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I hope I am forgiven for posting so many pictures of this flower in a row. But they are here only for a very short time and it is my favorite flower.
Thanks to everyone who takes the time to view, comment, and fave my photo.
A Starry Cluster (Dandelion) taken in a Wild Garden in West Wales
[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)
😄 HaPpY Sliders Sunday 😄
Tweaked Exposure, enhanced contrast and saturation, and framed it using the Flickr Photo Editor
and uploaded for the
ƒ/4.0
4.5 mm
1/800 Sec
ISO 100
It's that time of year again... wine making time! Happy new week my friends, pour yourself a glass & enjoy =)
Thanks to Wayne Hicks for ID.
Thank you all who fave and comment on my photo'/video's,much appreciated.And thank you all for looking.
“Fungi constitute the most poorly understood and underappreciated kingdom of life on Earth.” — Michael Pollan
Back to Smuggler Cove and a treasure hunt for another chest of gems. This time it is the discovery of a cluster of Lilly pads floating in the shadows. Their greenish hue is further enhanced by the deep blue in the water and the black shadows from the surrounding trees that grow in the bog.
They almost shimmer in the reflected light and remind me that landscape photography can be a matter of discovery, rather than time of day.
For years I have wanted Beautyberry growing in my yard. But life, weather and insects conspired against me ... until now!
The colors... grape green to deep magenta! The songs of visiting birds! Last years bushes are now in full fruit and their spaced clusters of berries are ripening from green to pinky purple. Even the veins of the leaves have a purplish tint. I love the texture of the edge of the tiny leaf above the green berry cluster in this image. And the deep hazy purple tones in the background.
American beautyberry (Callicarpa americana)
Also called French mulberry
Biscayne Park, FL
These small gills fungi grow in large clumps on stumps, dead roots or rotten trunks on broadleaved trees.
Well I haven't seen the sun for six consecutive days, it's quite depressing ! They say April showers bring May flowers but what do May showers bring ??? Anyway water drops appears to be the theme for a little while longer, hope all of you are well :-))
Nikon nikkor 105mm f2.8 AIs
“You cannot eat a cluster of grapes at once, but it is very easy if you eat them one by one.”
Jacques Roumain
DSCN2681-003
A real gem in the night sky, this globular star cluster is M13 (13th entry in Charles Messier's catalogue of deep sky objects), the Great Hercules Cluster in the northern hemisphere sky. It is visible to the naked eye as a fuzzy patch of light under a clear, dark sky. Located about 25,000 light-years away from Earth, this globular cluster is made up of several hundred thousand stars and occupies a region of space that measures around 150 light-years in diameter. The stars of M13 are about 12 billion years old, an age comparable to the age of the Universe itself (about 13.7 billion years).
Look at it with a small telescope and the view is filled with countless sparkling stars. With larger telescopes and in deep exposures the tremendous number of stars becomes evident. One can only imagine the view from a hypothetical planet around a star close to the center of M13, a night sky filled with thousands of stars brighter than the brightest stars in our own night sky.
The faint 12th-magnitude galaxy NGC 6207 can be seen below and to the left of M13. It is a spiral galaxy located about 40 million light years away that appears by chance close to M13. Between M13 and NGC 6207 lies another smaller and fainter galaxy - IC 4617, which is more than 10 times farther away than NGC 6207. Can you spot it?
Telescope: Orion EON ED 80/500 refractor
Mount: Modified Vixen Sphinx (NexSXW)
Camera: Canon EOS 20Da
Light frames: 28 x 3 minutes (total: 84 minutes), ISO 1600, Daylight WB, calibrated with darks
Guiding: Skywatcher 80/400 refractor, Skywatcher Synguider autoguider
Date & Location: 3/5/2019 - Chalkidiki, Greece
Processing: DSS 4.1.1, Adobe Photoshop CS6 with Astronomy Tools Actions Set (spikes added to the brightest stars)
Located on the outskirts of Aomori, Japan, at the foot of the Hakkoda Mountains, Seiryū-ji (青龍寺) Temple has extensive beautiful grounds and buildings. It's famous for having the largest colossal seated bronze figure of Buddha in Japan. Many of the paths are lined with flowers, I believe this a type of hydrangea that has a cluster of small blossoms surrounded by larger ones.