View allAll Photos Tagged hover
A hoverfly enjoys the sweet nectar from our Spyridium scortechinii plants. Happy Beautiful Bug Butt Thursday, everyone! [Lower Blue Mountains, NSW]
Macro shot of Hover fly using Sony A7M2 and Oshiro 60mm macro lens for canon adapted to sony.
Handheld and manual focus.
The lens is about £150 and adapter £15 so really pleased with the results.
The personal hover car of the Blacktron III overlord.
BA used: 3 u-clips, 3 monopods, and 1 apoc smg.
The personal hover car of the Blacktron III overlord.
BA used: 3 u-clips, 3 monopods, and 1 apoc smg.
I used a monopod to make a safety brake.
Paused, millimetres away from destruction, hovering in a frozen window of time. It's short life flashing before it in a burst of flash, and clunk of the shutter :P
Wingfoot One hovers slightly over its landing spot at its Wingfoot Lake base in Suffield, Ohio. The blimp was christened here on August 23, 2014.
Hovering over something on the dunes at Moruya Heads. It dropped down and stayed down. I eventually investigated and when it leapt into the air, I found a dead rat in the grass. PH FM
Hover-taxi I built 5-6 years ago and never got around to photographing before. The Fifth Element movie was obviously a big influence on the design.
I haven't changed or updated it since it was built. If I was doing it today there are some changes I'd make.
I know it's blurry but he was running across the parking lot to me and it was just too funny not to share.
This may look familiar to some....the game Hover from the Windows 95 days.
I was glad to discover that is works fine on Windows XP.
Woo hoo :-)
Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation HH-60G Pave Hawk from the 56th Rescue Squadron (RQS) lifts from the SAR dispersal at RAF Lossiemouth on April 16th 2013. JOLLY 11 (A6206) completes its hover checks before heading off for SAR Box-2.
Copyright Terry Eve Photography 2016
Terry Eve Photography (Including Moira) now available for Weddings, Graduations, Special Occasions, Children, Commercial, and Pet pictures in and around Scotland UK
terryeve71@yahoo.com (Flickr Mail)
The purple sunbird (Cinnyris asiaticus) is a small sunbird. Like other sunbirds they feed mainly on nectar, although they will also take insects, especially when feeding young. They have a fast and direct flight and can take nectar by hovering like a hummingbird but often perch at the base of flowers. The males appear all black except in some lighting when the purple iridescence becomes visible. Females are olive above and yellowish below.