Puddle watering 

545 creative works found

  • malvern, melbourne, australia /

  • / somewhere after heavy rain in barcelona…..

  • In Notting Hill London, just after a tonne of rain…..somehow makes the area much less depressing STREET / THE SEA/WATER / BIRDS/ANIMALS / UK / ITALY / ARCHITECTURE / CARDS / OTHER BITS

  • Russell Falls in Tasmania Click on the photo and see the larger view on this one! Thanks for visiting! / I really appreciate your comments.

  • Old row boat now neglected by a rural pond. as is…

  • A well-placed puddle after twenty-minutes of rain in Adelaide on Friday afternoon helps me capture the reflection of a nearby historic building. All artwork is copyright© to Stephen Mitchell All Rights Reserved. / You may not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify my photography, writing, and artwork without my express consent.

  • Winner of the Bacchus Marsh Rotary Club Art Show, photography section 2009. Since exhibiting this at the art show I’ve had many people tell me they are very familiar with this corner of road and never seen anything beautiful about it before. It is very gratifying to hear that they now look at this part of the world with different eyes. This image was taken at the suggestion by an acquaintance (thank you, Keryl) when I was telling her about my water project (to photograph local bodies of water). Being that there is little about, puddles are a bit of an oddity, but this morning’s wonderfully special light helped to make this image (in my opinion) exceptional and I’m quite excited about the result. It raises thoughts in my mind about the concept of alternate or parallel universes being linked by a reflection, kept apart by a fragile, gossamer field. This image as is. There has been no alteration to colour, not even cropping or rotation adjustment. Taken in Woolpack Rd, Bacchus Marsh / 22 July 2008 / Looking towards the Avenue of Honour.

  • Reflection in a puddle enhanced using GIMP. Taken outside my workplace in Newtown, NSW, Australia. Featured on the Home Page 4 June 09. Sold! as a card June 2009.

  • The same puddle as in O Fortuity. A rain drop fell as I took the picture. Cleaned up on GIMP and border added from PhotoFiltre. Puddle on Church Street, Newtown. I love the rain! Featured in the Urban Art group, 3 May 09 / Featured in Imaginative Realism, 8 May 09. / Featured in Featured Only (30 May 09) Top Ten placing in The Everyday Abstract challenge in the Images and Ideas group O Fortuity

  • You know the grips in a water bottle… well that’s what this is. I took the aquafina label off, and put some colorful wrapping paper behind it. There was a few bubbles in the water, which looked cool with the texture of the bottle. It looks like a droplet continuously dropping into a puddle to me…haha. Enjoy! I used my 105mm macro lens for this.

  • Canon PowerShot SD1000 / Self Portrait The temps here in Omaha, Nebraska have been in the 50s and 60s lately, which finally melted the snow off our driveway! The melted snow left puddles all over the streets, and when evening came, the vibrant sunset was reflected in these puddles. I rode my bike up to the middle school parking lot and set my camera at the edge of a puddle (set to 10 second self-timer) to snap this self portrait. Thanks for viewing!

  • Canon PowerShot SD1000 A low-level perspective shot, using a stagnant puddle to reflect the evening’s vibrant sunset. Thanks for viewing!

  • Polaroid i633 6.0 mega pixels. Light edit of contrast / Just a muddy puddle in my driveway. / Featured in postcard styles group / Featured in Just Pure Nature group / Placed 5th in reflections challenge / placed in the top ten in the Water Is Everywhere!!! challenge in Just pure nature

  • i like puddles…. they are like windows into a parallel world. refelction—UNphotoshopped Minolta X-570

  • “Hope is a river never is it still to catch. But we can hope!” / Druidstorm !http://images-2.redbubble.net/img/art/framecolor:black/framestyle:box20/mattecolor:off%20white/product:framed-print/size:medium/view:preview/2756457-2-hope-floats.jpg

  • another view….. another puddle….another world….....

  • A splash from a water droplet hitting a puddle of water. / Camera: Canon Rebel XT (DSLR) MY BUBBLESITE

  • A black and white photo of leaves in a puddle.

  • Best Viewed Large All Rights Reserved / @ Julia Wright

  • Feeling Blue … /

  • In my yard late winter 09’ playing in the puddles, enjoying life~ / / Canada Goose Facts / • Life expectancy about 20 years / • Weight: 20-25 pounds / • Migration is a learned process / • Migratory geese flight range 2 – 3 thousand miles / • Resident geese flight range: 100 –200 miles to find food, water, and safety. / • Resident geese can fly long distances as their migratory cousins, but generally have learned that it is not necessary. / • Migratory geese do not become resident geese unless they are injured. / • Mating season: February to March / • Geese mate for life and will stay together during all seasons. / • Geese will find a new mate if mate dies or is killed. / • Migratory geese nest in Canada. / • Geese nesting in the U.S. are “resident” geese who were born here. / • Resident geese were imported to the area for rebuilding dwindling numbers for conservation or hunting. The urban nuisance was not anticipated. / • Nesting Season: Mid March to mid May / • Age of geese when they begin to nest: 3 years / • Geese return to the general area of their birth each year to mate and nest. Sometimes the exact site, sometimes a nearby pond or other body of water. / • The instinct to return to their general area or birth is very strong. / • Migratory geese fly 2,000–3,000 miles to return to these sites. / • Resident geese do not know how to migrate. / • When geese are chased from their traditional nesting area or the nesting area has too many nesting pairs, they find alternative sites to nest … sometimes farther from water, sometimes in nearby ponds, sometimes on rooftops or balconies. They will hide their nests. / • Geese prefer isolated sites near water to nest. Islands are their favorite location. / • Nests are usually on the ground, in the open. / • Sometimes geese nest in brushy or swampy areas not subject to flooding. / • When egg laying begins the “Father” goose will stand sentinel watch nearby, but not so close as to give away location of nest to a predator. When a solitary goose is seen during nesting season a nest is somewhere in the vicinity. / • The eggs in a nest are called a “clutch” / • Average number of eggs in a nest: 5 / • Mother goose lays 1 egg approximately 1_ days apart until full clutch is obtained. / • Eggs not being incubated are cool to the touch. / • Mother goose waits until all eggs are laid before she begins to sit on nest to incubate eggs / • Incubation time: 28 – 30 days / • Undeveloped eggs (still fluid) will sink or float vertically with the wider portion of the egg pointing down. / • Developed eggs will float horizontally or at a slight angle and break the surface of the water. At that point they are one to two weeks away from hatching. / • All geese eggs in a single clutch hatch on approximately the same day / • Baby geese are called “goslings”. / • Natural predators of geese are foxes, raccoons, owls and snapping turtles / • Goslings can fly approximately 2-3 months after hatching. / • During June adult geese lose wing feathers and are unable to fly. This is called molting. / • Molting season runs from early June to late July. / • Geese can fly again approximately 6 weeks after molting. / • Generally by early August all geese (except injured geese) are able to fly. / • During the molt geese need to be near water (any water) for easy escape from predators. The molting area needs an easily accessible food supply. /

  • / Okanagan Lake, Penticton BC. November 2009.

  • / I was down at Okanagan beach this afternoon taking some photographs when I noticed the reflection of some tree tops with the light shining through them in this puddle. Thought it looked almost like the leaves in the puddle were falling onto the trees…..seemed kind of magical to me :)

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