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Merci beaucoup à tous pour votre gentil commentaire et vos favoris très appréciés - bien cordialement ! au plaisir !
Thank you very much to all for your kind comment and your very appreciated favorites - well cordially - au plaisir -
Herzlichen Dank an alle für Ihren freundlichen Kommentar und Ihre beliebten Favoriten - herzlich! zum Vergnügen !
This is a thank you to everyone who has been so kind and supportive, I really appreciate it , in fact I've been overwhelmed by your wonderful words. To be kind is by Swans, and Flickr is such a positive influence, and I'd like to show a reflection to reflect back your love and kindness. Thanks so much , Paul :))
Die Wasseramsel ist wegen ihrer guten Tarnung nicht leicht zu finden, aber sie ist ortsgebunden und deshalb immer wieder an den selben Stellen zu sehen.
The dipper is not easy to find because of its good camouflage, but it is tied to a specific location and can therefore be seen over and over again in the same places.
Thank you very much for all your visits, faves and
kind comments! Much appreciated!
at least I think so because of the red stamens who remain after the petals have fallen, anyway giving a different view
Happy Quinta Flower/Flor 😊😊😍
Thank you for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day! ❤️❤️❤️
thank you very much for your kind comment!!!and fav!
merci beaucoup pour vos gentils commentaires!!!et fav!
One Yellow Rose
Jeff Victor
www.youtube.com/watch?v=eRah1Vxsby0
With heartfelt and genuine thanks for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day, be well, keep your eyes open, appreciate the beauty surrounding you, enjoy creating, stay safe and laugh often! ❤️❤️❤️
I am inspired by many things. Musically by the genius of Miles Davis, hence my title which refers to, IMHO, one of the best jazz albums of all time. Likewise I come to Flickr for photographic inspiration. My views on photography and indeed the many genres of photography that I attempt have been heavily influenced by so many talented people here on Flickr. One of them is Joseph Pearson Images, a London architectural photographer who has photographed so many of the same buildings and structures around London that I have but both of us do it in our own way. Its always interesting for me to see his take on a building that I am very familiar with myself and see what his 'eye' picked out. Usually it's something I've missed and so my education continues!
Yesterday Joseph posted a picture of one of my favourite underground stations here in London, Southwark station, and it got me looking back at some of the pictures I've taken over the years in this most photogenic of stations. I was surprised to see that I'd never posted this escalator shot so thought I'd do so now. Taken pre-covid, way back in 2019.
Once in a blue moon... actually, this is a "blue moon" because its the second full moon within a calendar month, which doesn't strike me as something all that interesting. What IS nice is when moonrise coincides with sunset and you get this kind of beautiful lighting.
The stony beach where I have come for years, was suddenly covered with hundreds of columns of balanced stones.Amazing view!
Explore Oct 5 2010 #235
Thank you for visit and kind comments and invites,so appreciated!
The kind of Lupine that grows in Iceland is the Alaskan Lupine (Lupinus Nootkatensis). Every single Lupine plant in the country is here because of one person.
In 1945, a committee was set up to revegetate areas of Iceland. A representative of the committee, Hákon Bjarnason, took a trip to Alaska to select plants he thought would do well in the harsh Icelandic landscape.
On November 3, 1945, he arrived home with his collection of seeds, and the story of the Lupine began.
I often see four Nankeen Night-Herons perched high in a tree at Blue Waters Lake Reserve on my walk.
Many thanks for your visits, kind comments and faves, very much appreciated.
making lumens
a fern frond and some kind of grassy clump of something.
almost done with the deconstruction of my birthday bouquet.
lumen, kodak kodabromine paper, expired 6/80
The (nearly) Halloween Blue Moon of 2020 above Earth's shadow with night approaching, held up by a spruce spire.
The male of the species, in its breeding plumage.
MANY THANKS FOR YOUR KIND COMMENTS AND FAVS........TAKE A LOOK AT MY PHOTOSTREAM, FOR GENERAL PHOTOS OF NATURE AND WILDLIFE.
Created for Kreative People TT239 challenge.
Entered to Explore Worthy, Challenge 122 - Your 2020 Favorite.
(Winner - 1st pl)
Source images 1 Here and 2 Here with thanks, from abstractartangel77.
Other images, my own. Purchased.
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© All rights reserved. This image may not be copied, reproduced, distributed, republished, downloaded, displayed, posted or transmitted in any form or by any means, including electronic, mechanical, photocopying & recording without my written permission. Thanks.
~ Thank you for visiting my photostream, for the invites, faves, awards and kind words. It's all much appreciated. ~
Untitled because I don't now what kind of flower they are. But they sure are pretty.
I am not a "flower photographer", but I do enjoy the challenge of getting a good flower shot.
Oh baby
Oh man
You're making me crazy
Really driving me mad
That's all right with me
It's really no fuss
As long as you're next to me
Just the two of us
You're my, my, my, my kind of woman
My, oh my, what a girl
You're my, my, my, my kind of woman
And I'm down on my hands and knees
Begging you please, baby
Show me your world
Oh brother
Sweetheart
I'm feeling so tired
Really falling apart
And it just don't make sense to me
I really don't know
Why you stick right next to me
Or wherever I go
You're my, my, my, my kind of woman
My, oh my, what a girl
You're my, my, my, my kind of woman
And I'm down on my hands and knees
Begging you please, baby
Show me your world
I have been spending some late afternoon, early evening time in a pretty secluded spot on the Lake - bugs of many kinds all over me - trying to locate the Pied-billed Grebe, and watching for any other activity. If one sits still enough, long enough, something is bound to happen…
These very young Wood Ducks ambled onshore and were completely oblivious to me, at least initially. The female with them stayed on the water in a supervisory capacity. Eventually a few of them noticed me, and I slowly brought up my camera while going from sitting to lying down, all in an effort not to spook them. The little photo bomber in the bottom right seemed full of beans, and they stayed for a couple of minutes, before re-entering the water.
There are often three or four sets of Wood Duck young on the water at this time of the year. I especially enjoyed the brief interaction with these ones as I had to misfortune to see a similarly-young duck caught by a Snapping Turtle a couple of weeks ago. Initially I didn’t understand the screaming and thrashing, but with binoculars I ended up figuring it out. It took a while to get that out of my head - I know predation is all around in natural settings, but that was a really unpleasant experience. These guys - who I know may suffer the same fate - cheered me up for the few minutes they were there.
Sometimes you can almost smell the coming rain, even if the sun is burning down.
Happy Fence Friday!
The fencing which is almost everywhere in Scotland is partly responsible for the regeneration of the Scots Pine woodland as it prevents the deer from grazing the young trees. There's a constant battle between deer farming for hunting and regeneration and rewilding in the highlands. There needs to be far more of this kind of control in my opinion to give the highlands back to the forests and its wildlife.
The track eventually leads to Britain's remotist Youth Hostel.