View allAll Photos Tagged vine
The tree was dead, the vine was red! The warm light brought out the gold of the bark ... the only sound was the click of my camera!
While in the Edna Valley vineyard a few weeks ago, I took note of the signs at the beginning of the rows. But now I'm not sure which was which, so these may or may not be Chardonnay grapes! (I should have photographed the signs)
On Fine Art America: fineartamerica.com/featured/chardonnay-grape-vines-mimi-d...
We stopped for lunch along this beautiful creek just to the east and several thousand feet lower than Yosemite National Park.
Have a great evening and weekend.
Thanks, as always, for stopping by and for all of your kind comments -- I appreciate them all.
© Melissa Post 2015
All rights reserved. Please respect my copyright and do not copy, modify or download this image to blogs or other websites without obtaining my explicit written permission.
In fact, this is a withered vine leaf. But it could also be a view from an aeroplane of an autumnal river estuary.
Focus stack
Repost 06.04.2022 for Flickr Social group
Vines growing along a fence in The Vennel, with the imposing Edinburgh Castle perched on its rock in the distance.
You see roses quite often in the vineyards here. They aren't planted in the vineyards because they are beautiful but because they serve as an early warning system. Roses attract insects like aphids before the vines. They also get fungal diseases like black rot and mildew before the vines do. So if the winegrower notices symptoms on the rose he may still have time to protect the vines.
John 15:5 New King James Version (NKJV)
5 “I am the vine, you are the branches. He who abides in Me, and I in him, bears much fruit; for without Me you can do nothing.
a lot of black eye Susan vines and this is a cousin. Bees and hummingbirds like it.
Have a great week my friends. I've been enjoying the woods of late as the weather here slowly starts acting like Autumn. ~Sam
Europe, The Netherlands, Zuid Holland, Rotterdam Zuid,, Bower vine (slightly cut)
Here in Holand, we call this 'trompletbloem' (Pandorea jasminoides). Behind it the plane trees of our dike. "It is a woody climber with pinnate leaves that have three to nine egg-shaped leaflets, and white or pink trumpet-shaped flowers that are red and hairy inside." Source Wiki.
We imported this one from the Sotavento some 8 years ago and it's going strong. Ah, the changing climate...
A Bower vine flower is here.
This is number 92 of Adventures in chaos.
© 2016 Thousand Word Images by Dustin Abbott
Here's a "tasty" image for you today of some Red Vines. No, not the candy, I'm afraid. These vines love to grow along chainlink fences, but create the most delightful subjects come autumn. It's not just the brilliant red color (though that helps), but also the great contrast of the dark fence that creates a great amount of contrast. Though the focus system of the 5D Mark IV doesn't seem radically different on paper, it is actually vastly improved in every area, and it's a treat to finally have DPAF on a full frame body. This image was featured in Flickr's Explore at position 17
Technical Information: Canon EOS 5D Mark IV + Tamron SP 85mm f/1.8 VC, Processed in Adobe Lightroom CC, Photoshop CC, and Alien Skin Exposure X (use code "dustinabbott" to get 10% off)
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Uno de mis favoritos. Es uno de los Tyránidos que más presente tengo y uno de los que más disfruté fotografiar.
Apareció de la nada y se posó justo enfrente mío, en la inmensidad del paisaje en la Reserva Natural Mono Lake. Un paisaje súper árido y con vegetación achaparrada.
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📍 Mono Lake, California. USA
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