Fractal and digital art by M. A. Duhaime
We did not disturb this nest – only took pictures. Unfortunately never seen mama so I don’t know what type of bird.
bad boys of the insect variety,close up of a ground wasp nest.
Bald eagle on the nest.
Best Viewed Large All Rights Reserved / @ Julia Wright
Scrub jay with nest-building materials, and very curious about me and my camera. /
The advantage to catching the camera bug isn’t always what we can capture.I believe it is in what we can see. I don’t remember a time I didn’t carry a camera but with the digital world there are no limits to what we can store.That makes us so much more aware of what is around us.We don’t have to look for the perfect composition or the most beautiful subject. This was taken on an old logging road near Medco Pond here in Southern Oregon. I barely caught sight of it hidden there under the rocks. I thought it made an interesting photo, and useful too for those who predict weather using nature.
the last touch to finalise yet another nest.
Taken at Havant Thicket, after a few days illness I decided to go and stretch my legs and went for a long walk around the Thicket, afterwards I sat in the car to eat my apple and drink my bottled water. As I sat there a phesant calmly walked out of the bushes and began eating the bird food. I took a few photos and it appears to be another regular at the birds nest cafe ......LOL my new name for the feeding area.
See if you can spot the nest in the oak tree?
These Blackbird babies left their nest the next day. The photo is taken in Pohja, Finland June 2009.
Baby Cockatiel peeking out of the nest box.
This Brown Thornbill Acanthiza pusilla was busy collecting small strips of bark for their ‘under construction’ nest. These little thornbills (9cm) are common along the east coast and ranges of NSW. I hope to bring you more images as the nest and pending nestlings progress.
They seem to like building their nests in the tallest, straightest, thick (well sort of!) trunks they can land on to flatten the tops and create these! Eagle Birdy Cradles!!! Found while exploring Squam Lake in our canoe – this was little Loon Island which has been known for harboring these wonderful birds in the past several year! Holderness, NH in August 2009. Untouched, As Is Camera: Canon PowerShot SX10 IS / Shutter Speed: 1/1002sec. / Lens Aperture: F/5.7 / Focal Length: 100mm / F-Number: F/5.7 / Exposure Time: 1/1000sec. / ISO Speed: ISO-250 / Metering Mode: Center Weight Average / Exposure Compensation: 0 step
Taken using a SonyA350 / Settings: f8 ISO400 1/400
My husband made this Flicker (Woodpecker) nesting box, bird house. Eventho, it is Fall, now they had a look and perched on the top and flew away. So now we just have to wait with baited breath for next Spring to see if we get any Flickers. The Northern Flicker (Colaptes auratus) is a medium-sized member of the woodpecker family. It is native to most of North America, parts of Central America, Cuba, the Cayman Islands, is one of the few woodpecker species that migrates, and is the only woodpecker that commonly feeds on the ground. There are over 100 common names for the Northern Flicker. Among them are: Yellowhammer, clape, gaffer woodpecker, harry-wicket, heigh-ho, wake-up, walk-up, wick-up, yarrup, and gawker bird. Many of these names are attempts at imitating some of its calls. Photo taken by Canon IXUS
Three ospreys share a nest on a nesting platform near St. Mary’s reservoir Provincial Recreration Area in the prairies of southern Alberta, Canada. Taken with a Canon Rebel XSi using a 55-250mm lens.
Crow’s nest on birch
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