Dodi Pat Sar is located ahead of Naran and Jalkand,
Pakistan near Basal Camp which is at an altitude of 10,000 feet. The
lake and surrounding area has been declared as National Wild Life
Park. This splendid lake resides in the lap of the snow covered mountain
peak. The snowy mountain peak sheds its reflection in the lake giving
an impact of milk contained in a lake, which makes up its name.
Thursday, 21 August 2014
Tuesday, 19 August 2014
Monday, 18 August 2014
Least Sandpiper (Calidris minutilla)
The least sandpiper is one of tiny shorebird. It is not
too much bigger than a sparrow. This bird is love to rummage through the seaweed,
and it is very tough to spot them when they are on it. I only manage to
see them when they move due to an advancing tide, or I may have
inadvertently stepped a bit too close.
Labels:
Birds
Saturday, 16 August 2014
Thursday, 14 August 2014
Pyramid of Giza (Egypt) - 5,000 Years Old
Planetary alignment that will take place Dec 3, 2012 is dead-on
alignment with the Pyramids at Giza. Night Sky in Giza, Egypt on
December 3, 2012, local time … one hour before sunrise compared with the
Pyramids at Giza. Image generated by Starry Night Pro (the same view of
the planets can be obtained using any other astronomy program, e.g.
Stellarium. Also, it should be noted, that planetary convergence
only happens every 2,737 years, and its different for at least 2 more
cycles running the program forward… and doesn’t happen again for over
28,000 YEARS if you run that program backwards in time.
Labels:
Egypt
Fascinating Glass Chamber Teapot Brews Tea before Your Eyes
Your tea-drinking experience is
about to get a lot more spellbinding! The upcoming Sorapot 2 is part teapot and
part sculpture and it aims to illustrate you the magical that happens when
preparing your beverage. Usually, you would put your loose leaves in a pot,
close it, and wait for them to brew. The Sorapot 2 has a glass chamber that
changes all of that it lets you see the tea leaves explain right before your
very eyes.
Using the teapot is easy. Simply
unscrew the stainless-steel lock, unhinge it by the handle, place the leaves in
the jar, and then close it. Finally, pour hot water through the spout, take a
seat, and observe the hypnotic process of tea extracts combining with water.
The teapot also works with teabags but that’s definitely less exciting.
The Sorapot 2 was formed by
industrial designer Joey Roth and is offered for pre-order on his website. It’s
slated to begin shipping in October. It’s current price tag of $285, and it’s surely
not cheap, but what other well-designed teapot makes brewing into an art form?
Labels:
Technology,
Video
Photographer Julie Fletcher Leaves Her City Life to Capture Stunning Images of Australian Outback
Photographer Julie Fletcher
quitting her office job finishing a failing relationship and leaving city in
life in Sydney. She finally is living in her dreams, when traveling to
Australia remotest locations to capture stunning landscape and gorgeous
wildlife of the land Down under. Julie hold her camera in hand and roams the
vast outback and photograph the majestic sights, the iconic and breathtaking
Uluru, wild kangaroos peeking up inquisitively, calm lakes dotted with twisted
trees, rugged mountains towering over barren land, and brilliant night skies
filled with endless stars.
Well, there is nothing out there
but at the same time there is so much if you just see and not just look, the
photographer says of the secluded southern regions that she frequents. This region
has made me a improved photographer by challenging me all the time. I am continually
looking for a changed approach on the same subject. It’s taught me to keep
things simple and don’t overthink things.
Labels:
Photography
Julesburg, Colorado, USA
While on storm chasing expeditions in Tornado Alley in the U.S. I have
encountered many photogenic supercell storms. This photograph was taken
while we were approaching a storm near Julesburg, Colorado, on May 28,
2013. The storm was tornado warned for more than one hour, but it stayed
an LP [low precipitation] storm through all its cycles and never
produced a tornado, just occasional brief funnels, large hail, and some
rain.
Winners of the 2014 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest
Labels:
USA
Wednesday, 13 August 2014
Sunday, 3 August 2014
Gates of the Valley
The Gates of the Valely in Yosemite National Park
stand in soft, smokey light as the sun nears setting. The El Portal Fire
a few miles to the west was fueling the air with a blue smokey haze but
that haze was no match for the majestic beauty of this splendid landscape. The recognizable face
of El Capitan dominates the left and the cascade of Cathedral Rocks
makes up the right side of the valley's gateway. Moreover; the hidden behind trees
here, Bridalveil Fall was a trickle in this driest of years.
Labels:
USA
Friday, 1 August 2014
Thursday, 31 July 2014
Hooded Mountain-Tanager
Hooded Mountain-Tanager, Azulejo real, or Tangara de montaña encapuchada (Buthraupis montana). The striking Hooded Mountain-Tanager is distributed from southern Venezuela south through the Andes to northern Bolivia.
Via Neotropical Birds Online
Via Neotropical Birds Online
Labels:
Birds
Crested Gallito!
Crested Gallito, also known as Gallito copetón (Rhinocrypta lanceolata) The Crested Gallito is a handsome and rather
uncharacteristic tapaculo that is found in Monte and Chaco habitats of
central Argentina, reaching north into westernmost Paraguay, and
easternmost Bolivia.
Via Neotropical Birds Online
Via Neotropical Birds Online
Labels:
Birds
Wednesday, 30 July 2014
The Bohemian Waxwing
The bohemian waxwing got its name for
the red waxy tips on mature feathers, and for its bohemian behavior.
These beautiful birds are very nomadic when following food sources and
their large flocking instinct leads to a communal type of protection and
sharing of food. Therefore; with their vibrant colors and sleek
appearance, bohemian waxwings are a favorite on any birder’s life list.
Bohemian Waxwings are sleek, masked birds with rare red, waxy deposits
at the tips of their secondary feathers. They’re grayish-brown with
white and yellow wing-patches and yellow terminal tail-bands. They’ve
unique crested heads, black throats, and black masks lightly lined with
white.
Their heads have a Rufous
tinges, and their under-tail coverts are Rufous. Adolescents have most
of the aforementioned field marks, but are mottled gray-brown and lack
the feather-tips. Bohemian Waxwings feather-tips seem to rise in number
and size as the bird’s age. The only bird in Washington United States
that could be confused with a Bohemian Waxwing is a Cedar Waxwing, a far
more common relative. Cedars birds are smaller and browner than
Bohemians and have yellow tinges underneath. But they have lack the
Rufous under-tail coverts and white and yellow wing markings of Bohemian
Waxwings.
Bohemian Waxwings habits
includes to breeds in open areas and edges of boreal forests, habitually
in places with sparse tree cover above brushy understory. In winter
season, they can be found in a diversity of habitats, as long as there
is fruit available. They habitually congregate in towns with abundant
plantings of fruit-bearing trees. Bohemian Waxwings are monogamous, and
both members of the pair help build the nest, which is habitually on a
horizontal branch of a spruce tree. Their nest is a loose, open cup made
of grass, twigs, and moss, lined with feathers and fine grass.
The
female incubates four to six eggs for about fourteen to fifteen days.
Normally both parents feed the young bird, which leave the nest at
fourteen to eighteen days. The young normally stay adjacent to the nest
and are fed by the parents for another few days. Moreover; family groups
may stay together through the fall. The Fruits which are rich in sugar
have deficient in other nutrients, so it must be eaten in huge
quantities. Bohemian waxwings have a big liver which supports him to
convert sugar to energy. They can metabolize ethanol formed from the
fermentation of those sugary fruits more proficiently than humans, but
May still become intoxicated, occasionally fatally. Waxwings habitually
drink water or eat snow in winter, since the sugar in their fruit diet
tends to dehydrate the birds through an osmotic effect. In the summer,
the fruits are juicier and water is less of a problem.
Bohemian
Waxwings behavior may be mixed in with other common Cedar Waxwing
flocks during the winter. They habitually perch atop trees to forage for
fruits and berries. However in summer conditions, they fly out to catch
aerial insects, but they’re primarily likes fruit-eaters, a trait that
dictates much of their behavior. Bohemian Waxwings eat almost nothing
but fruit in the winter, relying on the berries of mountain ash,
juniper, holly, and others. They also forage on fruit crops and
ornamental plantings. Bohemian Waxwings are susceptible to alcohol
intoxication, and even death, from eating fermented fruit. Like most
songbirds, they feed insects to their young at first, but switch to
feeding the young berries within a few days.
The
bird’s migration is nomadic and irruptive species roams in search of
food sources, rather than undertaking a typical migration. However; food
availability seems to be a more imperative predictor of winter presence
than temperature or latitude. Populations fluctuate considerably from
year to year, but Christmas Bird Count Data reveals a slightly declining
long-term trend. Maximum Bohemian Waxwings in Washington are northern
breeders that come down into Washington in winter. In many years they’re
fairly common in winter in northeastern Washington Ferry, Douglas,
Okanogan, Stevens, and Pend Oreille Counties, particularly in cities and
towns where they feed on fruit trees. In few years they’d extend
farther west into the Columbia Basin, and can rarely be seen west of the
Cascades. Bohemian Waxwings are erratic breeders in Washington in the
North Cascades at Hart's Pass and Holman Pass.
Source: Charismatic Planet
Labels:
Birds
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