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Pin-tailed Sandgrouse (Pterocles alchata), Aragona, Spain www.flickr.com/photos/137494906@N04/50216886376/sizes/o/
A young woman displays a self made Zapatista pin while she takes part of one of the meetings that the EZLN's Delegado Zero held in the city of Chetumal as part of a project called "La Otra Campaña".
The Zapatista Army of National Liberation (Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional, EZLN) is an armed revolutionary group based in Chiapas, one of the poorest states of Mexico. Their social base is mostly indigenous but they have supporters in urban areas as well as an international web of support.
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Holy shiz that was an amazing pun and if you missed it I'll cry.
This photo was a bit of a challenge to work out exactly how I was going to do it. I had to re-shoot it a couple of times before I got something I was happy with. And in totally unrelated news, today my girlfriend and I discovered a way to make Nutella even more amazing. Put it with strawberry jam on toast. FOOD OF THE GODS.
My son, Alex, as he's about tp pin his opponent in a high school wrestling match, as his teammates look on.
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The pin-tailed whydah is 12–13 cm in length, although the breeding male's tail adds another 20 cm to this. The adult male has a black back and crown, and a very long black tail. The wings are dark brown with white patches, and the underparts and the head, apart from the crown, are white. The bill is bright red. The female and non-breeding male have streaked brown upperparts, whitish underparts with buff flanks, and a buff and black face pattern. They lack the long tail extension, but retain the red bill. Immature birds are like the female but plainer and with a greyish bill.
-wikipedia-
Thank you so much for the great pleasure you give me by choosing my picture to represent your wonderful group. Hugs! 💙💛
⭐️Aeris Oxy
⭐️Original Picture: “Just The Two Of Us!” ―
A widely distributed common resident but the breeding male is lovely to see.
Kudu Private Nature Reserve
Mpumalanga
South Africa
Series: Living in Milan
•Story of a traveler with a cheap camera•
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Film transferred.
Short film.
another attempt at focus-stacking.
9 images, Sony SLT-A68 with Tamron 90mm stacked and edited in Luminar Neo.
(Still love my A-Mount gear!)
The Pin Mill building on the Canal Terrace at Bodnant Garden was added in 1938. Originally built in 1730 in Gloucestershire, it was rescued from decay by Henry McLaren, who dismantled it, brought to Bodnant and rebuilt it brick by brick.
Bodnant Garden is a National Trust property near Tal-y-Cafn, Conwy, Wales, overlooking the Conwy Valley towards the Carneddau mountains.
Founded in 1874 and developed by five generations of one family, it was gifted to the National Trust in 1949. The garden spans 80 acres of hillside and includes formal Italianate terraces, informal shrub borders stocked with plants from around the world, The Dell, a gorge garden, a number of notable trees and a waterfall. Since 2012, new areas have opened including the Winter garden, Old Park Meadow, Yew Dell and The Far End, a riverside garden. Furnace Wood and Meadow opened in 2017. There are plans to open more new areas, including Heather Hill and Cae Poeth Meadow.
Bodnant Garden was visited by over 270,000 people in 2019 and is famous for its Laburnum arch, the longest in the UK, which flowers in May and June. The garden is also celebrated for its link to the plant hunters of the early 1900s whose expeditions formed the base of the garden's four National Collections of plants – Magnolia, Embothrium, Eucryphia and Rhododendron forrestii.