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Big Head Todd and the Monsters - "It's Alright"
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This dashing medium-sized tit can be found in broadleaf and mixed hill forests, as well as adjacent parks and gardens. Utterly unmistakable, with a bright yellow face and nape, which contrast smartly with a black crest, throat, and breast. Wings are gray and black with white spots and bars. Gregarious; often in small flocks of its own species or with large mixed feeding flocks. Song is a bright, repetitive “chew-wee-ee, chew-wee-ee, chew-wee-ee.” Calls vary, but usually incorporate several sharp notes and one or two lower, buzzier notes. (eB ird)
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We found this lovely, perky little tit bouncing about in the trees at the Orchid Conservation Project (beautiful gardens filled with native orchids).
Here's a link to our Thailand bird trip list: ebird.org/tripreport/328567
Doi Inthanon National Park, Chang Mai, Thailand. February 2025.
Rockjumper Birding Tours.
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To be seen in full screen (Press L + F11)
- Homemade analog print -
- Pentax MX -
- Ilford Delta 100 -
- Ilford Multigrade RC paper -
A feature of the paths of England is the number of gates. it is important to close them behind you. South Downs Way near Devil's Dyke. Sussex
Please note there is one direct line, it goes to NPS headquarters
Kelso, CA - Mojave National Preserve
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Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved Luigi Alesi
Taken on July 9, 2025 at 3:29:04 p.m.
With heartfelt and genuine thanks for your kind visit. Have a beautiful day, be well, keep your eyes open, appreciate the beauty surrounding you, enjoy creating, stay safe, and laugh often! ❤️❤️❤️
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Mamiyaflex C2, f16, 1/400, Rollei Retro 400S
Lab developed
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By Catherine Boeckmann
February 9, 2024
The daylily is an amazingly low-maintenance perennial. It’s virtually disease-free, pest-free, and drought-resistant; it’s also not picky about soil quality. Plus, the flower has a long bloom period! Here’s how to plant and care for daylilies in your garden, as well as how to easily propagate them for more plants!
About Daylilies
The daylily’s botanical name, Hemerocallis, comes from the Greek hemera (“day”) and kallos (“beauty”). The name is appropriate since each flower lasts only one day! However, each scape has 12 to 15 buds on it, and a mature plant can have 4 to 6 scapes, which is why the flower seems to bloom continuously.
Originally from Asia, these plants have adapted so well that many of us think of them as natives. Imagine the excitement of a 16th-century explorer cruising the Orient and finding these gorgeous plants! European gardeners welcomed daylilies into their gardens, and when early colonists sailed for the New World, daylilies made the crossing with them.
Despite their name, daylilies are not “true lilies” and grow from fleshy roots. True lilies grow from onion-like bulbs and are of the genus Lilium, as are Asiatic and Oriental lilies. In the case of daylilies, leaves grow from a crown, and the flowers form on leafless stems—called “scapes”—which rise above the foliage.
There are thousands of beautiful daylilies to choose from. Combine early, midseason, late blooming varieties, and repeat bloomers to have daylilies in flower from late spring through the first frost of fall. If you see a height listed alongside a daylily variety, this refers to the length of the scape. Some can reach 6 feet tall!
For more information please visit
www.almanac.com/plant/daylilies
These Daylilies were photographed at Pashley Manor Gardens. At Pashley you will discover 11 acres of beautiful borders and vistas – the culmination of a lifetime of passion for gardening, an appetite for beauty and an admiration of the tradition of the English Country garden. These graceful gardens, on the border of Sussex and Kent, are family owned and maintained – visitors often express delight at the attention to detail displayed throughout and the intimate, peaceful atmosphere.
All the ingredients of the English Country Garden are present – sweeping herbaceous borders, ha-ha, well maintained lawns, box hedges, espaliered rose walk, historic walled garden, inspiring kitchen garden, venerable trees and the Grade I listed house as a backdrop. The gardens are a haven for wildlife – bees, butterflies and small birds as well as moor hens, ducks and a black swan. Then, of course, the plants! Borders overflowing with perennials and annuals – the look changing through the seasons, but always abundantly filled, and each garden ‘room’ planted in a different colour theme.
Pashley is also renowned for fantastic displays of tulips, roses and dahlias. Our annual Tulip Festival features more than 48,000 tulips this year! During Special Rose Week over a hundred varieties of rose swathe the walls, climb obelisks and bloom in flower beds. Then in late summer our Dahlia Days event transforms the gardens once more with bountiful, brightly coloured dahlias in every border and pot.
Add to all this a Café and Terrace with excellent garden views, serving delicious homemade lunches, scones and cakes; Sculpture and Art Exhibitions; a Gift Shop with Plant Sales; and a friendly, knowledgeable team waiting to welcome you, and the recipe for a wonderful day out is complete.
For more information please visit www.pashleymanorgardens.com/
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Pentax MX, SMC Pentax-M 1:1.7 50mm lens, f1.7, 1/500, Tri-X exp 12/13
Lab developed
This image is protected by copyright and may not be used in any way, for any purpose, without my written permission. Please contact me if you would like to use any of my photos.
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In the summer, curlew migrate to their breeding grounds. Historically, curlew were found breeding across Britain - in meadows, marshes and arable fields where they are now rarely seen. Today, their breeding range has contracted and they are more often thought of as a bird of the uplands, breeding on moorland areas and farms around the hill edge. The UK’s breeding curlew population has halved in the last 25 years.
This decline has also been recorded in most of the other countries where curlew breed. It is estimated by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) that worldwide there has been a 20-30% reduction in curlew breeding numbers in the past 15 years. Curlew are now considered to be “vulnerable” on the European red list, meaning that the species face a high risk of extinction.
I myself have seen instances of farmers gathering sileage before the end of the breeding season. No doubt numerous birds are needlessly lost this way every year.
Curlew - Numenius
Yorkshire Dales
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The next time you see a spider web, please, pause and look a little closer. You'll be seeing one of the most high-performance materials known to man.
~ Cheryl Hayashi
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Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
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Tom, please... you are going to have to stop your childish pouting.
Tom, stp... cesse de bouder, c'est de l'enfantillage pur et simple.
expo "RéTROsPectiVe "first year Flickr""
www.flickr.com/photos/jeans_man59/galleries/7215764984191...
fill up the feeder for me....
said this cute little boy.... and I did!!
This is a first for me, I actually used a tripod on these images which I never do... I hate feeling tethered to anything... but I wanted to try.... also shot through my kitchen door
some of you might have met her before:). Halle is a custom SH by Gina (G Baby)...
I LOOOOOVE HER ... she looks even more beautiful IRL.. :)
Thank you soooo much Gina for Halle's little black dress, and for the prettiest (handmade) pull charms, and of course the sweet little card...but most of all thank you for Halle.. you knew it was love at the first sight :)
(quick pic of Halle... been really really busy lately, will have more and better pics of Halle soon :)