View allAll Photos Tagged pinecone

macro shot w/ Sears TLS, Auto Sears 55/1.4 on Kopil bellows.

California Summer 2017

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"I have a pinecone

it is cute,

just like Marina

and just like you.

 

It is also brown,

so don't frown...

go to the dance floor

and just get down!!"

 

A song that my friend and I made up during music class. She lives in Spain now and I miss her dearly.

Easy weaving project for a young child: pinecone, yarn, beads. Child goes on nature walk to find pinecone, discusses spiral patterns in plants, selects colors of beads, threads them, weaves in a spiral pattern. www.syrendell.blogspot.com

Tightly closed in the cold

Winter in the Storybook woods

Pine Cones on a table in Garwnant, South Wales

Male pinecones are found on lower branches and are more plentiful than female cones.

Tumblr: @worldwidv

Instagram: @theaemiliemerli

65mm Elmar-V w/bellows

A large pinecone sketched with black ink

Still experimenting with the petzval, shot on 4x5 sheet film.

Speculaas cookies, made with a pinecone springerle mould.

Stumbled upon this pinecone while looking for something else to photograph.

 

Do not use this image on or in any media including websites and blogs without my permission. © All rights reserved.

Spring is finally here, and why not kick it off with an obligatory pinecone picture.

The morning of the second day of camping at the White River Campground we were bombarded by these fresh pinecones, falling from the top of the trees, perhaps 50-80 feet up. They were almost rock hard, 4-6 inches long, over an inch thick, sticky with sap, and hit the ground at high speed, sometimes breaking into pieces. Being hit by one would probably injure you very nicely. The bombardment lasted only 5 or 10 minutes, then stopped. We figured it was squirrel-caused.

 

Amazed at the size and hardness of the cones I tried to figure out what kind they were. I had a couple field guides with me but could not quite figure it out until I walked around the campground and saw similar cones on top of other trees and managed to see the needles up close. Then I was able to say, yes, these appear to be the cones of the Grand Fir tree. I'm still open to the possibility they were Subalpine Fir trees. But I didn't think subalpine firs would grow so tall--80 feet, 100 feet, more? Apparently they can grow that tall in well watered valleys, like the White River valley where we camped. I'm used to seeing them fairly small in the higher subalpine zone.

 

But the needles I saw had rounded tips, a groove on the top side and two white lines on the bottom. No white lines on the top of the needles, which my book says subalpine fir needles have. So...

 

No one was injured during the squirrel bombing run, but a few of us got our hands very sticky with resin or sap or whatever that gooey stuff was.

Leaves and pinecones litter the ground on a beautiful fall day in Flagstaff, Arizona.

For tabletop or mantle, a beautiful natural candelabra of wood ends and pinecones, with some sprigs of pine needles. Perfect for the holidays or any rustic home.

 

Wind River Furniture

InWorldz Grid

The backyard pond is getting more frozen every day

evergreen inside clear ornaments

A pine cone hedgehog... I thought it was cute.

Sepia pinecones close up.

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