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"TREE SILHOUETTES"
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The bark on a London plane tree has a distinctive gray mottled appearance that develops when it exfoliates, revealing white, brown, and creamy yellow colors. This distinctive camouflage pattern makes it easy to identify a London plane tree from a distance.
The bark of the planetree sheds because of the tree’s rapid growth. The thin bark doesn’t expand as quickly as the tree, and large flakes of bark drop off every year.
Alte Bäume und Totholz – ein vielfältiger Lebensraum.
Old trees and dead wood - in many ways a natural habitat.
* This dead tree in the water was extremely popular with Cormorants and photographers as it was very near the shore . For those of you with obsessive tendencies you can count them if you wish . I am just happy to report there were a fair few . Taken at the Lyndon reserve managed by the Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust
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Shot with the Olympus E-M1, Mark II outfitted with the Olympus 12.0-200.0 mm f/3.5-6.3 lens in Shelburne, Massachusetts.
Young people have been jumping into the waters below from this tree swing. Shot with the Olympus E-M1 at Lake Whitingham in Wilmingon, Vermont.
This tree doesn't usually stand out but with rain in the hills behind I stopped the car on the Kilmog section of road north of our city.
Have a good day whever you are and thanks for visiting our southern "summer" :)
I love winter shadows. This is late day light casting shadows over an untouched field which is a rare find with all of the wildlife around here.
A lone tree in the northern suburb of Soc Trang near the Buu Son Tu temple. It is probably a monkeypod tree.
I noticed after coming back to Japan that there is a large water body behind the tree. It may be a Baray, a Khmer architectural tradition for irrigation and/or for recreating the Sea of Creation surrounding Mt. Meru according to the Hindu cosmology, judging from its square shape.
A male Tree Swallow (Tachycineta bicolor) relaxing on an old gathered fence post along a meadow east of Tofield, Alberta, Canada.
15 May, 2017.
Slide # GWB_20170515_8352.CR2
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© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
Reflected trees everywhere: in the central brook, but also in the flooded meadows left and (in the distance) right of the brook.
This area, the "Assebroekse Meersen" has as a function that it absorbs excess water and protects the houses of the nearby village Ver-Assebroek, near Bruges.
A dead tree with its bare branches silhouetted against the setting sun. Old Winchester Hill Fort, Hampshire, South Downs National Park, England. Canon EOS 77D, f/8, 1/100 secs ISO 200 at 18mm.
A Tree Swallow (Tachycineta bicolor) resting on an old barbed wire fence along a pasture near Beaverhill Lake east of Tofield, Alberta, Canada.
17 May, 2018.
Slide # GWB_20180517_0412.CR2
In Explore April 6, 2021 No. 392
Use of this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission is not permitted.
© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
A lovely woodland walk amongst magnificent old trees in the National forest of Tomnafinnoge Woods, County Wicklow, Ireland.
“Tomnafinnoge Woods is the last surviving fragment of the great Oak Woods of Tinahely, which once clothed the hills and valleys of south Wicklow, Ireland. As early as 1444 these woods supplied timber for the construction of King's College, Cambridge, and later for Westminster Abbey, St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin and Trinity College, Dublin. In 1634, the woods were estimated to cover 'more than many thousand acres', but from then on they were heavily exploited especially for shipbuilding.
Today the woods are owned and protected by the Irish State. They are included in the Slaney River Valley candidate Special Area of Conservation.[2] A tributary of the Slaney, the River Derry flows through the woods. This is one of the best places in Ireland to see the great spotted woodpecker, which has recently recolonised the country.“ (Wikipedia)