View allAll Photos Tagged netting
to keep the birds out of the berries ... Bullocks' Permaculture Homestead
Orcas Island
890 Channel Rd
Deer Harbor, WA 98243
(360) 376-2773
We took the horses down to ferring beach on sunday. The wind down there was terrible, so taking pictures was not easy.
Lomo LC-A + E100G + Xpro. Eiffel tower, Paris.
Looking up. Either for maintenance work or to catch prospective suicide candidates.
These Sturgeon migrate up to 100 miles up the Wolf River to spawn right up against the shoreline, thrashing half way out of the water. Spawning usually takes place the last week in April.
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
This is the scene on the road into a nearby village after workmen covered hedgerows in netting, on at least two sides of a large field, in preparation for the building of four hundred new homes, the same netting (only in green) was also used on a larger development close by. Increasingly developers are using this hideous hedge netting to get around the Wildlife and Countryside Act (1981) which prevents the disturbance of nesting birds. This allows them to rip up trees and hedgerows at a time of their choosing and avoids any costly delays that our wildlife might inflict upon them. Concerns have been raised about birds and mammals becoming trapped and the timing could not be worse for our native hedgehogs as they are emerging from hibernation. As the pictures show there are plenty of holes in the netting for wildlife to enter and then become trapped. Hedgehogs are particularly vulnerable to becoming trapped in netting because their backward facing spines prevent them from reversing out.
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
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This float for a back to Maitland Parade taken by Sydney Smith in the 1930s in High Street West Maitland advertises Lysaghts iron and Rylands netting and stands just past Sparkes Street, the building in the left of then photo is the same one that is in Phar-Laps return, a previous photo in the now and then series.
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
184/365 In my dad's retirement community, they put netting over the decorative cabbages. I'm not sure what wildlife we're protecting them from: swans? Canadian geese? deer? I doubt the residents poach them :)
Some of the excitement, as fish were hauled in, sorted, thrown back in the river . . .and some shad kept in baskets.
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
The Humpback Whales work collectively circling around underneath a school of fish blowing bubbles. The fish don't like the bubbles and won't swim through so are trapped. The the whales swim a a group vertically with mouths open and scoop them up then filter out the water through their baleen. The birds grab the leftovers.