Capture: Spring is Like a Perhaps Hand
1301 Responses
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
you mean you can’t see my 3D shots or that your photo isn’t Nora?
Ha ha, both actually - though I must admit I've been too lazy to download the thingy that will let me see the 3D, and I'd hate anyone to get cross-eyed trying 'ocular tricks' over some Ivy Leaf Toadflax : )
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Chris Waugh, in reply to
Well, yes, short sighted and astigmatism and wearing glasses. Didn't know that would stop me getting the 3D effect.
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Jos,
you don't need a thingy, just look at the large version, let your eyes cross and look at the image that will appear between the other two, I can do it really easily now that I've had a few goes. You need to be about 30-40cm from your screen and try not moving your head around too much
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Nora Leggs, in reply to
Maybe my eyes are too close together, cant seem to cross them far enough : )
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Jos,
It's your brain that does the stitching, you just have to get that third picture in the middle and move to and fro a bit and it should almost snap int focus. I can do it really easily now.
Here's one from a framing job today, a bunch if introduced beetles and things to control gorse and ragwort and stuff. It was a leaving present for someone. I have to get back about 50cm for this one. I think it depends on how far apart the two photos were taken. -
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JacksonP, in reply to
My Bay tree doing one of it’s infrequent flowering. And beetly bug.
Spectacular. That little camera does a good job. Well, in your hands of course. ;-)
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Venetia King, in reply to
That is such a pretty beetle I had to look it up. It looks like the "Fungus-Eating Ladybird" which is apparently from Australia and likes to eat powdery mildew in vege gardens.
Which New Zealand Insect? = awesome.
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Cecelia, in reply to
That's beautiful:)
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Lilith __, in reply to
Kowhai trees sprinkled through the gorgeous bush by the Okura River
I think kowhais are prettiest in bush. Grown as specimen trees they often look straggly and lost. They need their green friends. :-)
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Jos,
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Cecelia, in reply to
I like the seagulls caught mid-flight and mid-squawk.
I think kowhai are regarded as one of NZ's rare deciduous trees. They do look scrawny over the winter but I'm a great fan of their springtime display in streets and gardens and must-have accessories, the tui. -
JacksonP, in reply to
Looks luverly. Was a bit wild up here this afternoon for fish n chips.
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Islander, in reply to
Kowhai arnt deciduous - the kotukutuku -tree fuchsia - is the only tree native that is deciduous (there are some wee groundlings that shed on a seasonal basis,,,)
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Lilith __, in reply to
the kotukutuku -tree fuchsia – is the only tree native that is deciduous
Some dramatic stands of these on the Otira side of Arthurs Pass. Lovely red trunks in the Winter.
Aren’t ribbonwoods deciduous too? I guess they’re more shrubs than trees.
PS will I be seeing you soon?
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Lilith __, in reply to
What cheeky gulls, Jos!
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Islander, in reply to
Yo- Lilith!
Depends what you mean by a ribbonwood...I hope to be in ChCh area on Wednesday and hope to catch up then ---ack, my life is unreasoning flow but -we go with it-
a/n/n/I -
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Islander, in reply to
Stand on that thing! Looks like a porina to me-
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Islander, in reply to
I am getting confused - no ribbonwoods/lacebarks et al drop their leaves on the Coast. The *only* one that does is kotukutuku/fuschia (and during winter, you will see its reddish-brown branches everywhere - but no leaves on it.)
Incidentally, it's one native tree you shouldnt bother to try & make a fire with...
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Lilith __, in reply to
ribbonwoods
Not sure where these ones grow. What I think of as ribbonwoods are much smaller...skinny things with branches that grow almost straight up against the trunk.
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Islander, in reply to
Well..thankyou! From childhood, grew up with what seems to be a myth (kotukutuku the only deciduous etc/etc...) I certainly know that both lacebark & ribbonwood (tree) were used as plaiting/woven material...
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