Assie 

20 creative works found

  • This is one of the many wonders of italy, more specifically assisi, a place where art resides in every stone and every piece of nature, and the old architecture style is gorgeous. / Why not having a bit of this amazing architecture exposed in your house, so everybody can see it and admire it?

  • first assi
    by samara

    i’ve just finished my first assi, unfortunatly, its taking me a long time to complete it and the photos aren’t great. I find it difficult…

    i’ve just finished my first assi, unfortunatly, its taking me a long time to complete it and the photos aren’t great. I find it difficult to get it done with it just being my daughter and I at the moment. / loss of insperation. / any help welcome.

  • Crocodile

  • I love Chili’s perky expressions. He is an Aussie/Queensland mix. There is no end to his energy! /

  • My dog Chili always has this look on his face when I come home from work. It usually means that he got into something and he is wishing and hoping that I don’t notice! /

  • I shot this in 2006. The year that huge blizzard hit Colorado! Poor Chili! He was waiting for me to open the door and let him back in. I was playing with this photo and changed it to black and white! / /

  • Side of St. Francis de Assis Church in Taos, NM. It is made completely of adobe. theis angle shows the supporting buttresses. This was FEATURED in Out of the Past Group on July 22, 2009, the same day I put it in RedBubble.

  • Famous large adobe church just outside of Taos, NM. This was taken in color and converted to b&w. I think the b&w is more effective than the color.Many famous artists and photographers have used this as a favorite subject as is one of mine. Every year the church officials ask the congregation and anyone else that would like to help resurface/rebuild the outside surface which is why it looks so good. It is made of adobe and they use the old methods of making the adobe from mud and straw and apply it by hand.I used my Canon Eos Rebel XTi at f/ 5.6, 1/2000sec, iso 200, 55mm on my Tamron 28-300mm lens. This was FEATURED in the United Stated Group July26, 2009. This shot was in the TOP TEN of Colorless Buildings in the History Group Sept. 14,’09.

  • A patient fishermen at his favorite fishing hole. Fishing on a small lake near the touristic village of Rochefort-en Terre in Brittany, France. / / /

  • An old wooden and stone bench on a narrow street in St. Goustan, Auray, Morbihan, France. /

  • Small Tortoiseshell, Butterfly, butterflies, insect, invertebrate, Aglais urticae, orange, black, wings, red, blue spots, Succisa pratensis, devils bit scabious, British Wildlife, Irish Wildlife, ASSI, Nature Reserve,

  • a difficult shy wader to capture i think this the best i have so far Greenshank, Tringa nebularia, wader, shorebird, hunter, predator, hunting, British Wildlife, Irish Wildlife, Strangford Lough, ASSI, SPA, SAC, Nature Reserve, TIFF available, bird, winter visitor, migrant, IPSV2547, IPSV0833, IPSV1731, IPSV0495, IPSV2741, IPSV0497, IPSV2590, IPSV1301, IPSV2707,

  • The wheatear is a small mainly ground-dwelling bird. It hops or runs on the ground. It is blue-grey above with black wings and white below with an orange flush to the breast. It has a black cheek. In flight it shows a white rump and a black ‘T’ shape on its tail. It is a summer visitor and passage migrant. Birds breed mainly in western and northern Britain and western Ireland, although smaller numbers do breed in southern and eastern England. It winters in central Africa.

  • Photo of the small copper taken on Sheepland Coast ASSI near Ardglass County Down. The Small Copper is a fast flying butterfly that, once settled, is unmistakable with bright copper-coloured forewings. It has a widespread distribution and is a familiar and welcome sight for many naturalists. Subspecies: eleus This subspecies is found throughout the British Isles, with the exception of Ireland. Subspecies: hibernica This subspecies represents the population found in Ireland, and has minor colour differences with the subspecies eleus. Distribution This is a widespread butterfly, occurring in discrete colonies through most of the British Isles. Most colonies are fairly small, with just a few adults seen on the wing at any one time. It is absent from the mountainous areas, and the Outer Hebrides, Orkneys and Shetlands. Annual Cycle There are typically 2 or 3 generations each year, depending on the weather, with 4 believed to be possible in extremely good years. The first adults emerge in May, occasionally at the end of April, depending on location. The next generation emerges at the end of July, or beginning of August. Adults may also appear in September, depending on location.

  • Peacock, Butterflies, underwings, dark, succisa pratensis, Inachis io, eye spots, bright, colourful, insect, invertebrate, wings, British Wildlife, Irish Wildlife, woodland, gardens, coastal, grassland, ASSI, SSSI, Sheepland Coast, Lecale, County Down, Northern Ireland,

  • Small Tortoiseshell, Small Tortoiseshell, Butterfly, butterflies, insect, invertebrate, Aglais urticae, orange, black, wings, red, blue spots, rape seed, British Wildlife, Irish Wildlife, ASSI, Nature Reserve, TIFF available,

  • From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia / Jump to: navigation, search / Common Sandpiper Adult in breeding plumage at Hauxley (Northumberland, UK) / Conservation status Least Concern (IUCN 3.1) / Scientific classification / Kingdom: Animalia / Phylum: Chordata / Class: Aves / Subclass: Neornithes / Infraclass: Neognathae / Superorder: Neoaves / Order: Charadriiformes / Suborder: Scolopaci / Family: Scolopacidae / Genus: Actitis / Species: A. hypoleucos / Binomial name / Actitis hypoleucos / (Linnaeus, 1758) / Synonyms Tringa hypoleucos Linnaeus, 1758 The Common Sandpiper, Actitis hypoleucos, is a small Palearctic wader. This bird and its American sister species, the Spotted Sandpiper (A. macularia), make up the genus Actitis. They are parapatric and replace each other geographically; stray birds of either species may settle down with breeders of the other and hybridize. Hybridization has also been reported between the Common Sandpiper and the Green Sandpiper, a basal species of the closely related shank genus Tringa. [edit] Description The adult is 18-20 cm long, with a 32-35 cm wingspan. It has greyish brown upperparts, white underparts, short dark-yellowish legs and feet, and a bill with a pale base and dark tip. In winter plumage, they are duller and have more conspicuous barring on the wings, though this is still only visible at close range. Juveniles are more heavily barred above and have buff edges to the wing feathers.[1] This species is very similar to the slightly larger Spotted Sandpiper (A. macularia) in non-breeding plumage. But its darker legs and feet and the crisper wing pattern (visible in flight) tend to give it away, and of course they are only rarely found in the same location.[1] Adult in winter plumage in Hyderabad, India. / Juvenile / Adult in winter plumage in Hyderabad, India. / Spotted Sandpiper in winter plumage [edit] Ecology It is a gregarious bird and is seen in large flocks, and has the distinctive stiff-winged flight, low over the water, of Actitis waders. The Common Sandpiper breeds across most of temperate and subtropical Europe and Asia, and migrates to Africa, southern Asia and Australia in winter. The eastern edge of its migration route passes by Palau in Micronesia, where hundreds of birds may gather for a stop-over. They depart the Palau region for their breeding quarters around the last week of April to the first week of May.[2] / Wintering bird foraging matakakoni-style, Puri (Orissa, India) The Common Sandpiper forages by sight on the ground or in shallow water, picking up small food items such as insects, crustaceans and other invertebrates; it may even catch insects in flight. In the Nukumanu language of the Nukumanu Islands (Papua New Guinea), this species is usually called tiritavoi. Another Nukumanu name for it, matakakoni, exists, but this is considered somewhat taboo and not used when children and women are around. The reason for this is that matakakoni means “bird that walks a little, then copulates”, in reference to the pumping tail and thrusting head movements the Actitis species characteristically perform during foraging.[3] It nests on the ground near freshwater. When threatened, the young may cling to their parent’s body to be flown away to safety.[4] The Common Sandpiper is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies. It is widespread and common, and therefore classified as a Species of Least Concern by the IUCN.[5]

  • Green Veined White Butterfly, Pieris napi, spots, butterfly, white, garden, wet grassland, meadow, British Wildlife, Irish Wildlife, Northern Ireland, ASSI, BAP, NIEA, EHS, ASSI, Murlough bay, mating, sex, reproduction,

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