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Explore : February 3, 2008

The paw of Rubio.

 

Posted for the Macro Mondays theme "Dutch Angle".

Spring is finally here! Amusement park season has started!

 

Non-commercial use allowed when name of photographer is mentioned. No derivative works allowed.

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Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 2.0

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If you find my work worth using, please humor me and read my About section!

 

Unfortunately many people take using photos they found online very lightly and disregard (or are unaware of) the fact that most of it is copyright protected and using it may have conditions or be completely disallowed. Before you use my photos, I ask that you read my About page so that we're both on the same page and avoid all the headaches that result from license violations and copyright infringements.

Out of sight. Rarely passed. Worried and worn and flailed by the wind and rain of middle Ireland. Fading.

In the neighbor's backyard, to my right.

 

Posted for the Happy Caturday theme "Brand-New Photo Taken in 2025", 2025, January 4th.

 

I wish you all a wonderful and very Happy Caturday !!

 

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This week, I would like to think of Annette (annette.allor) and send her the best wishes.

I don't see her among the members of "Happy Caturday" but I remember that she has posted sometimes photos in the group.

She lost her brave Kakashi this week after more than 20 years living happy with her. She is devastated ❤.

Qué alto es este pájaro!!

Parc Natural de S'Albufera

Lion relaxing at the Santa Barbara Zoo

 

Santa Barbara, California

another from yesterday morning

A Californian Ground Squirrel on sentry duty this evening. They're really common where I live, about the size of a grey squirrel, they live communally in underground burrows. They sound a bit like birds chirping when they call the alarm, which it was doing when I took the picture.

 

Today is day 52 of Project 365.

Wonderful boattrip through Geikie Gorge.

Castle Stalker, Scotland.

 

Castle Stalker is a tower house set on a tidal islet on Loch Laich, an inlet of Loch Linnhe. It is about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north-east of Port Appin, Argyll, Scotland, and is visible from the A828 road about midway between Oban and GlenCoe. The islet is accessible (with difficulty) from the shore at low tide. The island castle is one of the best-preserved medieval tower-houses to survive in western Scotland.

In recent times, the castle was brought to fame by the Monty Python team, appearing in their film Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

 

Wikipedia

The sights of the city cannot be seen, and

Its sounds only faint, as

The fisherman wades.

 

A great blue heron, on (in)...

 

Postal Pond

Decatur (Legacy Park), Georgia, USA.

15 December 2020.

 

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▶ Photo by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.

▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).

— Follow on Twitter: @Cizauskas.

— Follow on Facebook: YoursForGoodFermentables.

— Follow on Instagram: @tcizauskas.

▶ Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M10 II.

▶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.

some a bit past it, but overall so full of Spring oomph energy!

 

Shonen Knife - Sheena is a Punk Rocker

www.youtube.com/watch?v=EDz0FKEJYRM

Another shot from a late night meeting.

 

We have offices on Pier 9 in San Francisco. An odd camera shot from the conference room with lots of inside reflections.

 

Pretty sad that two of my shots this week are from meeting rooms.

 

Today is day 195 of Project 365 (Wednesday).

A swallow takes a brief rest along the Sonoma Port Marina. Our temperatures surged today, well to into the 90's F. I guess it is summer already.

All that's left is stubble where two days ago stood the heavy headed wheat.

going to be a very weird Christmas this year

 

arachtober 27

DOWNLOAD HERE

 

Check out my website: my photos on canvas

 

This image by Jeff S. PhotoArt is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License

 

Feel free to use this image on your blog, for fun and the like but you must:

1. Link the image to Flickr.

2. Give credit to: Jeff S. PhotoArt at HDCanvas.ca.

 

Follow Me On: Facebook Pinterest Instagram Google+ 500PX Twitter

 

Photo Inquiry: Click here ................ Buy Art At: FineArtAmerica

West Coast National Park

This image by Jeff S. PhotoArt is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License

 

Check out my website: my photos on canvas

 

Feel free to use this image on your blog, for fun and the like but you must:

1. Link the image to Flickr.

2. Give credit to: Jeff S. PhotoArt at HDCanvas.ca.

 

Follow Me On: Facebook Pinterest Instagram Google+ 500PX Twitter

 

Photo Inquiry: Click here ................ Buy Art At: FineArtAmerica

 

The Muskegon South Pierhead Light is a steel tapered cylindrical tower located at the west end of the south pier at the entry channel that connects Muskegon Lake with Lake Michigan. The light tower was constructed in 1903 and remains an active navigational light. .

     

As all the pictures in my gallery, this is a FREE picture. You can download it and do whatever you want with it: share it, adapt it and/or combine it with other material and distribute the resulting works.

 

I’d very much appreciate if you give photo credits to “Carlos ZGZ” when you use this picture. This would help me find it and add it to my photoset “Used elsewhere”.

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Como todas las imágenes de mi galería, esta es una imagen LIBRE. Puedes descargarla y hacer lo que quieras con ella: compartirla tal cual, modificarla y/o combinarla con otro material y distribuir el resultado.

 

Por favor, si utilizas esta imagen, dale el crédito a “Carlos ZGZ”. De esta manera podré encontrarla fácilmente y añadirla a mi álbum “Used elsewhere”.

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This picture has been used here:

writeronfire.wordpress.com/2016/09/06/dashiell-hammett-a-...

 

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Photo by Frank N. Thomsen. License: Creative Commons CC-BY-SA 4.0 (details: creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/)

West Coast National Park

These mushrooms popped up out of nowhere next to my parking space this autumn. They looked so nice I had to snap a photo of them.

 

This edit is completely out of my style and comfort zone, so any kind of feedback is welcome.

 

Non-commercial use allowed when name of photographer is mentioned. No derivative works allowed.

_______________

Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 2.0

_______________

 

If you find my work worth using, please humor me and read my About section!

 

Unfortunately many people take using photos they found online very lightly and disregard (or are unaware of) the fact that most of it is copyright protected and using it may have conditions or be completely disallowed. Before you use my photos, I ask that you read my About page so that we're both on the same page and avoid all the headaches that result from license violations and copyright infringements.

The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has observation time devoted to Saturn each year, thanks to the Outer Planet Atmospheres Legacy (OPAL) program, and the dynamic gas giant planet always shows us something new. This latest image heralds the start of Saturn's "spoke season" with the appearance of two smudgy spokes in the B ring, on the left in the image.

 

The spokes are enigmatic features which appear across Saturn’s rings. Their presence and appearance varies with the seasons — like Earth, Saturn is tilted on its axis and therefore has four seasons. With Saturn's much larger orbit, each season lasts approximately seven Earth years. Equinox occurs when the rings are tilted edge-on to the Sun and marks the height of spokes’ visibility, while during a solstice when the Sun is at its highest or lowest latitude, the spokes disappear.

 

The shape and shading of spokes varies — they can appear light or dark, depending on the viewing angle, and sometimes appear more like blobs than classic radial spoke shapes, as seen here. The ephemeral features don't last long, but as the planet's autumnal equinox approaches on 6 May 2025, more will appear.

 

Scientists will be looking for clues to explain the cause and nature of the spokes. It's suspected they are caused by interaction between Saturn's magnetic field and the solar wind, which also causes aurorae to appear on the planet. The hypothesis is that spokes are the smallest, dust-sized, icy ring particles being temporarily electrically charged and levitated, but this has not been confirmed.

 

Saturn's last equinox occurred in 2009, while the NASA/ESA/ASI Cassini spacecraft was orbiting the gas giant planet for close-up reconnaissance. With Cassini's mission completed in 2017, Hubble is continuing the work of long-term monitoring of changes on Saturn and the other outer planets.

 

[Image description: A close-up image of the planet Saturn. The rings are level with the viewer, and tilted slightly down.]

 

Credits: ESA/Hubble, NASA & A. Simon, A. Pagan (STScI); CC BY 4.0

 

A field of sunflowers, near Winters, California.

This image of a female Anna's Hummingbird hit the sweet spot of my lens with the tree of green leaves and gaps of sky for cool background color and effect.

The lazily winding spiral arms of the spectacular galaxy NGC 976 fill the frame of this image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. This spiral galaxy lies around 150 million light-years from the Milky Way in the constellation Aries. Despite its tranquil appearance, NGC 976 has played host to one of the most violent astronomical phenomena known — a supernova explosion. These cataclysmicly violent events take place at the end of the lives of massive stars, and can outshine entire galaxies for a short period. While supernovae mark the deaths of massive stars, they are also responsible for the creation of heavy elements that are incorporated into later generations of stars and planets.

 

Supernovae are also a useful aid for astronomers who measure the distances to faraway galaxies. The amount of energy thrown out into space by supernova explosions is very uniform, allowing astronomers to estimate their distances from how bright they appear to be when viewed from Earth. This image — which was created using data from Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 — comes from a large collection of Hubble observations of nearby galaxies which host supernovae as well as a pulsating class of stars known as Cepheid variables. Both Cepheids and supernovae are used to measure astronomical distances, and galaxies containing both objects provide useful natural laboratories where the two methods can be calibrated against one another.

 

Credits: ESA/Hubble & NASA, D. Jones, A. Riess et al.; CC BY 4.0

A stream on the side of Mount Hood. From our trip in Oregon.

Image by © TSEPSUR

 

Esta obra es publicada bajo una

licencia Creative Commons</a

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