View allAll Photos Tagged cucumber
A slice of cucumber with a light source behind it makes an interesting colour and pattern...love it!
Now I have also started a blog, there are two entries in it so far. It will be about photography, creativity and other things. I will have ocassional giveaways and also feature other people's work.
Go and check it out:
June 15, 2018
I think this is a cucumber spider Araniella cucurbitina.
Please help identify.
Brewster, Massachusetts
Cape Cod - USA
Photo by brucetopher
© Bruce Christopher 2018
All Rights Reserved
...always learning - critiques welcome.
Tools: Canon 7D & iPhone 6s.
No use without permission.
Please email for usage info.
Brock actually spent most of his time crawling around the location. Here's one calm moment. Also a moment when other photographers were not all over the picture.
Best viewed in Flickr Lightbox by pressing the letter "L"
The basis for a spectacular summer lunch: cucumber, tomato, & mustard on toast!
Our Daily Challenge: SATURATED COLOR
Fuji GFX/GX680 Hybrid Camera, 115mm GX680 Fujinon
ISO 320, f/22 at 1/125 second
Two ProFoto B10 Strobes
I saw this little Cucumber Green spider today with its web stretched across one of my wife's rhododendron flowers. It was quite patient and waited while I took its photo with its prey at the side.
365/146 - Year 11 Photo 3433
Fruit, leaf and tenril of a Oneseed Cucumber (Sicyos angulatus). Middle Patuxent Environmental Area, Howard County, Maryland.
From Local Kitchen. Total copification of JulieFrick.
I know this looks like every other damn tomato cucumber feta salad that we have all made, but the dressing is actually really nice. I never use red vinegar unless a recipe tells me to. I just forget.
Cucumber Falls is a tall slender waterfall at Ohiopyle Park. Not as big as the huge falls in the town.
It's been a good year for cucumbers in our garden. The seeds seem nuttier and sweeter than I remember.
A male Cucumber Green Spider, either Araniella cucurbitina or A. opistthographa. It requires a detailed examination to determine the exact species.
The usual commercial method of cultivating cucumbers involves the use of mineral (manufactured) fertiliser. However, a study in 2004 by the Department of Environmental Sciences at the University of Kuopio, in Finland (Helvi Heinonen-Tanski, Annalena Sjöblom, Helena Fabritius and Päivi Karinen) shows that pure human urine can be used as more than just a substitute; crop yields compared favorably, and taste and microorganism content did not appear to be negatively affected.
There did appear to be a slight smell when the urine was introduced, but this faded over time. (Source: Wikipedia)