View allAll Photos Tagged spring
More bluebells, all leaning over to reach the sunlight. Apparently English Bluebells (Hyacinthoides non-scripta) have a droopy stem - these ones look pretty upright, so maybe they're Spanish (and very welcome, wherever they're from...).
Some fresh green spring layers from Tuscany this Easter. The light there is amazing!
In cooperation with Haida filters .
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I have three bushes of varying heights of this tiny pink rose - left to itself, it happily climbs to over ten feet. The buds are perfect miniatures and even when fully out the flowers are only about an inch and a half across. What you can't tell from photographs is that they also have a wonderful scent.
While I only got fleeting glimpses of the Vixen this morning, the kits were more than generous in sharing their space. It's an absolutely magical experience to witness the behavior of these beautiful creatures in the wild and one where time stands still. As I find myself adrift in the rather surreal place our world has become of late, moments like this serve as my anchor.
Northern VA
Spring is nature’s way of saying, “Let’s party!”
Robin Williams
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My parrot is placed in the tree by me (and photoshop) also the ladybird :)
Texture is from Lenabem Anna.
Also I used NIK color efex pro .
It's been a good spring for Snowdrops, though here they're now nearing the end of the season. These are my larger Snowdrops, that come out a little later and unlike the smaller variety, have two or three flowers on each stem.
More of my Magnolia, which is very photogenic when the sun shines and if its petals have not been battered by the elements. This year it seems pretty much perfect.
It is always a miracle how quickly the nature changes every spring to to delicate spring greenness. From today's walk along the shore path.
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Every spring i eagerly await orange tips. One of my favourite UK butterflies. Very little cuckoo flowers in the meadow I visit near the house, i wonder if the Roe deer are eating it?
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© Ioan C. Bacivarov
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Spring arrives in Crane Park, Middlesex, and here’s the first sign – a riotous blackthorn in all its blossoming glory.
The straight side shoots of the blackthorn develop into sharp thorns and the bush will produce sloes in autumn. The tree can often last up to 100 years and was once used for making walking sticks and shillelaghs.
The blossom is a vital source of pollen for early bees; birds like the dense branch network for nesting and butterflies use the bush later in spring – so it’s an all-round giver!
(Information courtesy of the National Trust.)
"Spring is sprung, de grass is riz
I wonder where de boidies is?
De boid is on de wing, but dat's absoid
De wing is on de boid"
Author much debated