Shanked 

2 members found

48 creative works found

  • Enjoy!

  • oil on board / 15cm x 15cm

  • The sun was low in the sky after a warm Autumn day and before going home we took our binoculars to watch the waders catching fish at the mud flats

  • Cape Shank Lighthouse Victoria, Australia. This was a cool and windy day in May, just before the storm and the rain arrivied. /

  • Cape Shank, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria, Australia

  • This is a close up of the stairs at Cape Shank, Victoria. This was a very cold and stormy day in May. I had organised an excursion for the Year 8 students…148 of them…..9 staff….and 5 buses!!! Fantastic day and worth the effort and planning. Oh yeah! I took some lovely photos as well!

  • Best viewed large. / My students looking like ants at this beautiful windswept location!

  • Best form of transport I know! Reliable (mostly!), with added health benefits ….

  • The very Rare and Endangered Red Shanked Douc’s Langur. Canon 20D Views: 992 / Favs: 19 Featured in: ‘Animal Photography’ CRITICALLY ENDANGERED! During the Vietnam War millions of bombs were dropped in the Langur Douc’s forest home and huge swathes were defoliated with chemicals like Agent Orange, wiping out many plants and animals. Doucs were also used for target practice by soldiers and hunted for meat by subsistence hunters. Nobody knows how many Doucs survived, but it seems likely that their numbers have been devastated over big areas. They were previously observed in groups of 60 or more, now groups are rarely larger than 12. Taken in Philadelphia Zoo

  • I had an awesome shoot yesterday at the Zoo….douc langurs endangered species and my favourite Primate of all / / /

  • CRITICALLY ENDANGERED! During the Vietnam War millions of bombs were dropped in the Langur Douc’s forest home and huge swathes were defoliated with chemicals like Agent Orange, wiping out many plants and animals. Doucs were also used for target practice by soldiers and hunted for meat by subsistence hunters. Nobody knows how many Doucs survived, but it seems likely that their numbers have been devastated over big areas. They were previously observed in groups of 60 or more, now groups are rarely larger than 12. Taken in Philadelphia Zoo

  • Shankly Memorial – Glenbuck Ayrshire. / This memorial to the late great Bill Shankly is, in my opinion, much overlooked, sitting as it does near the Glenbuck road-end close to the junction with the A70 between Muirkirk and Glespin in Scotland it is not signposted and few passers by know of its existence.

  • Black and white charcoal on midtone paper.

  • Latin name: Flammulina velutipesi / Size: The cap is approximately 2cm to 6cm in diameter. / Distribution: Found throughout the UK. / Months seen: September to March / Habitat: Deciduous woodland – especially on dead elm trees. / Special features: The velvet shank is one of the few fungi which grows in winter. / The cap is an orange-brown colour, and the gills underneath are a creamy-orange colour. / The stem is dark brown to black, and distinctly velvety to the touch (hence the name). There is no ring on the stem. / This fungi is edible, although it could be easily confused with similar looking species, so please get an expert opinion before tasting any wild fungi. In Japan they are cultivated commercially and are known as ‘Enoko-take’.

  • One weekend down in Bansha in my classmates family pile, an old as old country Mansion I was freezing in the bath having a shower when I noticed that the tap & plug had arranged themselves most harmoniously. Scanned print. Taken on film most likely 400 asa Fuji.

  • This was a photomontage I made for the Mersey river festival photographic competition in the late 1990’s. It won a major award in that competition and has since been accepted all over the world including Shanghai, Hong Kong The London salon of photography and many other exhibitions, the first print sale was from the RPS print exhibition since then I it has sold many times, mainly to expats from my home town of Liverpool,

  • This fungi is edible, although it could be easily confused with similar looking species, so please get an expert opinion before tasting any wild fungi. / In Japan they are cultivated commercially and are known as ‘Enoko-take’. Nikon D80 SIgma 70-300 APO DG Macro at 240mm / f-8 at 1/4 sec ISO 100

  • This shot was taken on my way up out of Cape Shank, my sister’s boyfriend and I ventured down there on a Monday morning befor sunrise and snapped up the morning. / I tryed to capture the vibrant colours that makes this place so beautiful in it’s wild harshness. 3 shot Photomerge. / Samsung pro815

  • Endangered Species © T.Russotto – / My work is NOT public domain and may NOT be used, modified, or changed in any way without my written consent.

  • Shank
    by Nala

    A lost lamb . . . . now a sweet pet

  • Well that what it said in my book, it looks very much like it anyway , unless any one knows for sure.

  • ANOTHER HEATH FIND

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