A young Eastern Spinebill / hovering and feeding on / nectar. Reminds me of a / Hummingbird! More birds and wildlife here Read about my wildlife photography here
100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia A small Eastern Spinebill honeyeater.
100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia A small Eastern Spinebill Honeyeater.
The little New Holland honeyeaters are making the most of the short time of blossom by feeding all the daylight hours. I love the colour of the pink blossoms against the sky, too. Sold – a matted print of this image, Feb. 2009 /
taken at my mothers place on her bird bath New Holland Honeyeater Phylidonyris novaehollandiae For more images of cozmist: / Busselton Jetty Images / Christmas Cards / Dogs / Birds / Scenery / Creatures
Honey-eater (bird) feeding on and amongst the Kangaroo Paws an Australian Native plant.
All of those ornithologists out there came up with the identification – thanks!
100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Brown Honeyeater Photo taken at Broome, Western Australia.
We have a family of New Holland Honeyeaters in the front garden, and they are very vocal at the moment. This one sat briefly on one of the native plants, just long enough for me to capture this image. Sold – a matted print of this image, Feb. 2009
OIL ON CANVAS 60 X 60 CM / if you can pick this canvas up I would like to sell it for, say ”$150”. I need studio space and without the commission of a gallery I would be happy with the $150
For the bird lovers This shirt is featured on the main t-shirt page
The New Holland Honeyeaters at The Berry Farm near Margaret River have developed a taste for caster sugar. Put a spoonful in your hand and you will have half-a-dozen sitting on there fighting for room. They would often get the sugar stuck to their beaks. The one on the right was actually eating the sugar off the beak of the other bird.
Taken at the Royal Botanic Gardens Cranbourne. Mar 2009 / / Canon 400D
Honeyeater captures a view of one of these beautiful yet shy birds at the National Botanic Gardens in Canberra. Behind the scenes / Too many times, I’ve missed a great shot of birds like this one because of hesitation. I’ve waited, my finger poised on the shutter button for the perfect shot. To capture this image, I tried a different tactic, shooting many frames rapidly capturing the bird in a variety of poses. This was one of the successful shots, capturing the bird in a fantastic posture it held for only a split second. / Canon 1Ds mkIII | EF 100-400mm | 1.4x Extender Artwork / This is a striking image and an ideal addition to any decor. The subject creates a focal point while soft colours ensure it isn’t imposing. Take it home, to the office or share it as a gift! © 2009 A Spence. All Rights Reserved
100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Spiny-cheeked Honeyeater. Photo taken in the Diamantina Lakes National Park, Western Queensland, Australia
View more work from this series Best viewed LARGE
100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Photo of a Grey-fronted Honeyeater taken at St. Johns Gorge in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. Best viewed large
100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Photo of a Singing Honeyeater taken at Broome, Western Australia. High speed sync flash used to overcome low light conditions. Canon EOS 20D, Canon100 – 400L IS lens at 400mm – Flash exposure +1 1/400@ f/5.6, ISO 400, hand held /
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As my gifted friend Lianne wrote- these works are gifts, back at all who gift their work and hearts so generously here on the Bubble.It is a life of give and take. My wise Uncle told me”There are no free lunches”, and so I offer back the best I can find from my heart. Namaste. To this, to this, after my hope was lost, / To this strange victory; / To find you with the living, not the dead, / To find you glad of me; / To find you wounded even less than I, / Moving as I across the stricken plain; / After the battle to have found your voice / Lifted above the slain. Poem Strange Victory by Sara Teasdale, 1933 / / This image began as a shot taken on this evening’s walk, and I had had Sara Teasdale’s poem in my head all day since being yet again touched by the poems and writings of some dear Bubblers, who inspired me to rescue my dozens and dozens of poetry books from storage tonight on returning from our walk -they had all been packed neatly into heavy boxes en route to the Salvation Army, for want of space on my shelves for all sorts of other “business”. We had gone out for our evening walk, and I was doing my usual dawdle thing, when Mick hushed and waved me over to see a Honeyeater in the bushes. Honeyeaters are fast flyers, and before I knew it, he was gone in a beautiful blur, but in playing around again in PS and Picasa, something strange came together, and I realized a bird in the hand can be worth two. Mick had been my strange victory ten years ago. Until we met, even up to that final moment, I had no idea, nor barely hope that my life would turn around as it did. I send out this image tonight to the Bubblers who yearn, who mourn, who have lost love and hope. See how the birds dance, and open your heart. Be brave. It all changes in a moment. So, even my love for poetry had had a strange victory today, in the rescue mission of my collection, but I don’t know who will be reading them poetry down at the Salvation Army this Xmas. / / These two shots were taken within five minutes of each other:
This New Holland Honeyeater Phylidonyris novaehollandiae was caught red-handed enjoying some Callistemon (bottlebrush) in a front garden near Mogo on the NSW Far South Coast. Image captured with a Canon EOS1000D with a 150-500 @ 500 handheld. Steve is the Principal Ecologist at EnviroKey, a specialist ecological consultancy that undertakes surveys, research and education programs across Australia.
Female Scarlet Honey-eater
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