View allAll Photos Tagged hover

Family Archive - slides that belonged to my grandparents. This slide is dated September 1971. The boat carries the title "Hoverservice" - location unknown.

Episyrphus balteatus. I've plenty of these in my garden at the moment but not much else in the way of hover flies.

Hoverflies, (family Syrphidae) also called flower fly, or syrphid fly they are a member of a family that contains about 6,000 species world wide. Their various common names refer to the behavior of hovering around flowers. Hoverflies, with their yellow markings, resemble wasps or bees but do not bite or sting. Adults are 4-10 mm long and have dark flattened bodies with black and yellow markings. During flight, they move in a characteristic way. As their name suggests, they hover over objects but will also dart to and fro. The immature hoverfly looks like a maggot and can grow up to 10 mm long. The larvae hunts by touch.

South Pambula NSW

olympus pen lite 5 + 14-42mm + fisheye converter.

olympus trip 35

kodak ektar 100

Is this a Tapered Drone Fly??

Flowers to the rescue, again....

 

Had shot these yesterday morning as the sun was coming up and cast a beautiful backlight on these flowers.

 

However, I had no intention of making these my "shot of the day".

 

Had some friends coming over for a grill out later in the evening, and I had a few fireworks light painting ideas in mind. But, after I did a couple of test shots on my daughter to show what my idea was, the other kids freaked out and wanted nothing to do with it... they were getting impatient to light the fireworks on their own..

 

After everybody had left, I was too tired to upload these flower shots.. and thus doing it now.

 

So, despite being a bit disappointed not to be able to do the light painting shots, it ws a fun evening... lots of beer consumption and good yummy food.

 

Anyhow, need to get out and shoot some other stuff today.

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.

Hovering above the cliffs looking for a spot to land on.

Triple Crown trailers always look to me as if they're hovering a few inches off the rails. Their road wheels are, at least!

Hover Fly on a Red Zinnia. See Large if you like!

Northern Harrier

Two Westland Sea King helicopters of the Commando Helicopter Force hovering above the crowd at the end of the RNAS Yeovilton Air Day finale.

Close up image of a Hover Fly

OLYMPUS XZ-1 / Flying (Hovering) Dragonfly

It is difficult to photo the insect which is flying in compact digital camera.

Movement is too early and cannot catch the dragonfly in the Auto Focus by compact digital camera.

I observed a dragonfly and noticed the following things.

The dragonfly has a habit to stop to the same branch repeatedly.

Therefore focused the dragonfly which stopped to a branch in a Manual Focus and waited for a dragonfly to fly away.

After having flown away, I pressed the shutter at the moment when the dragonfly returned to the same branch.

(Since I am poor at English, a comment is described using translation software in many cases.

There may be a strange part in description.

Please forgive. :-)  )

Hovering in preparation to eat, this is one beautiful Stripe-throated Hermit Hummingbird. This picture was taken in the rain of the Los Ángeles Cloud Forest Reserve in Costa Rica.

 

I have finally worked my way through all my hummer pictures from Costa Rica, so we will take a break now. Looking back, I see that there were seven different species that I was able to identify. I think there were a couple more that I didn't get very good quality pictures of. The species we saw were:

• Green-crowned Brilliant

• Purple-throated Mountaingem

• Violet Sabrewing

• Coppery-headed Emerald

• Green Violetear

• Violet-crowned Woodnymph

• Stripe-throated Hermit

 

The conclusion - if you want to photograph hummingbirds, Costa Rica is a very good place to go. If I ever go again, I will be much better prepared with lighting, as that is one of the big challenges. The second challenge, as with all BIF shots, is focus as these little birds dart around so quickly. All-in-all, while I can see a bunch of ways I could have done better, I am not unhappy with the results.

Platycheirus sp. Probarbly P. manicatus

 

Found this beautiful hoverfly resting on a blade of grass. I nudged blade to get a Dandelion as a background. That woke the hover up but I managed to snap a few shots before it took off.

 

View larger!

Multiple phots stiched to make the one.

Hover Fly on the move

hover details on Trulia map

This hover bike was announced on Lugnet in 2005 (http://news.lugnet.com/announce/moc/?n=2571). It was inspired by a design by Elroy Davis.

Hummingbird hovering by feeder behind the visitor center on Sandia Crest, at 10,678' above sea level, northeast of Albuquerque, NM. At one point there were 5 or 6 of these energetic birds buzzing all around us.

Chasing and eating aphids. They look a little like small caterpillars and they are hungry! Photo Jean

 

The personal hover car of the Blacktron III overlord.

 

BA used: 3 u-clips, 2 monopods, and 1 apoc smg.

A hover car. The idea here was to create a vehicle using the four round and grey technic pieces for the engines.

This fly could hover, fly forward and fly backward.

 

It sat down and I photographed it.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/jean_hort/2918090599/

Soon after my conversation with the raven I ducked down to a more sheltered part of the Marwick Head cliff face. Only on this day it was far from sheltered as can be seen by this fulmar hovering and playing at being a kestral. It needed its wings held high - any lower and it would have been swept away.

There must have been a competition that day because one after another these fulmers had a go at hovering like this with varying degrees of success. On a less windy day they would be showing off swooping around the cliff tops.

Hoverflies, sometimes called flower flies or syrphid flies, make up the insect family Syrphidae. As their common name suggests, they are often seen hovering or nectaring at flowers; the adults of many species feed mainly on nectar and pollen, while the larvae (maggots) eat a wide range of foods. In some species, the larvae are saprotrophs, eating decaying plant and animal matter in the soil or in ponds and streams. In other species, the larvae are insectivores and prey on aphids, thrips, and other plant-sucking insects.

Diptera : Syrphidae

There are about 6000 described species of Hover flies in the world. Most of these flies are very small and difficult to spot, but some species are large, and when they hover near a flower they produce a buzzing sound. Because of their colorful stripped appearance and buzzing sound many people think these are bees or wasps. Many Hover flies are important pollinators of flowers, and predators of insect pests, such as aphids.

Parque Chicaque, Colombia

Nov 18, 2010

A hover fly image from today. Quite pleased with this one although would have liked slightly more DOF.

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