Photographed up high in the rain forest canopy from below. The early morning light gave the subject the impression of extra dimension.
Autumn leaves of a Staghorn Sumac.
a burnt down tree takes up a new role in nature, it is now supporting new stags and moss is starting to cover it….....makes an interesting contrast…......
baby staghorn in a log in my dam ps altered /
Photo of a baby staghorn plant growing on a fallen tree on the edge of my dam, some ps treatment too!
There is something distinctive about the sight and sound of a / human body falling from the rain forest canopy. The breathless / scream, the wildly gyrating arms and legs pumping thin air, the / rush of leaves, snapping branches, and the sickening thud, / followed by uneasy silence. Listening to that silence, I reflected / on how plant collecting can be an unpleasant sort of activity. / - Eric Hansen, Orchid Fever
This photo was taken in Iluka in the World Heritage Littoral Rainforest. This shows what beauty can be found in the rainforest, if you just look up.
This one is only about 5 years old, they are popping up all over my place, helped by all the rain over the last couple of years. Tallebudgera Valley Gold Coast Hinterland Aust.
staghorn fern. they never cease to fascinate me
This is a beautiful Staghorn found in the north tropics of Australia. / One of another series of Images “HigherPlaces” / A collection of artworks of the natural beauty found in the Atherton Tablelands Queensland Australia.
A large staghorn that grew outside my bedroom window… / Pure graphite on paper
This is the big outer leaves of a “stag horn’ plant that lives on trees…late afternoon sun is highlighting the “life with-in’.... DebsPhotos
Flowers and other bits and pieces from nature.
Staghorn sumac leaves along a Rainy Lake shoreline near Fort Frances, Ontario are washed by an early October rain. The subtle blur was created with a slow shutter speed in the wind. Featured in “Natural Color and Light” – January 30, 2009
A sign of spring, the American Robin feeds on the Staghorn Sumac on a busy street in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada. The American Robin Turdus migratorius is one of the best-known birds in North America. It was given its name by the early settlers, who thought that, with its reddish breast, it resembled the English Robin. However, the American Robin is a thrush, not a robin, and except for the colour of its breast, it does not look like the small brown European bird. The American Robin is the largest thrush in North America. The adult measures about 25 cm long and weighs about 77 g. In addition to its cinnamon-rufous to brick-red breast, the American Robin has a black head, white eye-rings, yellow bill, black and white streaked throat, and grey back. The male is generally more brightly coloured than the female.
Staghorn Sumac / (Rhus typhina) West Deane Park, Etobicoke, Ontario / 10/19/07
This is a macro of the underneath of a staghorn fern / Nikon D70, 60mm macro.
The remnants of last years fruit at the tip of a staghorn sumac. Taken in early spring in Duffin’s Creek Environmental Education Center in Pickering, Ontario, Canada. Staghorn sumac grows as a small tree or shrub throughout the northeastern United States and southern Ontario. / The fruit of staghorn sumac is one of the most identifiable characteristics, forming dense clusters of small red drupes at the ends of the branches
Staghorn Sumac / (Rhus typhina) West Deane Park, Etobicoke, Ontario / 7/25/08
Staghorn Sumac / (Rhus typhina) West Deane Park, Etobicoke, Ontario / 10/16/09
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