View allAll Photos Tagged racket
Backyard bird
Wikipedia: The racket-tailed treepie (Crypsirina temia) is an Asian treepie, a member of the crow family, Corvidae.
It has a velvety-black forehead of short, plush black feathers with the rest of the bird being an oily green color, though appearing black in dim light. The tail feathers which in this species are long and broaden at the tail's end are black also with a greenish tinge, as are the wings. The iris of the bird is a turquoise-blue darkening towards the pupil to a very deep or near black. The bill, legs and feet are black.
This bird occurs in southern Burma (Myanmar), Thailand, Indo-China, Sumatra, Java and Bali in scrub and secondary growth, open fields and gardens, bamboo thickets and open forest often near villages.
a less known Roller that lives in miombo woodland
This one was photographed in Hwange NP In Zimbabwe in the local winter of 2013.
So it does not have the beautiful and typical tail streamers of the summer plumage
Coracias spatulatus
vorkstaartscharrelaar
rollier à raquettes
Spatelracke
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Wikipedia: The racket-tailed treepie (Crypsirina temia) is an Asian treepie, a member of the crow family, Corvidae.
It has a velvety-black forehead of short, plush black feathers with the rest of the bird being an oily green color, though appearing black in dim light. The tail feathers which in this species are long and broaden at the tail's end are black also with a greenish tinge, as are the wings. The iris of the bird is a turquoise-blue darkening towards the pupil to a very deep or near black. The bill, legs and feet are black.
This bird occurs in southern Burma (Myanmar), Thailand, Indo-China, Sumatra, Java and Bali in scrub and secondary growth, open fields and gardens, bamboo thickets and open forest often near villages.
Conservation status: Least Concern
The Racket Tailed Roller is a species of bird in the family Coracidae. It is found in Southern Africa from Angola, South Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo and Southern Tanzania to Northern Botswana, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique. I love the colors on this bird just beautiful. This is one of my favorite Zoo Birds.
Taken in Ecuador during my stay at San Jorge Eco-Loges .
Thank you for your likes and comments very much appreciated
In another bedroom, this caught my eyes straight away, of the way how they were placed at the end of the bed and on an old trunk.
Tennis? - Must have been very popular at this house, way back then it seems and no wonder with its elegant gardens that surrounded this House!
Comments are disabled on this one; so just enjoy this one here, my flickr friends !!!
This is a Alleyway that runs from Lairgate through to Saturday Market in the Historic old Town of Beverley in East Yorkshire It was first recorded in 1409..
(Ocreatus underwoodii)
La Brisa
Baeza
Equador
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All my photos are now organized into sets by the country where they were taken, by taxonomic order, by family, by species (often with just one photo for the rarer ones), and by the date they were taken.
So, you may find:
- All the photos for this trip Equador (2021)
- All the photos for this order APODIFORMES
- All the photos for this family Trochilidae // Troquilídeos
- All the photos for this species Ocreatus underwoodii
- All the photos taken this day 2021/11/14
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Bandeirinha (Discosura longicaudus). One of the rarest hummingbirds or at least more difficult to photograph since it rarely leaves the canopies.
Measures between 7.8 and 10.5 centimeters in length and weighs between 3 and 3.7 grams. It has a pronounced sexual dimorphism. Unmistakable male with long external tips and racket-shaped tips or purple-brown colored "bandeirinhas". Crown, throat and upper chest bright green, copper lower chest and whitish belly, white flanks. Green-bronze mantle, with a whitish strap on the lower back.
Picture taken at Paulista, PE.
Happy Monday!
Thanks a lot for your visits, comments, faves, invites, etc. Very much appreciated!
© All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written explicit permission. All rights reserved. Please contact me at thelma.gatuzzo@gmail.com if you intend to buy or use any of my images.
Talk about attitude. This bird, which I think may be a spotted sandpiper, can really make some noise to draw myself and the Labrador away from her brood. Constantly teeters with the the high pitched whistles, quite a sight. Not the best shot. Tried to get some shots of the youngsters, but they know how to hide.
It was quite difficult to set focus on this greater racket-tailed drongo, which sat upon a lofty branch, some 70-80 ft high...loved taking the shot...taken in Chidiyatapu nature park in Andaman Islands, India
Backyard bird
Wikipedia: The racket-tailed treepie (Crypsirina temia) is an Asian treepie, a member of the crow family, Corvidae. This bird occurs in southern Burma (Myanmar), Thailand, Indo-China, Sumatra, Java and Bali in scrub and secondary growth, open fields and gardens, bamboo thickets and open forest often near villages.
Conservation status: Least Concern
Continuing from last week's picture of a Conrail E8 at Lacona, here's a picture of more E-units visiting the Montreal Secondary: Lackawanna 808 and 807, owned by the CNY Chapter NRHS, lead the return leg of the 29 September 2001 excursion to Massena, seen crossing the Raquette River bridge in Potsdam in the glow of late afternoon light.
Backyard bird
Wikipedia: The racket-tailed treepie (Crypsirina temia) is an Asian treepie, a member of the crow family, Corvidae. This bird occurs in southern Burma (Myanmar), Thailand, Indo-China, Sumatra, Java and Bali in scrub and secondary growth, open fields and gardens, bamboo thickets and open forest often near villages.
Conservation status: Least Concern
The racket-tailed treepie (Crypsirina temia) is an Asian treepie, a member of the crow family, Corvidae. It has a velvety-black forehead of short, plush black feathers with the rest of the bird being an oily green colour, though appearing black in dim light.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Candid street photography from Glasgow, Scotland. Without any amplification this guy was bellowing at the top of his lungs to proselytize the passers-by, though he was being mostly ignored. I had no interest in photographing him until I walked behind and saw his jacket. I loved the storytelling of the resulting shot. Enjoy!
Booted racket-tail in Flight
Raymond's Ecuador Photography Tours
ray@raymondbarlow.com
Nikon D810 ,Nikkor 200-400mm f/4G ED-IF AF-S VR
1/1000s f/4.5 at 400.0mm iso2500
The racket-tailed treepie (Crypsirina temia) is an Asian treepie, a member of the crow family, Corvidae.
It has a velvety-black forehead of short, plush black feathers with the rest of the bird being an oily green colour, though appearing black in dim light. The tail feathers which in this species are long and broaden at the tail's end are black also with a greenish tinge, as are the wings. The iris of the bird is a turquoise-blue darkening towards the pupil to a very deep or near black. The bill, legs and feet are black.
This bird occurs in southern Burma (Myanmar), Thailand, Indo-China, Sumatra, Java and Bali in scrub and secondary growth, open fields and gardens, bamboo thickets and open forest often near villages.