View allAll Photos Tagged maple
Japanese maple at Shiojiri Gardens, Mishawaka, Indiana; Sony A7RII with Meyer-Optik Trioplan 100/2.8
Not too many sunny days recently here in Empingham and this Norway Maple has started to turn to autumn but with the forecast of more and more rain and wind over the next week or so, i may not get any decent chances of any more autumnal images.
We will be seeing a lot of these fall to the ground tomorrow, as we are receiving our first freeze of the season tonight.
Maple leaf on a piece of 19th century timber frame. Lit with natural light.
Jefferson, Wisconsin, USA
My Japanese maple has very well since planting it three years ago. I caught it this day with the sun coming through the leaves.
There is definitely a chill in the air, and last weekend there was a beautiful coating of frost on the leaves of this Maple tree in our back yard
Lake Yamanaka, Fuji 5 Lakes
Autumn festival
山中湖・夕焼けの渚 紅葉まつり
The lighting maple of the beginning of this month.
今月初めの紅葉ライトアップより。
Yamanakako-mura, Yamanashi pref, Japan
Here in the north, maple is not so common, only here & there, but they turn colour first, fiercy red, which is so fantasticly beautiful.
Same island, near Oslo.
The fall colors are insane this year, if only the leaves would stay on the trees longer :-)
This is straight from my camera, no manipulation...just a little crop.
Happy Wednesday!
Golden hour capture looking through the maple at the setting sun. Peak colours at Rockcliffe park 16 October 2012
This leaf was fluttering in the wind, and several shots missed. But the glowing back light was irrisistible.
Kubota Garden has a number of Japanese Maples planted before the garden was transferred to the city of Seattle. Most are quite large. The garden has been a public park since 1987. I go and check on them a couple times a year.
We don't have the glorious Maple leaves that some parts of Canada have, that turn a rich red in the fall. Our fall colours are mainly yellow with an occasional splash of orange. There are two species here that I sometimes see that remind me of what we are missing - wild Gooseberry and the plant/shrub that is in this photo. I'm not sure what it is, but perhaps some kind of currant bush? Just a quick shot, taken on 20 September 2014, when I was walking along the path to see the family of Beavers. I haven't been there for quite some time, so I hope all is well with them.
I actually got out on a birding walk yesterday morning, a rare thing for me these days. We walked along the path in South Glenmore Park, overlooking the Glenmore Reservoir. We found only 20 species of bird, mainly the usual ones such as Chickadees, Crows, Ravens, Coots, Robins, and Nuthatches. However, we were lucky enough to see an immature Pacific Loon that was out in the middle of the reservoir. Then it disappeared and, for a brief couple of seconds, reappeared somewhat closer to us. I was able to get just one 48x zoomed shot, heavily cropped, that I might post sometime, as that was my first "proper" sighting of a Pacific Loon. So amazing to see how long these Loons can stay underwater and then reappear such a long distance away. We also were treated to two Common Loons that flew overhead. Though we saw so few birds and bird species, it was a beautiful, sunny morning, with temperatures of 10°C to 16°C.