Canonpowershota650is 

159 creative works found

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Water Lillies at Cape River Far North Queensland. 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of “Water Lillies at Cape River” will be donated to “thegreataustraliancancerbushwalk” for the Cancer Council. Please check out Michael Mitchell’s website thegreataustraliancancerbushwalk Canon PowerShot A650 IS / 12.1MP – 6x Optical Zoom – 4x Digital Zoom Art_4_Charity_Calendars 100% of the proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of my “Cape York Calendars” will be donated to “thegreataustraliancancerbushwalk” for the Cancer Council. ============================================= / To View My Zazzle Store Click HERE Water Lillies Carry Bag / Water Lillies Mouse Pad / Water Lillies Mug / Water Lillies Magnet /

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Twin Beach Lookout Cape Hillsborough National Park, Queensland, Australia. Cape Hillsborough with its 816 hectare coastal National Park about 20 kilometres north of Mackay is renowned for its rugged scenery, walking tracks and native wildlife. The closest thing to a crowd on a beachfront stroll in this neck of the woods is likely to be a friendly family of wallabies. The park is scattered with walking trails, the most popular being the 1.6 kilometres Juipera Plants Trail. This trail illustrates the way the Juipera Aboriginals used the parks native plants for survival. Other walks include the Diversity Boardwalk, Beachcomber Cover Track and Andrew Points walking track which passes six lookouts offering spectacular views make the climb up numerous steps at the beginning of this track worthwhile. At low tide a causeway links the end of the track to Wedge Island. Over 150 species of bird life and tropical butterflies live amongst the parks eucalypt forests, hoop pines, creeks, mangroves and headlands. Canon PowerShot A650 IS / 12.1MP – 6x Optical Zoom – 4x Digital Zoom

  • Brush-tailed Possum is donated to the Wildlife_Appeal_Group for the wildlife victims of the Victorian Bushfires. All of the proceeds will go to WRAP (Wildlife Rescue And Protection Incorporated) ========================================================= Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Brush-tailed possums are marsupials, and their young are usually born in May and June after a gestation period of 17 days. The newborn possum finds its way to the mother’s pouch and attaches itself to a teat. After feeding and growing for about five months in the pouch, the young possum spends another two months clinging to its mother’s back as she moves about. Usually only one young is born at a time, and males do not take part in looking after the young. By the time they are seven months old, the young possums are independent of their mothers. They are fully grown by about 10 months, and the females will usually start to breed for the first time when they reach 12 months of age. The brush-tailed possum is the most widely distributed possum in Australia. It can be found in forests and woodlands all along the east coast, and also lives in inland areas along tree-lined rivers and creeks. A nocturnal animal, it is active at night and usually spends the day sleeping. Canon PowerShot A650 IS / 12.1MP – 6x Optical Zoom – 4x Digital Zoom

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Pink Rebutia narvaecensis Rebutia is a genus in the family Cactaceae, containing 41 species and are native to Bolivia and Argentina. They are generally small, colorful cacti, globular in form, which freely produce flowers that are relatively large in relation to the body. They have no distinctive ribs, but do have regularly arranged small tubercles. They are considered fairly easy to grow and they may produce large quantities of seeds that germinate freely around the parent plant. Sets of Two / Rebutia_narvawcensis_-_Pink_Cactus_Flower Canon PowerShot A650 IS / 12.1MP – 6x Optical Zoom – 4x Digital Zoom

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Pink Tulips ============================================== / Featured on the Home Page – 12/10/09 ============================================== / Pink Tulips from my garden – Spring in Australia. I like the way the light enhances the petals. Approx size of these Tulips is 6cms wide. Canon PowerShot A650 IS / 12.1MP – 6x Optical Zoom – 4x Digital Zoom

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery View from Mt Kaputar Stopped to take in this spectacular view on my way up to the Summit of Mt Kaputar, New South Wales, Australia. Mount Kaputar National Park is located on 36,817 hectares and is 50 kilometres east of Narrabri and 570 kilometres north west of Sydney. Mount Kaputar National Park consists of a gathering of sharp peaks and rocky ranges, the remnants of a 17 million year old volcano. Millions of years of erosion have carved this volcanic pile into the Nandewar Range, with its dramatic landscape of lava terraces, volcanic plugs and ring dykes. At the peak of the range is Mt Kaputar, which reaches an altitude of 1510m. From the summit it is possible to take in 360 degree views encompassing one tenth of NSW. The National Park is popular with rockclimbers. There are 11 walks in the national park, most offering spectacular views of the area. The park protects a wide variety of plant communities, including semi-arid woodlands, wet eucalypt forests and subalpine heaths. Wildflowers in spring provide a magnificent display. It’s home to a host of animal species, and provides a haven for many threatened species – including bats, birds, wallabies, quolls and a unique large pink slug, which often appears after rain. Canon PowerShot A650 IS / 12.1MP – 6x Optical Zoom – 4x Digital Zoom

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Ebor Falls Ebor Falls, New England National Park, New England Tablelands, New South Wales, Australia. Ebor is a small country town of approximately 100 people, 45 minutes east of Armidale on the Waterfall Way and 1.5 hours west from the coast high on the New England Tablelands. Just a few minutes walk from Ebor are the Ebor Falls. The Guy Fawkes River meanders along the edge of the township of Ebor and drops over Ebor Falls, a columned basalt rock of 115 metres. The falls are most spectacular after recent rainfall in the catchment area. Although not very high, the two part fall presents the visitor with some great views and some interesting walks. Canon PowerShot A650 IS / 12.1MP – 6x Optical Zoom – 4x Digital Zoom

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Three Blue Berries ============================================== / Featured in the Top 10 of Alphabet_Soup Best of B_Challenge ============================================== / “Green Patch”, Booderee National Park, Jervis Bay, (ACT) Australian Capital Territory. AS IS – Straight from the camera! Shutter Speed: 1/80sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 200 / Focal Length: 44.4mm Canon PowerShot A650 IS / 12.1MP – 6x Optical Zoom – 4x Digital Zoom

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Brown Falcon (Falco berigora) Taranna Conservation Park, East Coast Tasmania, Australia. AS IS – Straight from the Camera Brown Falcons are small to medium-sized raptors (birds of prey). The female is larger than the male. The Brown Falcon has a range of plumage colours, from very dark brown to light brown above and off-white below. Generally, the upperparts are dark brown and the underparts are pale buff or cream. The sides of the head are brown with a characteristic tear-stripe below the eye. Birds from the tropical north are very dark, with a paler face and undertail, while those from central Australia are paler all over. Younger birds resemble dark adults, but have less obvious barring on the tail, and a buff-yellow colour on the face, throat and nape of the neck. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/400sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 80

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Ruins of a Huon Pine Barge ============================================== / Featured in the Top 10 of Rusty_Crusty_and_Falling_to_Bits / Challenge Nautical_relics ============================================== / The discovery of rich deposits of copper at Mt Lyell led to the establishment of the Mt Lyell Mining Company in 1892. / Teepookana was situated at the highest navigable point of the river, where the township acted as a port facility for the Mt Lyell Mining and Railway Company, and home to about 200 people, mostly railway workers. / Two steamers, the “Pioneer” and “Eagle”, and over a dozen barges, or “lighters”, plied the King River, carrying coal, passengers, goods and mail for shipment by rail to the copper mines, and copper for shipment from the Strahan port facilities. / Today, the ruins of two Huon pine “lighters” can be seen at the Fishermens Wharf, Strahan. Strahan, West Coast Tasmania, Australia. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/100sec / Aperture: F4.0 / ISO: 80

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Historic Richmond Bridge ============================================ / Sold a Laminated Print ============================================ / Featured in Top 10 of Tasmania Challenge Bridge_of_Tasmania ============================================ / The Richmond Bridge, built in 1823, is the oldest bridge in Australia still in use. Richmond Bridge is a lasting symbol of Tasmania’s convict heritage. The sandstone arches of Australia’s oldest known large stone arch bridge have spanned Tasmania’s Coal River since its completion in 1825. The foundation stone for the Richmond Bridge was laid on 11th December 1823 and construction continued using convict labour until completion in 1825. In 2005, the bridge was recognised as an outstanding historic place and added to the Australian National Heritage List. Richmond, Tasmania, Australia. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/1250sec / Aperture: F4.5 / ISO: 80

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Sunflower and Bees The sunflower (Helianthus annuus) is an annual plant in the family Asteraceae and native to the Americas, with a large flowering head. The stem can grow as high as 3 meters (9 3/4 ft), and the flower head can reach 30 cm (11.8 in) in diameter with the “large” seeds. The term “sunflower” is also used to refer to all plants of the genus Helianthus, many of which are perennial plants. / What is usually called the flower is actually a head of numerous florets (small flowers) crowded together. The outer florets are the sterile ray florets and can be yellow, maroon, orange, or other colours. The florets inside the circular head are called disc florets, which mature into what are traditionally called “sunflower seeds,” but are actually the fruit of the plant. The inedible husk is the wall of the fruit and the true seed lies within the kernel. The florets within the sunflower’s cluster are arranged in a spiralling pattern. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/320sec / Aperture: F4.5 / ISO: 100

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Purple Foxglove (Digitalis purpurea) Common names: Foxglove, Purple Foxglove or Lady’s Glove Came across these beauties growing wild by the roadside. The foxglove is a familiar tall herb that produces 20-80 nodding flowers on a long spike. The tube-like flowers are pinkish-purple in colour, with an area of white inside the tube, which features darker purple spots. The common name derives from the Anglo-Saxon ‘foxes glofa’ meaning foxes gloves, and refers to the tubular flowers, which are suggestive of the gloves of a small animal. The flowers were also known as ‘witches’ thimbles’ by Medieval herbalists. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/100sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 200

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery The Magic of the Forest Floor Goblin Forest Walk, The Blue Tier, North East Highlands National Park, Tasmania, Australia. As Is – Straight from the Camera The_Blue_Tier The Blue Tier has been the home to thousands of people who have lived, worked and died on the mountain. Tin was the reason the early pioneers came here. The tin lay in heaps behind rocks and in the creek and river beds. All the miners had to do was bag the ore up. / In their search for the tin-bearing rock, these early pioneers burnt most of the temperate rainforest which existed above the 600 metre level. When the mines were finished, the farmers over-grazed the grass areas which followed the burning, eventually the mosses took over. / Since the last grazing, around 1970, the mountain and its native animals have been successful in aiding the regeneration of the temperate rainforest. What you see today is the continuing struggle of the rainforest trying to return. / To appreciate the extent of the regeneration it is necessary to visit the various areas by following the well-defined walking tracks on the mountain. There are bogs, grassland, pure rainforest, regenerated rainforest, tea-tree swamps and areas dominated by celery top pine. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/60sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 320

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Big Red ============================================== / Featured in the Top 10 of You’re_Accepted Challenge Red_Red_Red ============================================== / Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/200sec / Aperture: F4.0 / ISO: 200

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Honey Glazed Fungi These beautiful fungi were on the walk to St Columba Falls (one of Tasmania’s highest waterfalls), in St Columba Falls State Reserve located in Tasmania’s north east region. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/60sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 200

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Gordon River Dam, also known as the Gordon Dam, is a double curvature arch dam on the Gordon River in Tasmania. Its height is 140 metres (460 ft), making it the tallest dam in Tasmania and the fifth-tallest in Australia. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/500sec / Aperture: 4.0 / ISO: 80

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Sunset out West Bathurst, Country New South Wales, Australia. AS IS – Straight from the Camera From where I sit on my back verandah, somtimes I’m luckily enough to capture a few of the beautiful sunsets that we have out here in the west. In winter, the sun is in just the right position. Bathurst is Australia ’s oldest inland settlement and has a population of around 37,000. It is only a two and a half-hour drive from Sydney and a three-hour drive from Canberra . Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/1000sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 80

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Rainbow coloured Dahlia For a dramatic spread of colour in summer and autumn Dahlias are hard to beat. They are named after the Swedish botanist, Dr Anders Dahl, and come from the family Asteraceae, which is part of the daisy family. These wonderful flowers originated in the mountain ranges of Mexico, Guatemala and Columbia, before becoming popular throughout the world. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of different cultivars and hybrids of Dahlias and about 30 species. This tuberous-rooted perennial plant is characterised by the different flower types. Dahlias come in many lovely shades including bi-colours. / Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/320sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 100

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Land of Three Thousand Lakes A Day’s Hike – MY_STORY The Walls of Jerusalem National Park, Tasmania, Australia. The future belongs to those who believe / in the beauty of their dreams / Eleanor Roosevelt Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/500sec / Aperture: F4.0 / ISO: 80

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Peeping Out Tiny Yellow Fungi making its way out of the mossy forest wall along the road to Bird River. Macquarie Harbour Historic Site, Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area, Tasmania, Australia. AS IS – Straight from the Camera Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/60sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 250

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Gerbera Abstract Canon PowerShot A650 IS

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Romancing the Icicle Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/200sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 200

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Chantilly Lace ============================================== / Sold a Framed Print – (406mm x 305mm) ============================================== / Eucalyptus globulus is one of the most widely cultivated of Australia’s native trees. It can be found in parks and gardens in many parts of Australia and is well established overseas (eg. Algeria, Brazil, France, India, Spain and Portugal). Tasmania blue gum – E. globulus; found in eastern and south-eastern Tasmania, as well as in the islands of Bass Strait. It also occurs in southern Victoria; flowers occur singly in the leaf axils; rough bark usually retained at base of trunk. It is the floral emblem of Tasmania. Tasmania, Australia. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/250sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 200

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