View allAll Photos Tagged tinyworld
Theme of The Week - Fisheye
at the Missouri Botanical Garden on Henry Shaw's 221st Birthday
These are water lilies from the Amazon (Victoria amazonica). They can reach up to 15 feet in diameter in the wild. There is one growing here that is going to reach 8 feet, which will be a new record for the Garden.
A bee is feeding deep inside a tight cluster of tiny white-and-purple blossoms. The petals surround its body so closely that the bee almost disappea
These are "store bought", but will soon being enjoying the tulips outside as they are just emerging out of the ground.
Turkish for turban, the tulip has a long and eccentric history. Tulips are spring's ultimate ornamental flower.
Remember: Tulips Are Better Than One.
I am still lacking inspiration with photography so I decided I had to post something today. My youngest was given this succulent terrarium for her birthday and I thought it might be a good contender for my 100. I'm adding it to my 10x Stage is Set group.
I rarely leave the office building during the day, so yesterday I made an effort to walk out on the building terrace and check the views for possible tiltshift photos. Within a minute of being outside I felt like I was melting. I fired off some shots and quickly ran back inside to comfortable cool A/C....
Explored! May 6, 2010
Walked out of a clients home and saw this family of mushrooms in the front yard. Grabbed my Fujifilm with a vintage Canon lens and captured these images.
Fujifilm X-E2S
Canon 50mm f1.4 SSC
10mm Meike extension tube
Spring - it is time you came back. I am ready to go on a "Safari". Looking through some "old" folders.
Ladybug (Coccinellidae) - A common name widely preferred is the name "Ladybird Beetle" or "Lady Beetles" as these insects are not true bugs.
North America had has over 450 native species of ladybug.
The Coccinellidae are generally considered useful insects
this is the bus which didn't travel a lot,
still it used to carry green bunnies, scke-sckes and other creatures
and in the end it simply flew to the moon
Induced by the Knopper gall wasp (Andricus quercuscalicis). Growing on an acorn of Pedunculate Oak.
Instagram - @nature.magnified
The common spangle gall wasp produces a small, disc-shaped growth, or 'gall', on the undersides of oak leaves. Inside the gall, the larvae of the wasp feed on the host tissues, but cause little damage.
Source: www.wildlifetrusts.org/wildlife-explorer/galls/common-spa...