Wet Calendars

34 creative works found

  • Water in many locations

  • a collection of some of my favourite landscape photography

  • A collection of all my droplets and watery pictures on flowers and leaves

  • Various water images from the fresh to the salty, from the calm to the wild

  • I have always taken a special liking to cloudscapes. They reach out and touch my heart. They change in shape, size, design, color and magnitude. The give meaning and offer expression from a different perspective. It is my hope that these cloudscapes can leave you with a partial impression of who I am as an artist – creative, appreciative, and always aspiring for something beautiful, something good. God of course, is my greatest inspiration of all.

  • A selection of Ruth’s Watercolours and Oils. Impressionist and pseudoabstract colourful pictures.

  • My hope for this calendar is to showcase some of the beauty to be found in Tasmania. Tasmania is truly in a class of its own, an amazing place to visit and a photographers paradise.

  • Garden life in the rain.

  • This is an Album with different wedding images in it mostly ones from the wedding we did at the beach on a stormy evening!

  • This calendar as a lot of my work baste on water

  • A collection of my favourite abstract photos.

  • The Perfect Waves of 2009

  • A collection of images from in the water… get ready to get wet!

  • Showing casing the awesome power of the ocean

  • Just like the title says; Let’s Get Wet. Various ways of enjoying beaches, boats and other water craft.

  • rain drops and dew on garden life.

  • A collection of native birds and animals of Australia. Cover Image: Eastern Water Dragon / Eastern Water Dragons are extremely shy in the wild, but readily adapt to continual human presence in suburban parks and gardens. They are fast runners and strong climbers. When presented with a potential predator, they seek cover in thick vegetation, or drop from an overhanging branch into water. They are able to swim totally submerged, and rest on the bottom of shallow creeks or lakes for up to 90 minutes,to avoid detection. Great Egret / The Great Egret is a large bird with all-white plumage that can reach one metre in height and weigh up to 950 grams (2.1 lb). It is thus only slightly smaller than the Great Blue or Grey Heron. Apart from size, the Great Egret can be distinguished from other white egrets by its yellow bill and black legs and feet, though the bill may become darker and the lower legs lighter in the breeding season. Eclectus Parrot The male Eclectus Parrot is bright green except for red under the wings and a bright orange beak and a black tail. The female Eclectus Parrot is so different it was once thought to be a different species. It is bright scarlet except for a dark blue belly and back and a black beak. Even tiny Eclectus Parrots look different. Male chicks are a grey ball of fluff, female chicks are a black ball of fluff. They grow up in a hollow high in a rainforest tree where the female lays two eggs. And she almost never leaves them in case another female takes her nest hole. She does not starve because lots of different males come to feed her rainforest seeds and fruits at her nest. / / Eastern Grey Kangaroo / The Eastern Grey Kangaroo’s fur is woolly and grey-brown in colour, and they have a small head with big ears. Their tail can grow up to 4 feet long which is very helpful for balancing and standing up straight. An Eastern Grey Kangaroo can live anywhere from 15-20 years of age in the wild. A big male can measure up to 2.8 meters from his nose to the tip of his tail, and can weigh up to 66kg. Females are much smaller only reaching approximately 32kg. Seagull / The Silver Gull (Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae) also known simply as “seagull” in Australia, is the most common gull seen in Australia. It has been found throughout the continent, but particularly coastal areas. Kookaburra / Kookaburras (genus Dacelo) are large to very large (total length 28–42 cm/11-17 in) terrestrial kingfishers native to Australia and New Guinea, the name a loanword from Wiradjuri guuguubarra, which is onomatopoeic of its call. Kookaburras are best known for their unmistakable call, which is uncannily like loud, echoing human laughter — good-natured, but rather hysterical, merriment in the case of the well-known Laughing Kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae); and maniacal cackling in the case of the slightly smaller Blue-winged Kookaburra (D. leachii). They are generally not closely associated with water, and can be found in habitats ranging from humid forest to arid savanna, but also in suburban and residential areas near running water and where food can be searched for easily. Rainbow Lorrikeet / The Rainbow Lorikeet is very colourful – almost every colour of the rainbow can be found on their feathers. They are not large birds, with a Rainbow Lorikeet’s length ranging from 25-30 cm (9.8-11.8 in) in size, and have a wingspan of about 17 cm (6.7 in). The markings of the best known subspecies T. h. moluccanus are particularly striking. The features distinguishing a Rainbow Lorikeet include a dark blue or violet-blue head and stomach, a bright green back, tail and vent, and an orange breast and beak. Several subspecies have darker scalloped markings across the orange or red breast. Green Tree Frog / The Green Tree Frog is larger than most Australian frogs, reaching 10 centimetres (4 inches) in length. The average lifespan of the frog in captivity, about sixteen years, is long in comparison with most frogs. Green Tree Frogs are docile and well suited to living near human dwellings. They are often found on windows or inside houses, eating insects drawn by the light. Due to its physical and behavioural traits, the Green Tree Frog has become one of the most recognisable frogs in its region, and is a popular exotic pet throughout the world. The skin secretions of the frog have antibacterial and antiviral properties that may prove useful in pharmaceutical preparations. White Faced Heron / The White-faced Heron is mostly light blue-grey in colour, with a characteristic white face. In flight, the dark flight feathers of the wing contrast with the paler grey plumage, making this bird easily identifiable when viewed from below. It has a long, slim neck and a pointed grey-black bill. The legs are long and dull yellow in colour. Sexes are similar. When breeding, the birds have long feathers (nuptial plumes) on the head, neck and back. The White-faced Heron has a slow bouncing flight. Young White-faced Herons are similar in appearance to the non-breeding adults (no nuptial plumes), but are duller, with little or no white on the face. They often have a reddish colour on the underparts.

  • As Anyone who has had the joy of having a golden retriever grace their lives KNOW Golden Retrievers LOVE what no matter the form. These are of some happy goldens having a ‘day’ at the Potomac River.

  • A collection of images all related to water and our interaction with it.

  • ©2009 Shannon Plummer. All Rights Reserved. / www.wetnosefotos.com

  • Like to use your imagination? Then this calendar, “Secret World” is perfect for you. / This secret world is a peek at what water drops / look like through the lens of my camera. Through my Eyes basically. What do you see when you look at the magnificent different shapes? Do you see a seal spinning a ball, and explosion like the atomic bomb, or do you see diamonds? Let your imagination run wild with this calendar. Buy one for your friends…. they’ll love trying to figure out in their mind what each image is.

  • A collection of Alyce Taylor’s photographs of mule deer taken mostly in Waterton National Park in Southern Alberta.

  • by / Cas Digital Photography It would be impossible to remember where I took all these shots of the dragonflies. What I can say is they are all in NSW Australia, around creeks, ponds, dams, rivers, streams & even swamps. For every shot I don’t get, I do get 3 mosquito bites for my troubles. / I hope you enjoy them. Thanks Cas All photos by Cas / All copyrights to Cas Digital Photography / © 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, 10

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