View allAll Photos Tagged pinecone,
Still life with leaves and pinecones (un-arranged).
Seminary Wood
Decatur (Legacy Park), Georgia, USA.
8 October 2020.
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â–¶ "A pine cone is an organ [the fruit] of the pine tree containing its reproductive structures. Pine trees are only one of the conifer, or 'cone-bearing,' plants; others include cedars, firs, cypresses, and redwoods. Pine cones, like the reproductive organs of other conifers, come in male and female varieties. The image that most people associate with the pine cone, a woody, scaled structure, is actually the female structure. Male cones are smaller, more herbaceous, and shorter-lived."
— Wisegeek.
â–¶ "Pine cone is a compound word that can be written with a space (called an 'open compound') or without a space between the two words (called 'closed'). If you look on the Internet, you will find that this word is quite common in both forms."
— Merriam-Webster.
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â–¶ Photo by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.
â–¶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).
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â–¶ Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M10 II.
â–¶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.
It's time for the annual Christmas countdown! How did that happen so quickly?
One of my first countdowns started with pinecones, so it's appropriate to repeat that tradition.
A couple of weeks back the 4 of us all found 1 item whilst out walking, with the aim of doing a still life. We could then add up to 6 things.
Ian found a bit of bone.
Paul long pine cone.
Tony 2 feathers
Mandy an empty chestnut husk.
48/52 Didn't have time for the theme last week as it is something I know nothing about! Just a photo of some pinecones I've bleached for Christmas decorations.
Close up of a pine cone
Taken with a Panasonic Luimix FZ200 Bridge Camera with an Xit macro lens converter attached.
Old photo from one of our many Culver bike path visits, yay! He jumped up to do this. Mwaha, action shot.
Pinecone which was once covered in peanut butter and seed, now swings barren from the tree.
My mom likes to put them out as treats for the birds, and they eat em all up right away!
Tiliqua rugosa, named "Jack" -- a short-tailed species of blue-tongued skink endemic to Australia, also known as the shingleback or pincone skink. This fellow is an animal ambassador in the San Diego Zoo Safari Park's Walkabout Australia habitat. Conservation status: least concern
I love everyones fall photos!! :) I have no rhyme or reason to my fall photography. I just like to play with nature and photograph it the way I see it. The big and the small <3
Colorado Springs, CO - We returned for one more look at the owlets right about dusk and were not disappointed. This little one had ventured out onto a branch to get a better look at all of the funny people staring his way. Perhaps this owl was amused by those who chose to stand in the road to gain a closer look but the Colorado Springs Police Department was not as the reward for such behavior turned out to be traffic citations ...