View allAll Photos Tagged white
White clover (Trifolium repens) head with some flowers in bloom and some already withered.
Główka koniczyny białej (Trifolium repens) z częścią kwiatów kwitnących i częścią już przekwitniętych.
There are several dead tree stumps exposed from a reed bed alongside a series of small lakes. They act as great vantage points for any fish or insect eaters. On this occasion, a plucky young Wagtail.
It's Wonderful White Friday.
To all of my wonderful and loyal Flickr friends and contacts and some recent new ones, have a Fabulous Friday!
Best to View On Black
Polícia-inglesa-do-sul (Sturnella superciliaris), male, adult.
Morretes, Paraná, Brazil.
Animal in wildlife.
Species: A0065
Back from our vacation in GREECE.............SEND YOU WHITE ENERGY!!!!!!!
AND WISH YOU A MOST LOVING SUMMERWEEK!
Strictly speaking, white is not a color, but the manifestation of the presence of all color - the complete energy of light. It stands for wholeness and completion. In many cultures it represents openness and truth. White has a cold quality. It can provide clarity as its energy is complete.
White has purification vibrations and can be used to clear blocks from your path.
It holds the potential to move toward every other color and this makes it a good choice for new beginnings, and development in any direction.
Put some white in your life when you want:
to clear clutter and obstacles away
to start a fresh beginning
to bring about mental clarity
purification of thoughts or actions
Created for Smile on Saturday! :-) theme of reflection on white.
The flower is from my Tree Hydrangea this summer. At whatever stage (color) you pick the flower, that's the color it stays! Picked this one just when it started getting cold out. Flowers were still green but turning deep pink. It's just been sitting in a vase for a few months and is totally dry and crunchy. ;-)
Happy Smile on Saturday! :-)
This beautiful evening she was entertaining us near Kaunas sea. She was searching for food on the sea shore quite a long time, allowing to take a few photos of her.
I really wasn't sure what kind of hawk this was while I was looking at it. It wasn't until later when I consulted a "Birds of the Rio Grande Valley" pamphlet, which I had picked up at a grocery store, that I figured it out.
Laguna Atascosa NWR
White-flowering Ipheion uniflorum blooming by the roadside.
Ipheion uniflorum (Springstar, ‘Hana-nira’ in Japanese) is a bulbous flowering plant in the allium subfamily, native to Argentina and Uruguay.
These birds are incredibly iridescent! They don't have the white face in the winter but I enjoyed the light and how it made the colors pop.