View allAll Photos Tagged pine
【果.曼陀羅】
松果、高梁米
空間裝置
清華大學人文社會學院
2002
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【Pine cones‧Jimonson】
pine cones,sorghum
Spatial installment
The College of Humanities and Social Sciences,National Tsing-Hua University,Hsinchu
2002
Pine Siskin © Jane Baryames. Photo taken on the Flying Circus Birders of Boulder Walk on April 4, 2020.
As I stood photographing some Nuthatches at a place where someone had left some birdseed, this Pine Grosbeak almost flew right into me. I don't know if she was trying to scare me off or didn't see me or was attracted by my tuque, but I had to duck to avoid a face full of feathers.
This inquisitive bunny watched us cautiously but from an amazingly short distance as we listened for birds in the Pine Log Wildlife Management Area in the Georgia mountains.
Work on Ritsurin Koen started in 1642 and was completed over a 100 year period. It was the pleasure garden of three successive feudal lords (daimyo) in Takamatsu.
Pine Siskin showing its yellow underwing stripe at Lake Anza, Tilden Regional Park, CA on February 26, 2020.
© Please do not use this photo on websites, blogs, or any other form of media without my explicit permission.
I think this is another male flower on a different pine tree than the one I posted earlier. I don't know what kind of pine but I thought it made a nice design.
On Friday afternoon I took a little walk around the neighborhood to check for birds. Found a mixed-species flock with lots of red-eyed vireos and black-throated green warblers. There were also five Pine Warblers that responded very well to my pishing.
This guy perched out in the open for quite a little while, even allowing for a video of him preening.
A flock of about 8 male and female pine grossbeaks have hung out around our feeders all winter. It has been an extremely hard winter and just as it is finally letting up, TWO females crashed into our window.... how awful to get this far and then....I have hung and draped everything imaginable in that window, it has happened twice before (each time the bird survived). These two looked bad off. One was stunned and about 10 minutes later flew off. This on was flopped over on its back, its head at a weird angle.
Before I have gone out and put them in a box to stay warm while the recovered, but it was obviously very stressful when I picked them up. It was pretty warm so we decided to leave this one in hopes it too would pull itself together and it was very encouraging to see it had righted itself. But for another 1/2 hour it remained motionless like in the photo above. I don't the feather stuck on its beak helped it get oriented.
FINALLY it flew a short distance to the feeder tree and is still sitting there, gathering its wits... scroll down to see ..... good luck!