
Kletzsch Park Waterfall
Credit : Joe K Gage (https://flickr.com/people/181920661@N03)
#landscapephotography #nature
Kletzsch Park Waterfall
Credit : Joe K Gage (https://flickr.com/people/181920661@N03)
#landscapephotography #nature
Here's another velvet worm from the same night walk. This one looks like it's waving.
Kia ora!
Aurora over Sweden
Credits: Göran Strand
#nature #space #astrophotography
I did an hour ramble in The Ramble (NYC's Central Park) before meeting up with a friend at the American Museum of Natural History, today. I also met up with this amazingly placid Wood Duck hanging out with HIS friends, some Mallards.
#nature #NaturePhotography #birds #Wildlife #naturecommunity #photography #BirdsOfMastodon #birdphotography #birding
A Black-Capped Chickadee clinging to the boardwalk railing at Mass Audubon's Stony Brook late this afternoon.
Is your day really complete without seeing some velvet worm feet?
I found this excellent wee critter on the coast-to-coast field trip over the weekend for my Biological Diversity course at #LincolnUniversityNZ.
Its name is Ooperipatellus viridimaculatus.
Górzno-Lidzbark Landscape Park
Credit : ArturGabrych (https://flickr.com/people/159478400@N03)
#landscapephotography #nature
When Roses Aren't Red
Credits: All About Astro, 3RF
#nature #space #astrophotography
Streaks of gold and silver sunset, Scoville Reservoir, Wolcott, Connecticut. June 8, 2020, 7:56 PM.
Blue skies today so I retook the daffodils pic with the willow oak (Quercus phellos) in the background.
Which pic is better? https://mastodon.world/@jblue/114179925692540009
celebrating the 1st bumblebee of the year feeding on a goat willow.
(coolest beings - always imagine them wearing sunglasses)
Messier 97, also known as the #OwlNebula, is a planetary nebula located approximately 2,030 light-years away in the constellation #UrsaMajor that reaches its annual culmination at astronomical midnight and is best observed around March 8th.
Detailed Information: https://astrocamp.eu/m97
▼ Vixen VC200L | SkyEye62AM '25
“The identification and official registration of a new species can take up to 13-and-a-half years—meaning some species may go extinct before they are even documented,” the organization says.
https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2025/03/ocean-census-new-species/