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Images from visit to eagle nest and Lippold Park in Batavia, IL
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Artwork designed by Magnús Tómasson. Located outside the terminal at Keflavik Airport
This is just one of many photos I took during my drive around Iceland in the summer of 2014. You can read all about the adventure on my blog at www.baldheretic.com/category/travel/drive-across-iceland-...
Bull Ants Myrmecia sp. clearing or extending nest after rain, leaving a 50cm runway of finely graded soil crumbs
Tamborine Mtn QLD AU
The dark area in the lower right is the Bald Eagle nest at Jackson Bottom Wetlands Preserve, Hillsboro, Oregon.
I took this picture with my new Canon FS200 Video Recorder using the single image mode on maximum zoom. The quality leaves a little to be desired.
This was taken by my wife during her recent visit to India. The bird (red-whiskered bulbul) had build a nest on a lamp shade.
Nest (covered around with a layer) found in my attic (there are more than 10 older nests). Those nest are mainly from the wasp called Dolichovespula Saxonic. If you want one, just wait one year. They will leave it end of September and they will never return to it. Those wasps are very useful and are not aggressive at all (except if you shake the nest ;-)).
Découpe d'un nid aérien de la guêpe (il y a des couches de "papiers mâchés"): Dolichovespula Saxonic. C'est une guêpe courante dans nos régions (ici la Gaume, Belgique) qui est fort utile... si vous voyez un nid comme cela dans votre grenier, n'ayez pas peur. Elles ne restent qu'une petite période (entre le printemps et l'automne) et quittent le nid à l'entrée de l'automne.
The nest hung under a leaf. There were two wasps working on it.
Fired just the flash unit first from a safe distance before using the camera. Had to make sure it wouldn't get disturbed and want use its business end on my fleeing bottom :)
Tamron 90mm at f/22, 1/200s, ISO 100.
Lighting: Vivitar 285 at 1/4 power reflected on a piece of white paper. Handheld camera and flash.
the birds have been really confused with mild weather this year...these eagles have started building their nest quite early this year...the picture was taken at Blackwater Wildlife Refuge 4 days ago...it was a cloudy evening and not the best conditions for taking great photographs...
I don't remember there being quite as many Osprey nests along the shoreline at Occoquan last year. Going to have to dust off the Kayak.
Nature isn't always fair, or even kind. Today when we went out to do some yard work, Steve noticed a baby bird laying on the dirveway near the nest. My worst fear was soon confirmed - the nest was empty, and likely raided by jays. I picked up the baby, thinking it was dead... but after a few minutes it began wriggling in my hand. So, hubby son and daughter soon went hunting for worms to make a paste mash and feed it by eyedropper. We did this for 5 hrs, every hour or so...leaving the baby in the nest in between and hoping mom would return to it. It was a feeble attempt at best...but it was all we could think to do. She never came. We prepared an incubator for the night...but when we went to retrieve the baby, sadly, it was not to be...
Keely and I buried it in a sunny place in the garden, beneath a beautiful flower...
These twig and stick nests persist through the winter until the cormorant's return in the spring. This nest is adjacent to the Klein WPA of the Kulm Wetland Management District in McIntosh County, North Dakota.
Photo Credit: Krista Lundgren/USFWS
In 1911, Baron von Steinhel, a Baltic German noble who had made a fortune extracting oil in Baku, acquired the timber cottage and within a year had it replaced by the current building.[3] The Scottish baronial and Neo-Moorish styles had been introduced in the Crimea in the 1820s by Edward Blore, the architect of the Alupka Palace (1828-46).
Jerez, Spain. We were visiting the Sandeman winery in Jerez Spain when I noticed this Sorks' nest on top of one of their buildings. I guess they like being near the production of the Sherry that Sandeman is famous for.
Looks like the beginning of some sort of hornet's hive or nest. I found it on the sidewalk today--maybe blown there from its original spot by the recent winds. I thought it looked unoccupied, so I brought it home--very carefully, as it is paper thin and fragile.
This eagle nest is 3/4 of a mile west of the junction of Oregon highway 6 and Oregon 47 at Banks. This is on the south side of Oregon 6. There are most likely eggs in the nest and this one of the pair was standing guard. There was no eagle actually in the nest.
The nest looks about 2 years old. It is amazing that an eagle pair would build there nest right next to the highway. This is the main road between Portland and Tillamook and gets a lot of traffic.