Australia
A pity this flower is only a couple of centremetres across, otherwise it would have made a very decorative place to hang your coat! Canvas now available I currently have a stretched canvas print of this image for sale. It is 30×30cm, professionally stretched, UV treated, with a lustre finish for protection. If you’re interested in purchasing, please email pflem@bigpond.net.au. Cheers, Paul
This Elk was seen at Yellowstone just off the main road in a nice morning light. He had the biggest antlers on an elk that I had ever seen in person in the wild.
A large bull elk moves through the woods in Rocky Mountain National Park during a January snowstorm.
Pumpkins racked on wire supposedly so not to rot – although many have. Canon 300D
April 2008 – Westfield, NJ
Main St, Healesville.
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A black-tail Buck in velvet in a sea of Lupine of the slopes of Mt. Rainier near Sunrise.
WILD & FREE / / Reindeer with a big rack! / / (Spitzbergen – Scandinavian Arctic) / /
This gorgeous White Tail Deer is taking a chance that the only thing in my hand is a camera. Deer season opened last week and this is an easy and wanted shot for me or a hunter. It’s very rare to get this close, at this time of year, but this young buck was very curious.
Top 10 in a Challenge in Top Shelf Wildlife and Nature Art – October 16, 2009 / Featured in Country Bumpkin – October 8, 2009 / Top 2 in Addicted Photographer Group Challenge – May 15, 2009 Featured in Antlers, Racks and Other Horned Animals – March 31, 2009 TOP 10 and featured in Antlers, Racks and Other Horned Animals – March 21. 2009 WON A CHALLENGE – Large Mammals in AMERICAS~Rural, Urban, Wild, Free-Expressions of Artists – December 7, 2008 Featured in Miniatures & Mammoths – November 27, 2008 Featured in All That Is Nature October 30, 2008 Taken in Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada / Canon Powershot A80
THIS PIECE IS AVAILABLE TO PURCHASE AS A: / • Card / • Canvas Print / • Framed Print / • Laminated Print / • Matted Print / • Mounted Print / • Poster
These are some of the control racks at this abandoned power station. As you can see from the lights above here, the place even still has power itself despite no one working here in nearly 30 years and even then it was only a skeleton staff.
The mule deer congregate in our area for the rut as we are on a sparsely populated butte. The afternoon light provides a rich frame to set off their stunning strength and beauty, and the fading fall colors provide a soft counterpoint. Canon 40D, 100-400 IS lens, Jackson Hole, Wyoming, f5.6, 1/250, focal length 400mm. Featured in: / - 300+ Go Long group, August 2009, thank you so much! / - High Desert Life group, August 2009, thank you so much!
again with the new bath… taken with a nikon D80 + 50 mm 1.4 nikkor lens ISO: 100 / shutter speed: 1/200 / f/stop: f/1.4
While shooting some pool last weekend,,,, I noticed how the window light cast shadows across the table,,, so I racked them up and took advantage of that light.. Notice the triangle shapes of light on the second row???? Panasonic DMC LZ7,, no flash,,,,,available window light,,, early evening
SABLE – Hippotragus niger CAPTURED LOCATION: “THE KRUGER NATIONAL PARK”, South Africa. SHOULDER HEIGHT: 1, 07 – 1,37m. / MASS: 181 – 227kg / GESTATION: 270 DAYS Bulls are often solitary or associate in small groups. Herds are usually led by a cow. / Bulls are aggressive, fighting among themselves during association with cows. / Hardy and tough, they will defend themselves against lion, leopard and wild dogs. / When wounded they lie down and defend themselves with their razor-sharp horns. / Both sexes have horns. When the females are ready to give birth, like the roan antelope, they leave the herd. / The young remain hidden for the first month. DIET: Ninety percent of diet consists of grass. Will feed on broad leaves to certain extent. / Dependent on water.
Taken in one of the medinas in Morocco.
Sex & Drugs & Sausage Rolls
Most of the year the calves live with their mothers away from the bulls; in the late fall the calves encounter the bulls when the rut is on. What could the calf be thinking in this image…”Wow, will I grow up to look like you”? They must experience a tug of war; they want to stay near their mothers, but this huge bull is moving into their lives. In the end, the calves watch the bulls warily and try to stay out of their way. Canon 40D, f5.6, 1/160, focal length 250mm. Grand Teton National Park. Featured in Top Shelf Wildlife & Nature group, September 2009 – thank you so much! / Featured in Dimensions group, September 2009 – thank you so much!
These are the old herring-drying racks on Lowestoft beach in Suffolk. This was taken very close to the country’s most easterly point (the least celebrated of the 4 extreme points). The town used to be one of the country’s leading fishing ports – it doesn’t have much of anything now.
In the first week of September 2008, we were driving back down the Alaska Highway from Haines Junction to Whitehorse, capital of the Yukon. The clouds were rolling in when I stopped to take some reflection shots across the surface of a small lake, when I heard an unusual sound. My guide, Margaret Goodwin of Yukon Tourism, immediately told me that it was the sound of elk. So we waited until they broke cover and I shot two dozen frames very quickly. I had two cameras around my neck, a Pentax K100D with my 18-125mm lens and a Pentax K100D with my 70-300mm lens. Naturally I chose the longer of the two lenses. But here’s the problem … shooting images of wildlife comes with the unstated truth that just because you’re pointing your camera at a magnificent beast in its natural surroundings, it does not follow that the animal will actually look in your direction. And that can be a major problem! So, yes, I have a few shots of rumps and spines and assorted racks. And just as I was starting to grit my teeth while the herd departed back into the trees, the leader of the herd gave me a fleeting, imperious look. That’s when I hit the trigger on this frame. I do not crop, enhance or post-edit my images in any way. Shot with a Pentax K200D, using a Sigma 70-300mm lens. F5.6, 1/90 sec, ISO 400, focal length 300mm. Canada08Elk-01September-8508
Our part-time gardener. / Why hike for four hours, only to find a bull moose pruning bushes and tree in our ‘burb? We enjoyed a good, long hike with intermittent rain and spotted two bull moose far in the distance. Too far away to capture. What better welcome home party than this cutie safe in our suburbs. I cropped part of the power lines and added a light blue tint to the sky, since it was raining and grey and drizzly. Thanks to Peter Davidson for the video on Hoots mon, there’s a moose loose aboot this hoose D200 and Nikkor 18-200mm And another coy view with a yellow birch leaf. Did not remove road sign from behind his rack to add a certain verisimilitude. Sure wish it were the sign that reads: Moose Crossing. Photo links to my website. About size and weight, wikipedia has this to say: / “On average, an adult moose stands 1.8–2.1 m (6–7 ft) high at the shoulder. Males weigh 380–720 kg (850–1580 pounds) and females weigh 270–360 kg (600–800 pounds).[7] The largest of all is the Alaskan subspecies (A. a. gigas), which can stand over 2.1 m (7 ft) at the shoulder, has a span across the antlers of 1.8 m (6 ft) and averages 634.5 kg (1,396 lbs) in males and 478 kg (1,052 lbs) in females.[8] Typically, however, the antlers of a mature specimen are between 1.2 m (3.9 ft) and 1.5 m (4.9 ft).”
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