View allAll Photos Tagged feaster
I was looking through my shots from earlier this year and found a previously unseen food channel edition episode. I'm not sure what the migrating lesser yellowlegs caught here.
To “get in the festive mood”.
Ok, this particular feast was before Holiday Season kicked in full-force, but the principle is the same, and the practice has continued. By the way, if you’re ever in Zurich, this place is worth a visit.
Happy Smile on Saturday!
Caper White (Belenois java)
A number of these beauties were feasting on the flowers on Rick's White Cedar Tree yesterday. All were very high up so the birding lens was used.
Happy Wing Wednesday!
The calm of a quiet summers evening suddenly broken with the raucous noises of King parrot's gorging on our conifers again this year.
This raccoon and its family were busy feasting on the berries in this tree. At Markham Nature Park, Concord, California.
Gemeine Rosenkäfer und Trauer-Rosenkäfer auf Feige -
Rose chafer and white spotted rose beetle on fig
African Carder Bee (Pseudoanthidium repetitum)
Spotted on a Seaside Daisy today, in our garden - I usually see them in Kath's garden.
With only the hide and ribs remaining from the bison taken down and killed just an hour earlier, members of the Wapiti Wolf Pack in Yellowstone now look for a place to lie down and rest following their feast.
Common Grass Blue (Zizina labradus)
So intent on feeding it let me get in close.
Happy Eyes of March!
I recently visited Speke Hall National Trust... In the kitchen this Feast was laid out on the great wooden table..... Sadly not real food, what a disappointment
“...an intelligently planned feast is like a summing up of the whole world, where each part is represented by its envoys.”
- Jean-Antheleme Brillat-Savarin (1755-1826)
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Feasting on Goldenrod
The hypnotic eyes of a paper wasp collecting nectar at Springton Manor Farm Park. Technically this was taken handheld using a 180mm macro lens mounted on 57 mm of extension tubes
2016_09_16_EOS 7D_6798_V1
Good morning everyone!
This is a black-backed jackal at the scene of the remains of a wildebeest kill in the Masai Mara in Kenya. It's scanning its environment in hopes nothing bigger comes along to finish the job first.
Everything plays a role in an ecosystem including key scavengers like black-backed jackals.
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Despite taking loads of images of snowdrops from the side I quite like this overhead shot with the plants fighting for space in the clump.
iPhone 13 Pro Max - edit work in Lightroom Classic.
Little Wattlebird (Anthochaera chrysoptera)
There are now four or five Little Wattlebirds in the Grevillea in the next street over. This one was enjoying a feast.
Christmas Feast:
Salami
Bresaola
Ham
Brie
Cloth Matured Cheddar
Chicken, Leek & Truffle Terrine
Orange and Brandy Chicken Liver Pate
Cashew Nuts
Apricot Coconut Bites
Chocolate coated Sultanas
Sliced Tomato
Boiled Eggs
Grapes
Strawberries
Assortment of breads, lavosh and crackers
We should act like an adult, but always have the child's heart.
Bees are known to produce honey, beeswax, propolis and pollen. Also the precious royal jelly and even your poison, used in apitherapy. Striped black and yellow bees are part of the collective imagination because they are commonly portrayed in drawings and children's books. And there are those who only remember the bees for the sweet honey of her or the pain of their bite.
“Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life.
It turns what we have into enough, and more.
It turns denial into acceptance,
chaos to order, confusion to clarity.
It can turn a meal into a feast,
a house into a home, a stranger into a friend.
Gratitude makes sense of our past,
brings peace for today,
and creates a vision for tomorrow.”
- Melody Beattie
Western tanagers, Piranga ludoviciana, descended onto my cotoneaster hedge to feast on the small, super-abundant flowers.
I am chagrined by the unnecessarily wary behavior of these gorgeous birds. I assure you that there is nothing threatening in my behavior or appearance, but as soon as they spy me, they fly.
The RED fruit is the result of the Saguaro Blossom having been pollinated and called by many "Saguaro Tuna." Birds are perched on top of most of the Saguaros during this time of year feasting on the fruit. Then they fly off and deposit seeds. After birds eat most of the fruit the remainder falls to the ground and rabbits, coyotes, etc. eat it and also deposit seeds around the mountain sides. This photo was taken about 30 minutes before sunset.
Memories of the Five Musketeers, a coalition of 5 cheetahs who have took the Maasai Mara by storm. They are not all siblings as 2 are brothers from one mother and the other 3 are siblings from another and they all joined together to form the ultimate coalition. They hunt much bigger prey than single cheetahs, as there are many more mouths to feed, and also it becomes easier to pull down bigger prey when hunting in a bigger group. They have been seen hunting zebra, wildebeest, Hartebeest successfully.
One of the Five Musketeers captured after a successful Topi hunt during a Photography safari on an late evening game drive in the Maasai Mara Game Reserve, Kenya.