View allAll Photos Tagged weeding
Why is it a weed? I really don't know. The background is a field of goldenrod. The great blur is created by using a longer prime lens.
In May 2001, Central Oregon & Pacific's Weed Switcher returns to its namesake after delivering interchange traffic to Union Pacific at Black Butte. This was a great shot in Southern Pacific days, but the foliage is taking over. The arson fire that decimated Weed, California in 2014 was started near here.
At last, I finally got to photograph this wonderful stage of the Great crested grebe's courtship known as the weed dance.
One bird sits in the middle of the lake whilst the other disappears off to collect a suitable love token, a beak full of weed. Then it goes under and scoots up on his partner at quick speed..she goes under and they head straight at eachother and at the last minute the birds rush up and out of the water, bobbing and flicking their heads, mirroring each others jerky movements..It is all over so quickly and an absolute joy to watch..I was really chuffed to see it
:-)
Great Crested Grebes~Pyrrhula pyrrhula
The last rays of light for the day find CORP 2068 tied up with several box cars near the Roseberg Forest Products mill in Weed, CA.
© BodhiSativa Photography- Diablo Kush~ OG Varietal aka The devils weed. A legend in the og circles. A buttery og with deep lemon and an undertone of earthy spice flavors. Highly medicinal effects include euphoria and antiinflamation pleasures and not too much appetite stimulation. No cerebral thickening. Some call it happyweed. Not very devilish I must say. Heavenly orgasmic. No couchlock and the sweetness of the flower has aphrodisiac qualities stimulated by a type of sugar rush. I shall be El Matador del Diablo.
ps: Diablo is another strain too which is a purple strain bred from Blueberry, Grapefruit, South African Sativa genetics.
Leica M3, Nokton Classic 35mm f1.4, yellow filter, Kentmere PAN 400 developed in Microfine, Epson GT-X830. 1/500, f/4.
I'm not sure what this is...there may be a few of you who do. I know it's weed. Took this shot over at the river, I just love the pointed green edges around the blossom!!! Everything is so pretty right now around Missoula!! :)
I find by googling that this is Geranium Robertianum or Herb Robert. It grows around my garden as a weed but I find that people actually pay for seeds. That gives me a good feeling of having got something for nothing!
Abstract. There are times when I see something and just want to take a photo of it. I just loved the patterns, textures and light in this sea weed.
I actually like these weeds that pop up between the sidewalk and the planter (aka the bunker) in front of our house. They get these pretty little yellow flowers...
www.agric.wa.gov.au/pest-plants/caltrop-what-you-should-know
With a stem of Purslane Portulaca oleracea - A native which can become a weed.
This is the weed patch at the bottom of the draw passing through our land. Not ideal habitat for tiger beetles but two species have been able to colonize the paths I mow through the weeds. They are most often seen on the bare patches of earth. Notice the female Red-winged Blackbird ever keeping a watchful eye as I transgress the space near her nest.
The two tiger species are notated in the 1st comment section.
I let milk weed pop up randomly on our property in hopes that Monarch butterflies may survive It's a very finicky plant, and the Monarchs are kind of lame, often laying eggs on the smallest plants around. So it goes.
Several of these trucks were parked along Broadway in Midtown Manhattan. They sell cannabis based edibles. However there is no THC in the products, although there is cannabidiol (CBD), which is not psychoactive. In other words they will not give you a buzz.
In the not too distant space future, Jamaica will compete in the Bi-annual Stereotype Race. Their contestant: Milton, and his proud Weed Racer!
Kodiang
This woman was weeding out in the rice field as the grain would be used as uncontaminated seed for the following season.
Nikon FE2 | 50/1.4 Ai-S
DNP Centuria 200
Scanned negative
in Ataşehir, Istanbul.
I am reliably told that this isn't a weed at all, but a valued plant called
Alchemilla Mollis....what a mouthful :-O
These are just a tiny little weed flower... and I mean Tiny! Probably each flower would measure no more than a quarter of an inch. A teeny , tiny little weed, but absolutely beautiful all the same. Just takes a little more looking to actually see it! :-)
We've had a very wet and hot summer and everything has been growing like crazy, including the weeds. Usually passed over as nothing more than a problem, I took a closer look and put together a little series of photos that hopefully show their prettier side.
This weeds shadow was cast on this flagstone rock and the light was coming in on one side of it. There you go with my artsy side..;-) It caught my eye and also reminded me of plant fossils found in rocks..In this case I guess a shadow fossil. ;-)
Artist
Jules Breton (French, 1827–1906)
Title
The Weeders
Date
1868
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
28 1/8 x 50 1/4 in. (71.4 x 127.6 cm)
This is a smaller variant of Breton's painting "The Weeders" of 1860 (Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha, Nebraska), which was widely admired at the Salon of 1861 and the 1867 Exposition Universelle in Paris. Breton wrote in his autobiography that one evening in the fields near his native village of Courrières in northern France he had come across this twilight scene of peasants pulling up "thistles and weeds . . . their faces haloed by the pink transparency of their violet hoods, as if to venerate a fecundating star." It had presented itself to him as a "finished picture," completed even as far as "the breadth of the lines, intensity of the effect, character, richness and simplicity."