Deciduous 

150 creative works found

  • Stunning autumn leaf brightening up the garden just before winter

  • I purposefully went to Cradle Mountain in Autumn to get the colours of the deciduous beech tree (northofagus gunnii. With the help of the morning light, I came away with this beautiful memory.

  • Vast rows of deciduous trees can be seen in perfect columns, displaying their autumn attire, at this tree farm in eastern Oregon. Tree farmers sow rows of trees in varying stages so they can be harvested at different times and therefore produce a constant yield to maintain a consistent gross. Eastern Oregon October 2007

  • Just delving back a few years to a picture from Shap Abbey in Westmorland (now Cumbria) and on the eastern borders of the Lake District. More details of this wonderful abbey will follow if and when I get round to putting up some pictures! / However, as is so often the case with our treasured abbeys, the location of Shap Abbey is such a potent part of the whole experience. As you stroll towards the west tower you pass by the River Lowther with the blur of a dipper coming to rest on a stone to “dip” up and down before plunging into the rushing waters, whilst above, on the bank, trees, gnarled with age and battered by the harsh climate cling on to life for hundreds of years watching patiently as the abbey slowly returns to Nature’s grasp. / Thanks for looking, / Richard

  • This was the last pic i took of the Fagus as the hike took me away from the mountain and down into the valley.

  • A beautiful white Birch tree …. Betula ‘Jermyns’

  • It’s hard to resist – the colours can be so amazing… Nothofagus gunnii deciduous beech, or fagus to the locals. Tasmania’s only native deciduous tree, it usually grows at elevations above 900m, often on the edge of scree slopes and other naturally disturbed areas.

  • In the high country even the fagus, (Nothofagus gunnii), get heavily wind-pruned if they raise their branches too high above the sheltering rocks. The trunk indicates that this venerable specimen has seen the odd harsh winter.

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery White Clematis Clematis are charming climbers, bearing flowers in profusion generally in spring or summer. The natural distribution of the genus (containing over 250 species) ranges from cool temperate to tropical regions. They are members of the Ranunculaceae family which includes anemones, peonies, buttercups and aquilegias. Clematis are long-lived, most are deciduous, but there are some evergreen varieties. The name ‘Clematis’ comes from the Greek word ‘clema’, meaning tendril, and describes the slender twining petioles that help many species to climb. The petiole forms a ‘spring’ which supports the stem but allows flexibility preventing wind or storm damage. On the flowers, what appear to be petals are in fact sepals which have taken on the petals’ function of attracting pollinators and protecting the reproductive organs. To clarify the matter, botanists call these tepals. The fluffy feathery seed heads are also very decorative and give rise to its European common name of “Old Man’s Beard”.

  • So lovely in full foilage. Photo was taken at Riverside Park, Pembroke, ON , Canada / As/Is from the camera /

  • Corbett Gardens is one of the features of Bowral – in the Southern Highlands of NSW Australia – which attracts both tourists and locals alike. Winter, and the deciduous trees are bare, but the evergreens and bright flowers still make it a most attractive place to wander through, or sit and relax a while.

  • BEST VIEWED LARGER Nature’s neuroscience laid bare in winter. Forest neurons … or forest capillaries? * MOST VIEWED IMAGES* of all works by Bruce Dickson.

  • The boatshed on Crater Lake, Cradle Mountain National Park, Tasmania with fagus in the background and the opposite wall of the crater just barely visible through the low clouds. Nikon D40 / Sigma 10-20mm lens @ 10mm / ISO200 / F/8 / 1/30,1/80,1/320 / 3 shot HDR using Photomatix featured in Your Magic Places group 5th May 2009 / featured in A View Somewhere group 16th October 2009

  • Had my first trip to see the fagus in full colour in Cradle Mountain Lake St Clair National Park, Tasmania. / This is quite a hard crop so it lost a little clarity but the colours are still fantastic. Nikon D40 / Nikkor 18-200mm @ 200mm / ISO200 / F/8 / 1/6th of a second / natural light / cropped featured in Natural Colour & Light group 5th May 2009 / featured in Trees group 13th June 2009 Top Ten in the DSLR users – Autumn Colours Challenge 31st October 2009

  • As the day cools, and the cold front gets closer, the clouds that had risen earlier begin their descent down onto the surface of Crater Lake and the golden fagus bushes. / Cradle Mountain National Park, / Tasmania, Australia. featured in Lakes & Inland Waterways group 25th June 2009 / featured in All Parks 5th July 2009 Nikon D40 / Nikkor 18-200mm VR lens @ 26mm / ISO200 / F/22 / 1/13th second / 3 stop graduated ND filter

  • A branch of a Tamarack tree with new needle. Taken May 18th 2009 in Kicona Park, Winnipeg, MB, Canada. / Camera: Canon Rebel XT (DSLR) with 75-300mm zoom lens.

  • Morning rays in Cockatoo. A lovely cool, crisp morning. Dew on the grass and you can see your breath. It’s a new day. What a great start. Victoria, Australia. May 2009.

  • Deep blue sky and bright sunshine belie the fact that this was taken in winter in Hyde Park, Western Australia. Hyde Park was established as a European-style arcadian park in 1897 (having previously been one of a chain of wetlands leading down to the Swan River). It is on the WA Register of Heritage Places, but is starting to suffer from lowering water tables due to reduced rainfall. The tree is a London Plane (Sycamore) and is just one in a continuous parade of such trees that surrounds each of the two lakes.

  • late leaves on a deciduous oak tree

  • A flowering crab apple tree in May captured in Toronto. Nikon D200, Nikkor 105mm

  • Taken on December 29, 2008 with an Olympus FE-340. Hyde Park, London, UK Despite the wonderful glow of the sun which shining this little guy, it was in fact a very cold day. On the same day I took Illuminance

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