Spent part of the afternoon trying to get better pictures of
the woodpeckers, but I am not happy with any of the pictures I got.
So here is someone else's picture:
I think it is easier to get pictures of birds when they are
in a confined space.
href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=471537&in_page_id=1770&in_page_id=1770&expand=true#StartComments">Source.
- Log in to post comments
More like this
Someone asked me at dinner "What time did you get up" and as I was trying to remember what time I woke up this morning, and kinda wondering why she was asking me that, my wife answered for me: "Noon."
So I'm thinking "Why does Amanda think I woke up at noon. As a matter of fact, at noon, we…
Among the small thrills of encountering canonical works for the first time - Homer, say, or the King James Bible, or Star Wars - are the moments when you come across some turn of phrase so well-used it has been worn flat into the surface of everyday speech and think: so that's where that comes from…
Sunday and Monday were wrecked by SteelyKid getting sick. She was actually only really ill on Sunday, but that was highly miserable. Monday, she had to stay home from school, and we spent the day watching the original Star Wars trilogy (which she had refused to watch on two previous occasions...).…
tags: book review, owls, woodpeckers, birds, photography, Paul Bannick, The Owl and the Woodpecker
Most Americans have not seen all of the 41 species of owls and woodpeckers that share the North American continent with us, but not only has Paul Bannick seen them all, but he has photographed them…
Wow. That is just so amazingly adorable.