View allAll Photos Tagged cloudless
One good thing about 100% cloudless sky (and living at the top of a mountain) is, it gave me a good chance to try out some startrails photo that I've been wanting to shoot but didn't have much luck back in the east coast (near the city, too much light pollution!).
This is actually my 2nd attempt (tried one back at home a couple of months ago) but the one that's somewhat decent to post. There's really not much composition in this one, just want to get a decent startrails first. Now, I gotta go find some interesting foreground that doesn't have much light pollution at night......
Nikon D7000
Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8 VC
30sec x 100 shots
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Looking across to Holwick down the steep Miry Lane from above Newbiggin. Taken on a cloudless fine late summer morning
Taking in a cloudless, serene August sunset in the city. Just so beautiful! Pics taken from San Jose, CA. (Wednesday around sunset, August 4, 2021)
*“When the sun is setting, leave whatever you are doing and watch it.” – Mehmet Murat Ildan.
Cloudless Sulphur (Phoebis sennae) larva on host plant, Fabaceae, Christmas Senna (Senna Bicapsularis), 11/6/2016, The Landing's "Pollinator Garden Berm", Skidaway Island, Savannah, Chatham Co., Ga.
It was a quiet, nearly-cloudless morning on Monte Sano. But the valley fog was a nice touch.
From the overlook at Monte Sano State Park, Huntsville, Alabama.
Nikon D7200 — Nikon 18-300mm F6.3 ED VR
116mm
F8@1 second
ISO 400
GND Filter
DOL_2856.JPG
©Don Brown 2022
Photographed in the community gardens in Shelby Farms Park in Memphis.
Member of Nature’s Spirit
Good Stewards of Nature
Cloudless Sulphur (female) on Zinnia. Morgan County, Alabama - 2018 (Note: after a friendly Flickr note suggested a tighter crop, I cropped and replaced the original.)
Camilla Cloudless is a very happy and cheery lamb. Every morning when she wakes up - she is smiling and looking forward to the new day.
And when she gets her favorite breakfast - a sandwich with cheese and marmalade - the morning is just perfect.
She is made out of pre-washed organic cotton fabrics from fair trade production, organic cotton teddy plush and has a hand stitched recycling felt face. She is filled with recycling doll wadding.
en.dawanda.com/product/10066954-Biologique-et-Fair-Trade-...
Cloudless Sulphurs are large fast flying butterflies with males being particularly dizzying flyers as they search for females. Wing span is 2 1/4 - 3 1/8 inches (5.7 - 8 cm). Males are yellow with no markings on the upper side of the wings and faint spots underneath. Females are yellow above with black marginal spots, while the spots underneath are more prominent and noticeable than on males.
Permanent resident from Argentina north to southern Texas and the Deep South. Regular visitor and occasional colonist in most of the Southwest and the northern United States from the Midwest into New England, and sometimes as far north as Ontario, Canada. But many years it can be rare or non-existent in its northern range.
Flight season is year around in the Deep South; may have one flight in late summer in other southern states; immigrants to northern states in August or September usually do not reproduce. As the weather cools in autumn, adults begin a return migration back to the Deep South to overwinter.
Adult butterflies nectar from many different flowers, but prefer those with long tubes such as cordia, bougainvilla, cardinal flower, trumpet vine, hibiscus, lantana, wild morning glory, and jewelweed.
ISO400, aperture f/10, exposure .001 seconds (1/640) focal length 300mm
A sunday stroll with the daughter up Binsey giving some great views over the northern lake district hills. But I bet it has a slightly different look now.
Phoebis sennae, the cloudless sulphur or cloudless giant sulphur, is a mid-sized butterfly in the family Pieridae found in the New World.
Their range is wide, from South America to southern Canada, in particular southwestern Ontario. They are most common from Argentina to southern Texas, Georgia, and Florida.
The cloudless sulphur or cloudless giant sulphur (Phoebis sennae) is a midsized butterfly in the family Pieridae found in the New World.
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Cloudless Sulphur, Phoebis sennae. Fresh chrysalis, often, and erroneously called, "the resting stage". During this life cycle stage, the entire contents of its body liquifies and reorganizes into the body parts of the future adult butterfly.
Los Osos, San Luis Obispo County, Califormia, USA.
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Cloudless Sulphur (Phoebis sennae) larva on Fabaceae family, Christmas Senna (Senna bicapsularis), 9/19/2018, , The Landing’s Sparrow Field, Skidaway Island, Savannah, Chatham Co., Ga.
As I was leaving for the nature center yesterday, this Cloudless sulphur posed for me in the lantana - she didn't run from me when I was in the car. Our lantana doesn't like the cool temps we've been having.
At the nature center I saw:
Cloudless sulphurs
Sleepy Oranges - some brown, some bright yellow
Gulf frits
C. Buckeyes
Monarch - 1 old
Pipevine Swallowtail - surprised to see a swallowtail!
Long-tailed skipper - 1
C. Checkered-skippers
Fiery skippers
Mystery skippers
Phoebis sennae. The flower is a flame acanthus, Anisacanthus quadrifidus var. wrightii, at the Wildflower Center, Austin.
9/6/21 - Blue Heaven Road, Patagonia, Santa Cruz County, AZ; what the third strongest monsoon on record in SE Arizona will do
Reeds near the pond. They was very tall, about 4,5-4 m., so we can feel between them like beetles in the grass ;)
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For the first time in about two months, I went out and took some photos. It felt really good to get out there, especially after a kind of shitty past month.
It had been freakishly cold outside as of late as well.
Short video of nocturnal expedition to photograph the comet Lovejoy C\2013 R1
November 13, 2013 4am to 6am, the palindrome night, and one of the few, for months, dark and cloudless
I got the inspiration listening the music track, an idea, I hope, a little more original than usual
also @youtube in fullHD 1080p
San Diego from Old Point Loma Lighthouse. Both San Diego Bay and the Pacific Ocean can be seen from Old Point Loma Lighthouse, which sits more than 400 feet above the water on the peninsula on the west side of San Diego Bay. This view to the east shows the Cabrillo statue at Cabrillo National Monument near the left side; beyond it are North Island Naval Air Station, downtown San Diego, and the Laguna Mountains. A helicopter can be seen above North Island NAS, just below the mountain ridge.
Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo, a Portuguese navigator in service of Spain, landed at San Diego Bay on September 28, 1542, leading the first European exploration party in what is now the West Coast of the United States. Cabrillo National Monument began as a half-acre authorized in 1913; it now occupies over 140 acres, and includes Old Point Loma Lighthouse. Both lighthouse and Cabrillo National Monument are on the National Register of Historic Places (listings 74000350 and 66000224, respectively).
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Phoebis sennae. The flower is a Salvia of some kind. A few days ago at the Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center in Austin.