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Backyard Wildlife

Sir Henry and I love photography. Share your photography with us all.
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RanchRoper
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Re: Backyard Wildlife

Post by RanchRoper » Sun Apr 10, 2016 12:51 pm

Really nice.
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Re: Backyard Wildlife

Post by Nam Vet » Sun Apr 10, 2016 1:24 pm

Great looking pond. Thanks for sharing the photos.
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Re: Backyard Wildlife

Post by clovishound » Sun Apr 17, 2016 12:29 pm

Image

Blue tailed skink. A common reptile in our area.
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CT_Shooter
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Re: Backyard Wildlife

Post by CT_Shooter » Sun Apr 17, 2016 1:17 pm

Great shot! I've never seen one before. Thanks.
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Deadwood Dutch
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Re: Backyard Wildlife

Post by Deadwood Dutch » Sun Apr 17, 2016 2:08 pm

Cool photo, I haven't seen any like that since I was down in Guantanamo Bay Cuba where we used to have little green ones like that running around the barracks.
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Re: Backyard Wildlife - On the verge of Tadpoles

Post by CT_Shooter » Sun Apr 17, 2016 4:13 pm

More backyard pond creatures engaging in life...
On the verge of tadpoles.jpg
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Re: Backyard Wildlife

Post by PT7 » Sun Apr 17, 2016 5:04 pm

You guys sure do the animals & pond pics proud. 8-)
Very nice photography!!

~Пока~

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RanchRoper
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Re: Backyard Wildlife

Post by RanchRoper » Sun Apr 17, 2016 8:46 pm

clovishound wrote:Image

Blue tailed skink. A common reptile in our area.
Great shot.
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RanchRoper
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Re: Backyard Wildlife - On the verge of Tadpoles

Post by RanchRoper » Sun Apr 17, 2016 8:47 pm

CT_Shooter wrote:More backyard pond creatures engaging in life...
On the verge of tadpoles.jpg
Bumper to bumper traffic in the pond too? Oh man....
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Re: Backyard Wildlife

Post by CT_Shooter » Thu May 05, 2016 6:23 pm

I've tried for four years to keep a honeybee hive, but I finally gave up. Mine is what's known as a Topbar hive, one of the most natural of hive types and used worldwide; I built it myself using well established plans and materials. Each year the bees go into the winter with the hive full of honeycombs and brood and each year they're all dead in the spring. Once, they all died in late November inside of a single week. I've never taken more than a taste of their honey, leaving it for them to survive the winter. I also feed them sugar in the late fall. When I bring them to the hive in spring, they build ten to fifteen combs in just a few weeks, then begin to fill them with honey, pollen, and brood. I've read everything there is to know about caring for them, but each year more than 50% of all honeybee hives in the U.S. die. It breaks my heart that mine is among that sad statistic. Pesticides, especially systemic types that are in genetically modified crops, are a part of the problem. There are mites that can also destroy hives, but that's mostly controllable. There's nothing one can do about pesticides that end up in the pollen and honey. I may try again, but I'm leaving the hive empty for now, hoping a swarm will find it and move in.
honeybee_on_clover.jpg
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