Stars, a plane, and something else.
Hiding from the light
Flicker flashing his underwear at me
Roused rabble
This red flag means no swimming
Ten o'clock near Morón
Red-legged thrush, I figure.
Not warm enough.
Buena Vista Social Club
Short-cut
Only two seasons in the year
Harry got a brand new beard
May first
Tan shoes with pink shoelaces
Hand-made grave marker
Looking at a 1957 picture
Part of a march against austerity
Selfie, 1994
A gross of eggs in a square inch
Sea angel and its prey
Another Sea Angel
Roadside coltsfoot
Found a piece of glass
Another shot of Easter's grosbeaks
Eating dogberries
Mopes
Special Scowlery
Redpoll
Snowbird
Pitchy-pee
The same guys
Leftovers
Testing a new lens
Crow
Boids feeding
Sisters and cousins
The student society room
Rotted, they were
Molly
Parking, maybe
Kicking up snow
Blizzards outside
Fragment, goldfinch
Goldfinches and junco
Purple finch between two snowbirds
1/1250 • f/5.6 • 150.0 mm • ISO 250 •
OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP. E-M1
OLYMPUS M.40-150mm F2.8
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92 visits
Feral cat using her VNO


This feral cat comes around every day, checking out the places other
cats have been, or birds, or mice, or herself. Perhaps that's what
she's checking out here -- her own presence the day before. She's
using that mouth-open type of sniffing, using that sniffer that we
poor human beings don't have.
In the original picture, she practically disappeared in the snow and
grass. I bumped up the contrast and she stood out more, and the snow
looked more late-wintry, too.
------------
EDIT, next day: I grew up calling all cats "she" and I see today I did that yesterday about this one. But I suspect this one is a tom; she has a tom's face. :)
cats have been, or birds, or mice, or herself. Perhaps that's what
she's checking out here -- her own presence the day before. She's
using that mouth-open type of sniffing, using that sniffer that we
poor human beings don't have.
In the original picture, she practically disappeared in the snow and
grass. I bumped up the contrast and she stood out more, and the snow
looked more late-wintry, too.
------------
EDIT, next day: I grew up calling all cats "she" and I see today I did that yesterday about this one. But I suspect this one is a tom; she has a tom's face. :)
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