Birding canada 

1116 creative works found

  • Bald eagle in flight.

  • Two bald eagles soaring in the clouds.

  • The entering of a new era… the Old district of St. John’s is overtaken by the new architecture of this era. The pigeon in the foreground seems to emphasize the character and timlessness of Old St. John’s. / / / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography / Canon Rebel / / 3 shots merged in Photomatix and cs3 to touch it up

  • It take a bald eagle five years to reach full maturity, this one is almost there.

  • A Bald eagle doing a shoulder check.

  • This is a compilation image of a flock of Canada geese and the sun setting behind the San Juan mountains in southern Colorado.

  • I spend so much time with these wild and beautiful animals them have no fear of me.

  • Early morning mist rising off the mountain side.

  • AMERICAN BALD EAGLE (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) Bald Eagles live near large bodies of open water such as lakes, marshes, seacoasts and rivers, where there are plenty of fish to eat and tall trees for nesting and roosting. Bald Eagles have a presence in every U. S. state except Hawaii. Bald Eagles use a specific territory for nesting, winter feeding or a year-round residence. Its natural domain is from Alaska to Baja, California, and from Maine to Florida. Bald Eagles that reside in the northern U. S. and Canada migrate to the warmer southern climates of the U. S. during the winter to obtain easier access to food, especially fish. Some Bald Eagles that reside in the southern U. S. migrate slightly north during the hot summer months. Pet name Liberty Hatched 1996 Distribution: From Alaska and Canada down to Florida. Diet: Mainly fish but also carrion and various mammals. Bald eagles are very sociable and vocal birds. As is capture ….. “Killing For Survival (Liberty)” was featured in As Is “Killing For Survival (Liberty)” was featured in Eye Macros

  • The Stunning Bald Eagle…...... (As Is image straight from the camera !) Bald Eagles live near large bodies of open water such as lakes, marshes, seacoasts and rivers, where there are plenty of fish to eat and tall trees for nesting and roosting. Bald Eagles have a presence in every U. S. state except Hawaii. Bald Eagles use a specific territory for nesting, winter feeding or a year-round residence. Its natural domain is from Alaska to Baja, California, and from Maine to Florida. Bald Eagles that reside in the northern U. S. and Canada migrate to the warmer southern climates of the U. S. during the winter to obtain easier access to food, especially fish. Some Bald Eagles that reside in the southern U. S. migrate slightly north during the hot summer months. “The Stunning Bald Eagle…......” was featured in Alaska ~ Beyond Your Dreams “The Stunning Bald Eagle……...” was featured in Animal Portraits “The Stunning Bald Eagle……...” was featured in I Love Birds “The Stunning Bald Eagle……...” was featured in As Is “The Stunning Bald Eagle……...” was featured in Made By Nature “The Stunning Bald Eagle……...” was featured in All Animals Great And Small. “The Stunning Bald Eagle…......” was featured in Live, Love, Dream

  • For more information please see: / http://www.nfvirtual.com/

  • Crescent Beach, South Surrey, British Columbia. Canada / March 2008 Living one day at a time; / Enjoying one moment at a time… Extract from The Serenity Prayer by Reinhold Niebuhr

  • ! Currently 2128 views Featured in the Canon Vs Nikon group on 7 March 2009 Won the challenge in the My Favorite Owl Shot in the “Only Owls” group on 29 January 2009 Featured in the “Animal Kingdom” group on 20 January 2009 Featured in the group “We are Passionate about Birds of Prey” on 3 January 2009 Featured in the group “ONLY OWLS” on December 29, 2008 True to its name, the Burrowing Owl nests in a hole in the ground. Although it is quite willing to dig its own burrow, it often uses one already provided by prairie dogs, skunks, armadillos, or tortoises. A small Owl with a round head and no ear tufts. They have white eyebrows, yellow eyes, and long legs. The Owl is sandy coloured on the head, back, and upperparts of the wings and white-to-cream with barring on the breast and belly and a prominent white chin stripe. Location: Assiniboine Park in Winnipeg, Manitoba Make: Canon Model: Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XTi F stop: F/4.0 Exposure: 1/6 sec. Focal length: 85.0 mm Flash: flash did not fire, compulsory flash mode (16)

  • ! ! Currently 612 views Featured in The Photographer In Action group on 10 November 2009 Featured in the Caption Fun group on 9 November 2009 Featured in the group “Anything and Everything FUN” on January 29 2009. Featured in the group AMERICAS ~ Rural, Urban, Wild, Free – Expressions of Artists on January 19 2009. I WENT BIRDWATCHING WITH MY GOOD FRIEND RYAN, AND THIS LITTLE CHICKADEE LANDED ON HIS GLOVE WHILE HE WAS SHOOTING OTHERS NEAR BY…I COULD NOT RESIST THIS PHOTO OPPORTUNITY LOCATION: BIRD’S HILL PARK, JUST NORTH OF WINNIPEG,MANITOBA Make: Canon Model: Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XTi F stop: F/6.3 Exposure: 1/250 sec. Focal length: 187.0 mm Flash: flash did not fire, compulsory flash mode (16) Dimensions: 2400×1691 Shutter speed (Tv): 8

  • Cedar Waxwings enjoying the sunshine in mid winter ….............. Alberta, Canada …........ January 23, 2009 THANKS VERY MUCH FOR YOUR VIEWS FRIENDS!! xo

  • 930 views as of Nov. 13, 2009 Featured in The Birds – Feb. 15, 2009 / I can almost feel it. Spring is JUST around the corner. It’s such an exciting time in Canada after a long and cold winter. The lilac trees bloom putting forth the sweetest scent and the hummingbirds return to our property after a long migration. Yes, Spring will be here before we know it. I can’t wait! I spent countless HOURS last summer, sitting in a lawn chair, ever so patiently waiting to try & capture one of these little darlings in flight. They are only 7-9 cm long. While hovering their wings beat 55x/s, 61x/s when moving backwards, and at least 75x/s when moving forward! / / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—— / Processing info: / This image started out with 3 photograph layers (the lilac background image, a female ruby-throated hummingbird, and the tail from a different photo of the same bird). I took all of the original images with my Canon DSLR. After removing the background around the original bird photos I merged all of the layers in PhotoShop. I digitally painted/blended the entire image in Corel Painter X using the Impasto Depth Smear brush at 30% opacity. I cloned out a distracting branch in the upper left corner and performed blend # 2 work on the main lilac blooms, hummingbird, and the largest leaves using grainy blender 10 brush at 38% opacity. / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—- / Bird Gallery / ADD RENEE TO YOUR WATCHLIST

  • Canadian geese taking off in the morning from Prospect Lake, Wheat Ridge, Colorado. I used my 70-300 lens for this capture, so they look like they’re really close. I also added some dry brush in PSE 3.

  • / / A beautiful song to go with the beautiful Eagle’s Wings! Hope you enjoy! / I took this shot at Bear Cove in Port Hardy, BC on Vancouver Island, Canada!!! / Eagle’s Wings / / / Thank you for viewing! :) / Statistics on this image to date Nov. 10/09 – *Views- 1266, Favorited- 53, Comments- 237 / my #1 shot here on Red Bubble!! I am quite proud!! Many thanks to all the people that made this possible!!*

  • Featured in Color and Light, Dimensions, All Countries~Wetlands, Ponds, Lakes, and Rivers, Eagles Only, and in Alphabet Soup, Top 10 Challenge Winner Alphabet Soup (Letter E). This juvenile bald eagle carries the carcass of a mallard duck, he may have killed himself, or stolen from another eagle. Life in the marsh can be difficult, and all its inhabitants struggle to survive during the winter. This image was captured at a marsh in the Comox Valley of Canada’s Vancouver Island in February of 2009 using a Nikon D300, a Nikkor f4 600 mm lens, on a large Gitzo tripod, ISO 400, f4, 1/500s. Within a few seconds of this capture, the eagle loses his grip on the duck and drops it into the waters of the marsh in an image I titled, The Gruesome End

  • Captured with Canon 1D mk3 and Canon 100-400 lens at Stanley Park Blackpool Lancs UK Canadian Gosling chick ponders over his first ever swim Featured in the All About Water group / Featured in the Canon DSLR group / Featured in the Dimensions group / Featured in the Photography 101 group / Featured in the 300+ Go Long group / Featured in the Art North West group / 2nd Place finish in the New Beginnings challenge in the Canon v Nikon group

  • Featured in Dimensions, Nirvana, Canadiana, Eagles Only, and 300+ Go Long. In this fourth shot of my bald eagles’ nest series, the mother bald eagle has just joined her two young at the end of the day. The whole family sleeps together in two large coniferous trees. In the two weeks I have been shooting and observing at the nest, “dad” always arrives last at the end of the day. Soon the young fledged eagles will be on their own, completely abandoned by their parents. In this shot, she is certainly giving me the eye, as she hides herself within the protective bows of fir tree next to the nesting tree. Captured on the Fraser River in Delta, British Columbia, using a Nikon D300 and Nikkor f4 600 mm lens, on a Gitzo tripod, ISO 640, -0.33 EV, f4, 1/100s.

  • ! Featured in the I Love Birds group on 5 September 2009. Featured in the JPG Cast-Offs group on 30 August 2009.* Location: Taken shortly after sunrise at Oak Hammock Marsh north of Winnipeg, Manitoba. Model: Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XTi 75-300mm Lens, F stop: F/8.0 Exposure: 1/2500 sec. Focal length: 229.0 mm Flash: flash did not fire, compulsory flash mode (16) Dimensions: 2370×1818 Shutter speed (Tv): 11.3

  • This African superb starling (Lamprotornis superbus) finds a large cactus a convenient perch from which to scan for food. Bloedel Conservatory, Vancouver, BC, 26 Aug 2009. Canon Rebel XSi (450D) / Canon EF 70-200mm f/4L USM / 1/125, f/5, -1/3, ISO 800, 200mm, hand held

  • ! Featured in the Canon DSLR (One Image Per day group on 5 October 2009… Featured in ImageWriting (2/24) group on October 5 2009. The Bald Eagle… Haliaeetus Leacocephalus In 1872, when the Bald Eagle, was chosen as the symbol of the United states, Benjamin Franklin initially protested. He considered this eagle “a bird of bad moral character”, and recommended that the young nation adopt the Wild Turkey instead. The Bald Eagle once bred throughout North America, but its numbers have declined severely due to pesticide poisoning. Today some of these pesticides have been banned, and they are making a modest comeback. Identification: 30-43 inches. Very large, brown, hawklike bird with a white head, tail and stout, hooked yellow beak. Immatures variable with a dark head and tail witha black bill. Voice; A series of squeaky, thin cackling or chittering notes. Habitant: Seacoasts, lakes, rivers, and marshes. Range: Breeds in the forested areas of Alaska and Canada south to Oregon, N.Idaho, Great Lakes area and N. New England: generally along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts and in Florida. Winters from S. Canada south, especially along the major river systems of the interior. Info gleaned from The Audubon Society Field Guide. / Camera Details: Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi, 55-255mm Zoom Lens, Aperture exp 8.6, Shutter speed 1/400, ISO 100 / Focal Length 125mm. Location: Taken in Assiniboine Park in Winnipeg, manitoba.

RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.

You can buy their stuff

On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.

Risk Free Returns

It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.

About RedBubble

Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 328,900 items to more than 70 countries around the world.

Join In

Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.

Find More…

Birding Canada T-Shirts

Birding Canada Wall Art

Birding Canada Journal Entries

Birding Canada Writing

Birding Canada Calendars