Canada goosed 

443 creative works found

  • Location Taken Hinchingbrooke Park, Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom. Canada goose

  • The Canada Goose Like most geese, the Canada goose is naturally migratory with the wintering range being most of the United States. The calls overhead from large groups of Canada Geese flying in V-shaped formation signal the transitions into spring and autumn. The diet of the Canada Goose includes green vegetation and grains. The Canada Goose eats a variety of grasses when on land. It feeds by grasping a blade of grass with the bill, then tearing it with a jerk of the head.

  • They are back and that means we have spring again. Winnipeg, Manitoba

  • Taken 26.4.08 at Lee Valley Country Park Cheshunt

  • Canada Goose, / Lakeshore Series

  • At a small pond near Springfield, VA.

  • Taken at Assiniboine Park in Winnipeg.

  • A Canada goose at sunset, in a pond near Alexandria VA.

  • The bronze plaque on the front of the Lundar Goose reads: / “The giant Canada goose, Symbol of our Community, which was brought back from near extinction, through the foresight of Mr. W.A. Murphy & Associates. Statue was designed and constructed by Lawrence King, painted by Marlene Hourd, sponsored by the Lundar Area Development Board, 1976-77. Plaque donated by Mr. Peter Curry.” / Built – May 20, 1978 Dimensions – Wingspan: 20 Feet (6.1 Metres) / Height: 18 Feet (5.5 Metres) Construction Materials – Metal and Fibreglass; base: stone, cement, wood Location – East side of Highway 6 / Taken from website: bigthings.ca

  • Featured in Town Giants – April 24th, 2009 Located in Lundar, Manitoba. Built in !978. Designed by Lawrence King and Painted by Marlene Hourd. Height 18 feet with the wingspan of 29 feet.

  • Walking along the docks at the Marina in the spring, I came upon this “mother to be” sitting quietly in her nest. She was so quiet and surrounded by foliage and I didn’t notice her as I stood looking out at the bay. I was startled when I looked beside me and there she was. / She kept her eye on me and I kept mine on her not wanting to disturb her, but couldn’t resist taking a photo of her. / I didn’t realize the beaks had teeth till I saw the photo at home. / Lovely, bright eyed Canadian Goose. /

  • Photo taken with my Sony DSC W55 / This beauty did not seem the least bit bothered by my presence and actually seemed to be posing for the camera. She did not move as I set up my tripod within a few feet of her and actually stood up as I took this capture. Photo taken March 2, 2009

  • Canada Goose strolling in the park / Shot with Olympus e510

  • captured at castle howard, yorkshire. an area of outstanding natural beauty. / this was sooo funny! sorry it was so small! happened very fast!

  • Canada Goose landing on thin ice. See more bird pictures here Birds

  • An out-of-control Canada goose comes in for a wild water landing on a stream in the Alton Baker area of Eugene, Oregon.

  • Featured in the I Love Birds group Canada Geese in lake Blackpool Lancashire UK / Dusk Shot with Canon 40D

  • The Canada Goose (Branta canadensis) is a goose belonging to the genus Branta, which is native to North America. Nikon D80 – Nikkor 18-105mm VR lens – Polarisor

  • A young gosling mirrors his father, foraging in the grass for food. captured in Kinsmen Park, just north of Sault St. Marie, Ontario, Canada.

  • I love beachcombing and looking for odd pieces of flotsam and jetsam, but seldom find one with such evidence of the erosive (corrosive) power of wind,sea and sun on an old stump which obviously spent way too much time at the mercy of the North Pacific ocean. It finally came ashore on the beach at Goose Spit Park, a community park of the town of Comox on the eastern shore of Vancouver Island, British Columbia. A very popular place for locals and visitors alike, the Spit is a long stretch of land and sand extending out into the water and forming a protected harbour for boats. It’s right at the end of the town so very easily accessed by car, cycle, boat or just hiking. / Taken with a Fuji S100FS camera, May 17, 2009

  • I took this photo of a Canada Goose at the Green Ribbon Trail in St. Catharines, Ont., Canada / I just got my new 300mm f/4 lens with the 1.7 teleconverter so was anxious to get there to see what I shots I could get. It was an overcast day today so I had to use ISO 400. I also took some shots of a Great Blue Heron and a Green Heron but haven’t played around with them yet to see if they are good enough to post. Nikon d80 / 1/100 sec at f/6.7 / 1/3 EV / ISO 400 / Focal Length 500

  • Yes, the water came out this green in this photo of Canada geese on a pond in Pennsylvania.

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