one at that. But it had its moment in the sun and was happy.
An unmistakable bird with its black back and white underparts, and distinctive black head with large pale cheeks and a tall, flattened, brightly-coloured bill. Its comical appearance is heightened by its red and black eye-markings and bright orange legs. Used as a symbol for books and other items, this clown among seabirds is one of the world's favourite birds. With half of the UK population at only a few sites it is an Red List species.
My favourite filter box, because it always opens easily. It is made of transparent plastic and I placed it on a light blue surface and worked on layers and blending modes to make it darker.
... when there's gonna be an exhibition by some of "the best photographers from Deventer" and you 're invited to join. Of coarse you say: "yes!". And when there's a meeting to talk about the odds and ends of the exhibition you bring your cameragear. Just like the other photographers. And you meet up at the old centre of the city. After some talks you start taking new pictures....
The exhibition is from August 4 until September 4 in the Lebuinuschurch in Deventer. When you're there, please visit (no entrance-fee), and in the meantime enjoy this image
Cheers!
*Image is under copyright by Bram de Jong. Contact me if you want to buy or use my photographs*
A familiar sight with its pointed wings and long tail, hovering beside a roadside verge. Numbers of kestrels declined in the 1970s, probably as a result of changes in farming and so it is included on the Amber List. They have adapted readily to man-made environments and can survive right in the centre of cities.
Exif: A7RM-IV-Canon 100mm-f/8-ISO 160-1/200 with on
flash Godox V800-III-S manual mode - handheld - used tissue paper as diffuser.
It is really hard to beat this spot in Tremont at any time of year. The trees lean in over the river and form a vaulted canopy. In the fall, that canopy turns gold, yellow, red, and orange. Natures stained glass windows in natures cathedral.
I found this Japanese viewfinder camera from the fifties (probably 1954-55". Made by Shinano. This one is with Pigeon F.H. Coated 4.5cm f3.5 lens. Seems to be a kind of triplet design thou it mikes quite swirly bokeh.
This one is photographed with Dallmeyer Speed Anastigmat 1'' f1.5 on Olympus Pen micro 4/3.
A brown, long-tailed bird, usually seen flying rapidly across the top of a reedbed. Males have black 'moustaches' rather than 'beards'. They are sociable and noisy, their 'ping' calls often being the first clue to their presence.
Exif: Exif: A7RM-iv-Canon 100mm USM-F/8-ISO 160-1/200 manual exposure Godox On Camera Speedlight 1/32 power with diffuser.
Smaller than a redshank, turnstones have a mottled appearance with brown or chestnut and black upperparts and brown and white or black and white head pattern, whilst their underparts are white and legs orange. They spend most of their time creeping and fluttering over rocks, picking out food from under stones.
Playing with off camera flash... as you do.
For the gear-heads - The camera pictured is a Fujifilm X-Pro2 with a Fujinon 35mm F1.4 lens attached.
The UK's favourite bird - with its bright red breast it is familiar throughout the year and especially at Christmas! Males and females look identical, and young birds have no red breast and are spotted with golden brown. Robins sing nearly all year round and despite their cute appearance, they are aggressively territorial and are quick to drive away intruders. They will sing at night next to street lights.
Check out my new website to view my photos
I’ll be selling some of my 100,000 images on there,
Initially just screen savers, eventually Larger Prints (check back)
Tony
One of my favorite things about shooting in the Roan Highlands, are the layers of the mountains, there are options for 360 degrees from the top of Round Bald. On this morning, I chose to shoot towards the direction of the rising sun, the pinks on the horizon and the blue tones in the hills was just too much for this photographer to pass up.
Fungi of the genus Hypholoma are quite well known due to the commonness of sulphur tuft on stumps in temperate woodlands.
A highly coloured finch with a bright red face and yellow wing patch. Sociable, often breeding in loose colonies, they have a delightful liquid twittering song and call. Their long fine beaks allow them to extract otherwise inaccessible seeds from thistles and teasels. Increasingly they are visiting birdtables and feeders. In winter many UK goldfinches migrate as far south as Spain
This tiny, restless jewel of a bird vies with the goldcrest for the title of the UK's smallest bird. Compared to the goldcrest, the firecrest is brighter and 'cleaner' looking, with a green back, white belly, bronze 'collar' and a black and white eye-stripe. They have a yellow and black stripe on their heads, which has a bright orange centre in males. Like goldcrests, they move through trees and bushes in search of small insects.
An unmistakable bird with its black back and white underparts, and distinctive black head with large pale cheeks and a tall, flattened, brightly-coloured bill. Its comical appearance is heightened by its red and black eye-markings and bright orange legs. Used as a symbol for books and other items, this clown among seabirds is one of the world's favourite birds. With half of the UK population at only a few sites it is an Red List species.
My husband placed his gear on the bench to look through his binoculars to check for the birds we were hearing while visiting the Horse Camp at Myakka. I took the opportunity for the shot!
Happy early Bench Monday!
Kingfishers are small unmistakable bright blue and orange birds of slow moving or still water. They fly rapidly, low over water, and hunt fish from riverside perches, occasionally hovering above the water's surface. They are a vulnerable to hard winters and habitat degradation through pollution or unsympathetic management of watercourses. Kingfishers are amber listed because of their unfavourable conservation status in Europe.
I shot this composition before my picture yesterday and if I am honest I kind of prefer it. Although you don't see as much of the house it feels like it is more complete scene on Dartmoor. My initial thoughts about was to try and capture the house in the moors but didn't really have a wide enough lens on me at the time, when I go back I shall make sure it is in my kit.
I am probably going to make this image available as a print DM me if interested.
A highly coloured finch with a bright red face and yellow wing patch. Sociable, often breeding in loose colonies, they have a delightful liquid twittering song and call. Their long fine beaks allow them to extract otherwise inaccessible seeds from thistles and teasels. Increasingly they are visiting birdtables and feeders. In winter many UK goldfinches migrate as far south as Spain
Looking around this scene for compositions I can across a row of rocks that I thought would look good as a foreground element leading the eye to the two lovely water falls in the background. Setting my camera as low to the floor as possible.
A colourful mix of blue, yellow, white and green makes the blue tit one of our most attractive and most recognisable garden visitors. In winter, family flocks join up with other tits as they search for food. A garden with four or five blue tits at a feeder at any one time may be feeding 20 or more
The Chicago Harbor Lighthouse. I used the Smooth Reflections App to shoot 256 frames to simulate the long Exposure.
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I thought this was my first shipwreck photo, but then I remembered shooting the boat out near Point Reyes, so this is actually my second shipwreck!
This one is down in Florida. It will be the first of a series of 3 images of this beached sailboat from last week. I used the Smooth Reflections app to blend 8 15 second exposures. I was happy to have that app handy since one of my two remote cables that connect the receiver to the camera has died and the other was connected to the second camera doing a timelapse. The Sahara Sand dust cloud in the air made for some really odd light, I think it would have been a great sunset without that dust in the air.
For most of my trip to Reelfoot lake the skies were overcast. As sunset on Saturday approached, they started to break up, just long enough to get in a good sunset.
Stonechats are robin sized birds. Males have striking black heads with white around the side of their neck, orange-red breasts and a mottled brown back. Females lack the male's black head, but have brown backs and an orange tinge to their chests. Birds are frequently seen flicking their wings while perched, often doing so on the tops of low bushes. As its name suggests, birds utter a sharp loud call that sound like two stones being tapped together. They breed in western and southern parts of the UK, but disperse more widely in winter.