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Finally got around to processing images from the big camera. I love playing around with multiple exposures and seeing how the tiny details unseen in image capture, such as the stems of cottonwood leaves can create (in my mind anyway) the legs of diving swimmers as their teammates tread ice scarved with desert willow leaves.
I watched a semi-silhouetted coastal brown bear mother and older cub walking along the sandy shoreline of Cook Inlet at low tide and waited to snap this shot until their leg positions were in perfect synchronization. Maybe this could be a new Olympic sport. Silver Salmon Creek, coastal Alaska, Pacific Northwest.
07/08/2024 www.allenfotowild.com
Sandhill Crane family fly by from one corn field to another. It's amazing how they don't hit each other in the head with their wings.
Canon 1DX, F4, 1/1600, ISO 200
no.... there's no photo manipulation here. These lovebirds seemed to be a perfect match.
We had lots of sun showers today, and lots of rainbow lorikeets too, all displaying beautifully while preening their ruffled feathers.
Big Blue
and her triplets
floating,
carefree
brimming with glee
awash in light
amidst a cool
Baton Rouge sky
Pennington Hot Air Balloon Championships
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
August 09, 2009
Copyright © G.DelaCruzPhotography. All Rights Reserved.
4/14/2022 Foster Pit Mix brother and sister puppies on outing at the soccer fields in late afternoon sun.
Nikon D610 Sigma 100-400 mm f/5.0-.2 340 mm f/11.0 1/200 ISO 640
Thanks everyone for your comments and favs! The Boyz think it's all a great game to play fierce. When you know them you know how sweet, cuddly and sensitive they are when you share the cookies! LOL
Tag and Merc have been blogged at Goofy Doggies.
Used with permission at www.digital-photography-school.com/8-fun-dog-photos
I've been complaining about how far away the cormorants have been on each and every walk with Scott and Sock this week.
Well I guess they heard me because yesterday they were close enough for a shot.
I walked around the lake and managed to get close to them, but in the end I preferred the photo I shot from a distance.
Hope everyone has had a good day.
Click "L" for a larger view.
A playful moment on the water as four ducks dive in unison, their tails pointing skyward like a perfectly timed routine. Nature has its own choreography, and sometimes it’s just as entertaining as any performance. Captured in the Cleveland Metroparks.
Common Name: Mallard
Scientific Name: Anas platyrhynchos
Location: Cleveland Metroparks, Ohio
Date: September 2, 2025
Two whimbrels land at on the beach. These birds have been known to fly 2500 miles (from Canada to South America) nonstop. I'm glad these two stopped in for a visit.
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
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.