View allAll Photos Tagged walnut
40 pictures taken with Helicon Remote. Developed with Helicon Focus in standard mode (Method B), no post-processing with retouching tool.
RCPE MMNAU rolls west out of Walnut Grove, Minnesota behind a four-pack of ex-Blue and Gold SD40-2s and a healthy cut of mixed freight from Mankato.
I'm holed up as a hermit in West Virginia this week. I have no internet, or anything else for that matter. I do have my camera though, so I'll have lots of photos when I return rejuvenated, revived, reinvigorated and re-...
I sneaked out to find some internet to slip these shots in. Now I'm back to the woods... so long...
The year started with a bit of snow and wintery mist. The big old walnut tree standing guard on the Schiltalp (Eigenthal) was not impressed though…
Black Walnut (Juglans nigra), Eno River State Park
Pentax K-1
SMC Pentax 1:1.8 55mm
16:9 panorama crop
Iridient Developer
Walnuts are very popular among the squirrels at Monrepos and whenever I feed the squirrels the walnuts tend to disappear rather quickly. Often they just grab a walnut and disappear in the forest where they eat it. They are very fast and it's not easy to press the shutter button in time.
I wanted to take a photo of some walnuts and was looking for something to decorate it. Finally, I found these orange Firethorn berries on a neighbour's hedge.
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Ich wollte einige Walnüsse fotografieren und suchte etwas um diese zu dekorieren. Schließlich fand ich diese orangen Feuerdornbeeren an der Hecke eines Nachbarn.
Human beings lived here in these Walnut Canyon cliff dwellings near Flagstaff, AZ, at well over a mile in elevation. They were the Sinagua people, adapted to living in this arid region. They disappeared from the area in the mid-13th century.
Many years after making this photo in 1955, I read Willa Cather’s great novel The Song of the Lark. In it, an aspiring singer camps in and explores a canyon and its ancient cliff dwellings. Cather had visited Walnut Canyon, so the fictional canyon in her book is based on fact. While there, her heroine, Thea, finds herself. It’s a good place for that.
when the big walnut tree is awakening, its first leaves are red orange, they turn green later -- such a beautiful announcement of spring!
205/365
I have no idea why, but I really wanted to photograph walnuts today. Nothing much more to say.
Did you know that cows moo in regional accents?
One of the four squirrels I met on Friday, with its favourite snack.
It was funny to watch how they didn't want to touch the ones that birds, who also loved walnuts, had touched.
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