Esther's photos with the keyword: three
Erawan, the three-headed elephant.
Three little maids
08 Nov 2014 |
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"Old Sturbridge Village (OSV) is a living museum located in Sturbridge, Massachusetts, in the United States, which re-creates life in rural New England during the 1790s through 1830s. It is the largest living museum in New England, covering more than 200 acres (80 hectares). The Village includes 59 antique buildings, three water-powered mills, and a working farm. The museum is a popular tourist and educational field trip destination. Costumed interpreters speaking in modern language help visitors understand 19th century life."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Sturbridge_Village
SIMG 1331A (Fall 2014)
3D ceiling art
21 Nov 2011 |
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Not only are you surrounded by art in the Vatican Museums, many of the ceilings and walls are decorated as well.
AIMG_2416
Smile for the camera
14 Aug 2011 |
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Male Brown throated three toed sloth - Parque Nacional Manuel Antonio, Costa Rica. The brown throated tree sloth is primarily aboreal, returning to the ground once a week to defecate in a hole that it digs with its tail. It has a slow metabolism and spends much of its time hanging upside down from the trees. Its front legs are longer than its hind legs. Its outer layer of fur is very coarse and stiff and overlays a much softer layer of dense under-fur. The hairs of the outer layer of fur have numerous microscopic cracks across their surface in which algae lives. This accounts for the green tint when viewed up close.
AIMG_0634
Just hanging around
14 Aug 2011 |
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Male Brown throated three toed sloth - Parque Nacional Manuel Antonio, Costa Rica. The brown throated tree sloth is primarily aboreal, returning to the ground once a week to defecate in a hole that it digs with its tail. It has a slow metabolism and spends much of its time hanging upside down from the trees. Its front legs are longer than its hind legs. Its outer layer of fur is very coarse and stiff and overlays a much softer layer of dense under-fur. The hairs of the outer layer of fur have numerous microscopic cracks across their surface in which algae lives. This accounts for the green tint when viewed up close.
AIMG_0622
Okay. Don't smile for the camera
09 Apr 2011 |
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Brown-throated three toed sloth near Mt. Arenal in Costa Rica. You'd think that an animal that barely moves would be easy to photograph, but no. Sloths live up high in treetops. Usually they appear as a ball around a tree branch to the naked eye. This photograph was shot with a 300 mm lens and blown up. The leaves ensure that they are in mottled light and unless you catch them feeding, they don't look up. I have a few moving sloth shots that I will post later, but I just got lucky for those.
AxMG_2089
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