Jay
After eating, a rest
Last night's moon rising
Longhorn borer
Roses
Newly strung pylon
More expired film
Raining
Four frames of Symes's Bridge
Bumblebee in the astilbe
Bumblebee
"Real" cherries
Shrooms in a pot
Fledgling chickadee
Why we can't have anything nice
When you die at 95
After the burial service of my grandniece's great-…
After the family funeral
Non-scowlery
Thistledown
Went to a wedding
Groom comes for the garter
Caterpillar on the doorframe
Raining
Two loaded half-frames
Cutting a Christmas tree in 1986
Crackerberry flower
A neighbour's mock orange
More flowers finished
Squat
Stymie Bold, fading
Squeamish about my tea
Some caterpillar
Bluebell
Moon rising over the hill across the Arm last nigh…
Off the bridge
My clothesline, useless in the rain
Late 1982
Mourning cloak
Cat, screen
Grainy
Magnolia
Early fast film
On the roof watching a forest fire
Before they mow
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OLYMPUS M.40-150mm F2.8
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Our junco


As much as this may look like a single picture of two birds, it is two
pictures of one bird, taken a couple of seconds apart. On the right,
the mother had just arrived and was checking out her surroundings.
She then hopped into the nest she and her partner built two weeks ago.
Every morning for four mornings there was another egg but they stopt
at four. Whew.
Their nest has made watering the hanging pot (of bacopa and begonia)
more difficult than it would otherwise be. But we're trying to help
out the young family. Today about two dozen blue jays and starlings
came into the garden, en masse and excited, gorging on the moths and
worms in the trees. One of the jays seemed especially curious about
the pot. We shooed him off.
If you look closely, it is not hard to see the join between the two
pictures. I didn't try to match the details.
pictures of one bird, taken a couple of seconds apart. On the right,
the mother had just arrived and was checking out her surroundings.
She then hopped into the nest she and her partner built two weeks ago.
Every morning for four mornings there was another egg but they stopt
at four. Whew.
Their nest has made watering the hanging pot (of bacopa and begonia)
more difficult than it would otherwise be. But we're trying to help
out the young family. Today about two dozen blue jays and starlings
came into the garden, en masse and excited, gorging on the moths and
worms in the trees. One of the jays seemed especially curious about
the pot. We shooed him off.
If you look closely, it is not hard to see the join between the two
pictures. I didn't try to match the details.
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