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Mallard ducks are part of the group known as dabbling ducks. These birds forage by tipping upside-down in the water to uproot and eat aquatic plants as well as insect larvae and freshwater shrimp.
Spending large amounts of time with their heads underwater leaves them vulnerable to predators. One solution to this hazard is feeding in flocks, where there are multiple pairs of eyes looking for danger.
Pelicans do many things synchronously, especially when they fly together. Here four American pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos, Pelecanidae) are in a banked turn as they fly over Lake Butte des Morts at Terrell's Island Preserve.
Winnebago County, Wisconsin
AP505276
Rising over a short grade in the track approaching Prineville Junction is a westbound City of Prineville Railway freight on September 28, 2016, as two deer decide that it is a good time to get to other side of the tracks.
This photo was damaged and came out originally with a lot of orange it it.
This was as close as I could get to normal. I just liked it too much to give
up on it. You could also call it Dolphin Love.
© All rights reserved.
The second shot a frame later, without a texture.
I am used to shooting in manual focus, I will have to try the single point and spot focus AF next. This is fun.
This is where we feel in the sky, there I and my lovely Nui adventure partner has unique moments, good vibes enough to levitate!
Big birds, big wings! Sandhill crane pair facing the sun. I like to imagine them saying “I love you THIS much!”
Here is the still picture of moonset and Milkyway Synchronization with the alignment with Keyhole in Pfeiffer Beach, Big Sur, CA.
I had a timelapse posted earlier flic.kr/p/2aKhZoX.
It took me sometime to get the right expose on each elements in this image.
I used PlanIt app to find out the date and time for all three elements, i.e. setting moon, milky way, and keyhole aligment.
Shepherds Synchronized Sunday Sleeping Parallel Poses Positions Photo - IMRAN™
(My 138th Flickr Explore!)
It is funny how regularly K2’s pisé and position is identical to Kennedy’s. They’re not related by birth but are so amusingly in synch. Even in sleep.
This is actually a night time photograph with only one low corner lamp. The handheld long-exposure night-mode on the Apple iPhone 14 Pro Max makes it so well-lit. See 3D at lnkd.in/dEHNUdhQ .
© 2023 IMRAN™
#Florida #TampaBay #ApolloBeach #GermanShepherds #IMRAN #lifestyle #dogs #GSD #DogsLife #winter #gratitude #weekend #sleeping #synchronization #NightMode #LongExposure #iPhone14ProMax #HomeSweetHome #LetSleepingDogsLie #humor #Explore #InExplore
Synchronized Swimming / Rhythmic Swimming at the Guangzhou 2010 Asian Games held at Foshan Shi Jillian Aquatics Centre of Guangzhou City, Southern China’s Guangdong province.
www.news-world.us/pics/2011/01/17/synchronized-swimming-o...
Við Bakkatjörn
Ég hitt mann á nesinu í morgun sem vissi allt um fuglalífið þar.Langar til að deila þessum upplýsingum með ykkur Hérna eru svanirnir frægu, Svandís og maki hennar sem heitir í höfuðið á fyrrverandi bæjarstjóra Seltjarnarness. þau eignuðust 5 unga í vor sjá mynd hér að neðan, en núna eru aðeins eftir 4 sjá Einn þeirra fékk æxli í hálsinn og dó. Í fyrra komust líka bara 4 af 5 á legg, Flugfjaðrirnar komu aldrei fram á þeim fimmta, Hann var því fangaður af hjálparsveitinni á nesinu og fluttur í húsdýragarðinn. en þar var honum lóað eins og öllum hinm fuglunum þegar upp kom fuglaflensa. Nú fara þeir bráðum til vetrarstöðva sinna en þær eru einhversstaðar við Hornafjarðarósa.
Dos correlimos tridáctilos ( Calidris alba) con distinto plumaje, parecen sincronizarse durante el acicalamiento
Two sanderling (Calidris alba) with different plumage, appear to synchronize during grooming
Taken late in the day some years ago at Middle Creek National Wildlife Refuge, Pennsylvania. Middle Creek NWR is a major stopover for Snow Geese on their journey northward each year. Sometimes they number 100,000+ geese gathered here at one time, stopping to rest for a few days, feed and wait for favorable weather as they move along in stages to their Arctic breeding grounds.
I wasn't very close, but they were restless, making a lovely racket, heads up. Clearly something was afoot. They abruptly jumped up, and as soon as these cleared the rest packed up and left too. Somehow they all got the message about orientation and they took off heading right, not a single one went left. Good thing, too, considering the congestion.
They had been out on the refuge fields feeding on grain left on the ground by management, and ended up settling down on the pool for the night, where it was safe. The pool was a mile or so to the left, but they all went right initially. Show offs.