View allAll Photos Tagged native

Since trees were reasonably scarce on the plains of Kansas, ranchers used what was available....native stone.

Captured him while trekking in Jamnamarathur hills near my native. He seems to be pondering over something !!!

 

Have a nice day, friends !!!

  

கொள்ளித்தேள் கொட்டிக் குதிக்கின்ற பேய்க்குரங்காய்க்

கள்ளமனந் துள்ளுவதென் கண்டோ பராபரமே !!!

 

தாயுமானவடிகள் பராபரக்கண்ணி

 

** No appliers, only BOM**

 

- Contains 3 Shades (Faded / Worn / Fresh)

- Bom System (Bake on Mesh)

- Upper Body

- Lower Body

 

For more information just look "About".

Captured 2 days before Christmas.

In the waters around the newly discovered islands there are already some smaller crafts sailing. One common type of vessel is the outrigger canoe, used by the natives for fishing and for travelling between the islands. A number of sightings of these craft have been reported by the early explorers of Oleon. So far the natives seems peaceful…

 

Built for challenge 1, category A in Brethren of the Brick Seas, at Eurobricks.

Canadian First Nations Pow-Wow

Ontario, Canada

Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, Albuquerque

 

indianpueblo.org

My first portrait with the new (to me) Fujifilm XH2S. This camera features a significant leap forward in autofocus, which is why I took this shot with a manual focus lens :P

It's not really spring until I've visited the same woodland. Do you have a friend you only see once a year? I have a bluebell, well a white bluebell bulb I only visit in the spring. For the last six years I've walked the same wood and returned to the same spot and have been very happy to see the same flower looking healthy and well. Photo Kevin Keatley UK, Camera Nikon D800, 300mm, F5, 1/125 sec., ISO 640.

The masked lapwing (Vanellus miles) is a large, common and conspicuous bird native to Australia, particularly the northern and eastern parts of the continent, New Zealand and New Guinea. It spends most of its time on the ground searching for food such as insects and worms, and has several distinctive calls. It is common in Australian fields and open land, and is known for its defensive swooping behaviour during the nesting season.

 

Despite the species being also known as the masked plover and often called the spur-winged plover or just plover in its native range, lapwings are classified to their own subfamily, Vanellinae, and not to the closely related plover subfamily, Charadriinae. There are two subspecies; the nominate subspecies and the southern novaehollandiae, which has distinctive black markings on the shoulder and side of the chest, and is sometimes recognized as a separate species, the black-shouldered lapwing (Vanellus novaehollandiae).

I'm not sure which I have but I know it's a native. The blooms start out white and then can go to a light blue or even purple color.

Welcome to my Instagram if you interested in my works!

www.instagram.com/sco_street/

"flickr lounge" "Everyday Beauty"...native irises in our yard.

Native Columbine growing along the Mt. Baker Loop Highway.

It was said that at one time, a red squirrel could travel the length of the country without touching ground. Now, there are only tiny pockets of those woods left...

A person, who values ​​the beauty of nature and ambient the world, far richer and happier than those, who did not notices this.

 

This is the place where passed my childhood and youth.

on the Taranaki Falls walking track in Tongariro national park

When the blood in your veins returns to the sea,

 

and the earth in your bones returns to the ground,

 

perhaps then you will remember that this land does not belong to you,

 

it is you who belong to this land.

 

Just a small diorama i made yesterday. I made the figure with a Citizen Brick marine head in medium flesh. Takes place in Montana. Enjoy!

 

- Greg

A native falcon enjoying lunch at Jacks Point

A very big leaf being illuminated by the sunshine.

Shortly after Mum died in 2022 I planted over 1000 native daffodils. They are starting to show really well now.

Dicksonia tree fern koru.

New Zealand.

Native blue-banded bee on a Cordyline flower. Many Cordylines come from Hawaii but there are also species native to South America, New Zealand, parts of Asia, New Guinea, the islands of the Pacific, Mauritius and eight species native to Australia. Cordylines come in many colours or combination of colours including many shades of greens, reds, pinks, purples, yellows, oranges, cream and white. The Australian species are mostly green but occasionally variegated forms are found, these are highly prized by collectors. Cordylines have a large range of leaf shapes and sizes with some varieties, with foliage up to a meter long with proportionate width. Some have compact leaves of only a few centimeters in length while others have narrow strap like foliage. (Source: International Cordyline Society)

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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 consent.

The Chevrolet Apache 31 is a pickup truck from the fifties...

I saw this shiny one at the “Bent Axles” 39th Annual July Car Show in Old Orcutt.

I have no idea what this flower is but it seems to be a member of the bottlebrush family so I am guessing it is an Australian Native Plant...Pretty little thing!

Feliz Quinta Flower!

low tide (they're kind of rubbery)

A photo of one of several portraits that are currently displayed at the visiter center, Bandolier National Monument. The National Monument protects over 33,000 acres of ruggedly beautiful canyon and mesa country. Petroglyphs, dwellings carved into the soft rock cliffs, and standing masonry walls pay tribute to the early days of a culture that still survives in the surrounding communities.

 

My guess is that these photographs would be approximately 100+ years old. This is just speculation as my internet searches all came up empty.

 

US National Park Service

Los Alamos, New Mexico

 

Honor the sacred.

Honor the Earth, our Mother.

Honor the Elders.

Honor all with whom we

share the Earth:-

Four-leggeds, two-leggeds,

winged ones,

Swimmers, crawlers,

plant and rock people.

Walk in balance and beauty.

 

Native American Elder

Native Land. Summer.

Nellie Vin ©Photography.

A specimen of the lady finger cactus Mammillaria elongata at the Tucson Botanical Gardens in Tucson, Arizona. Native to central Mexico.

Photo taken at Midnight Sun Intertribal Powwow - Fairbanks, Alaska

 

Alaska Natives, American Indians, and First Nations People of Canada in a powwow setting to share similarities and diversities, to honor the elders, and children, and to educate the general public of the heritage of the indigenous people of North America.

 

© www.myplanetexperience.com

Hardenbergia comptoniana

I decided to do a digital study of the master painter Giuseppe Arcimboldo work "Earth" from 1566. In my version, titled "Native American", I used only local animals. I'm pretty happy with how it came out, hope you like it too!

 

The animals pictured here are: Bear, Sheep, Racoon, Squirrel, Goat, 2 Mountain Lions, 2 Ram, Rabbit, Fox, Mule Deer, Rat, Marmut, Eagle, Bobcat, Moose, 2 Deer, Muskrat, Pronghorn, Bison, Horse, Wolf, Dove, and 2 Mountain Goats.

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