lahlia and I walk through cemetery earlier
lahlia and I walk through cemetery earlier
This is a bit other worldy.

roughbarked said:
This is a bit other worldy.
roughbarked said:
This is a bit other worldy.
That took a while to work out what was going on. Definitely a shot for the pool room.
transition said:
lahlia and I walk through cemetery earlier
Same image after “auto adjust colours” on Irfanview.

mollwollfumble said:
transition said:
lahlia and I walk through cemetery earlier
Same image after “auto adjust colours” on Irfanview.
Most likely a Hobby. http://www.graemechapman.com.au/library/viewphotos.php?c=242
mollwollfumble said:
transition said:
lahlia and I walk through cemetery earlier
Same image after “auto adjust colours” on Irfanview.
yeah that’s quite good, I just took it raw out the camera, for here, a quicky
roughbarked said:
mollwollfumble said:
transition said:
lahlia and I walk through cemetery earlier
Same image after “auto adjust colours” on Irfanview.
Most likely a Hobby. http://www.graemechapman.com.au/library/viewphotos.php?c=242
yeah’s definitely a hobby, plenty of them around
home sweet home and coffee landed
as getting out of car


transition said:
home sweet home and coffee landedas getting out of car
Some very fine looking shots there.
Tau.Neutrino said:
transition said:
home sweet home and coffee landedas getting out of car
Some very fine looking shots there.
Indeed, the man is forthcoming with some great bird shots.
roughbarked said:
Tau.Neutrino said:
transition said:
home sweet home and coffee landedas getting out of car
Some very fine looking shots there.
Indeed, the man is forthcoming with some great bird shots.
We want calendars!
He should do a run of birdy calendars for 2023.
transition said:
home sweet home and coffee landedas getting out of car
shrike-thrush, yellow eared honeyeater, spiny cheeked honeyeater, mudlark.
Bubblecar said:
roughbarked said:
Tau.Neutrino said:Some very fine looking shots there.
Indeed, the man is forthcoming with some great bird shots.
We want calendars!
He should do a run of birdy calendars for 2023.
Agree.
transition does wonderful bird photography.
roughbarked said:
transition said:
home sweet home and coffee landedas getting out of car
shrike-thrush, yellow eared honeyeater, spiny cheeked honeyeater, mudlark.
first and last is songlark
transition said:
roughbarked said:
transition said:
home sweet home and coffee landedas getting out of car
shrike-thrush, yellow eared honeyeater, spiny cheeked honeyeater, mudlark.
first and last is songlark
Oo. I wouldn’t have guessed that. I hadn’t even known that we had songlarks in Australia.
mollwollfumble said:
transition said:
roughbarked said:shrike-thrush, yellow eared honeyeater, spiny cheeked honeyeater, mudlark.
first and last is songlark
Oo. I wouldn’t have guessed that. I hadn’t even known that we had songlarks in Australia.
skylark?
roughbarked said:
mollwollfumble said:
transition said:first and last is songlark
Oo. I wouldn’t have guessed that. I hadn’t even known that we had songlarks in Australia.
skylark?
“Songlark, either of the two species of the Australian genus Cinclorhamphus, of the songbird family Sylviidae. Both are drab and vaguely larklike; males of both species are much larger than females. The rufous songlark (C. mathewsi), 20 cm (8 inches) long, lives in open forests and has a lively song; the 30-cm (12-inch) brown, or black-breasted, songlark (C. cruralis) lives in open country, utters creaky chuckling notes, and has a flight song, as larks do.”
https://www.britannica.com/animal/songlark
Michael V said:
roughbarked said:
mollwollfumble said:Oo. I wouldn’t have guessed that. I hadn’t even known that we had songlarks in Australia.
skylark?
“Songlark, either of the two species of the Australian genus Cinclorhamphus, of the songbird family Sylviidae. Both are drab and vaguely larklike; males of both species are much larger than females. The rufous songlark (C. mathewsi), 20 cm (8 inches) long, lives in open forests and has a lively song; the 30-cm (12-inch) brown, or black-breasted, songlark (C. cruralis) lives in open country, utters creaky chuckling notes, and has a flight song, as larks do.”
https://www.britannica.com/animal/songlark
ta