Cool Diet images

September 5, 2018 · Posted in Diet · Comment 

Check out these diet images:

Blue-Gray Tanager – Selva Negra, Nicaragua
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Image by Michael W Klotz – The Bird Blogger.com
At the end of the pond at Selva Negra, there is a lone tree that serves as a nesting spot for a couple of birds. One is a pair of Blue-gray Tanagers. They are a common bird in the tropics, or at least they seem to be everywhere. As tropical tanagers go, they are not the most colorful, but still a beautiful bird all the same. The success of these birds has much to do with the flexibility in their diet and the areas that they will live in. They will eat fruit as will as insects and live in semi open areas including towns, farmland, roadsides and clearing edges.

Michael W Klotz – www.TheBirdBlogger.com

Blouvalk (1)
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Image by Pixlab.co.za
Small to medium; above dove grey with black "shoulder" patches; below white; rather gull-like in flight; eyes red; often wags tail when perched. Habitat variable, but not forest. Widespread. Common resident and nomad.
Alternative Names:
English (Rob 6): Blackshouldered Kite
English (Rob 7): Black-shouldered Kite
English: Black-winged Kite
German: Gleitaar
French: Elanion blanc
Indigenous: Umdlampuku(X),Unongwevana(X),Tuyu(K),Rukodzi(Sh),Phakoana-mafieloana(SS),Phakoana-tšoana(SS),N’watavangani(Ts),Xikhavakhwani(Ts),Phakalane(Tw),Segôôtsane(Tw),Scientific Explained:
caerulea/caeruleus: Latin, blue.
elanus: Latin, a kite (from Greek elanos, probably from elayn(, to drive or persecute).
Measurements: Length about 30 cm; wingspan (27) 84,4 cm; wing (23 male) 246-268,7-280, (24 female) 248-267,9-276, (14 unsexed) 261-270,3-278; tail (26 male) 110-117,6-129, (27 female) 106-115,9-122, (14 unsexed) 98,2-115,5-123,1; tarsus (14 unsexed) 32,6-34-35,6; culmen (26 male) 15,4-16,6-18,7, (27 female) 16,1-17,3-18,4, (14 unsexed) 15,1-16,8-18,1. Weight (88 male) 197-235,8-277 g, (65 female) 219-257,3-343 g, (19 unsexed) 194-239,9-275 g.
Bare Parts: Iris ruby red to orange-red; bill black; cere, legs and feet yellow.
Identification: Size smallish; above pale grey; below white; black patches on upperwing at wrist; gull-like appearance and flight. Immature: Washed rusty on neck and breast; above brownish with pale edges to feathers; iris grey-brown to yellow-orange; black "shoulders" spotted white. Chick: Buff; gape and legs pink; cere yellow.
Voice: Wheezy whistles and screams; high-pitched peeeu; rasping wee-ah and weep-weep.
Distribution: Africa (except Sahara), Madagascar, Iberia, tropical Asia to New Guinea; throughout s Africa.
Status: Probably commonest raptor in most parts of s Africa, except dry W; resident, but highly nomadic.
Habitat: Varied; mainly grassland and farmland; also woodland, savanna, semi-arid scrub.
Habits: Usually solitary or in pairs by day; roosts communally at night when not breeding, sometimes in flocks of over 100 birds, from 10-35 minutes after sunset. Hunts from perch (tree or telephone pole), or by hovering over open grassland; drops onto prey with legs extended, sometimes in stages before final strike. Wags tail exaggeratedly up and down in threat. Flight graceful and buoyant.
Food: Rodents (up to 98% of diet: mainly Otomys, Praomys and Rhabdomys), shrews, small birds, reptiles and insects.
Breeding: Season: All months in s Africa, mainly July-October in sw Cape, peak in November in e Cape, peak in March in Transvaal and Orange Free State, peak in March-April in Zimbabwe. Nest: Small platform of sticks, about 30 cm diameter and 10 cm thick, lined with grass; in fork 2-20 m (usually (54) 2-3,2-8 m) above ground, near top of tree (usually thorn tree if available), accessible from above; built by both sexes; may add to old nest of another species. Clutch: (124) 2-3,5-6 eggs (usually 3-4). Eggs: Cream to buff, more or less heavily blotched with brown and rust; measure (123) 39,8 x 30,8 (35,6-46,1 x 27,5-34,8); weigh about 21 g. Incubation: 30-31-33 days, all or mostly by female. Nestling: 30-35 days, fed by female only; prey brought by male; fledgling cared for only by male for 80-90 days.
Ref. Mendelsohn, J.M. 1982. Durban Mus. Novit. 13:75-116; 1983. Ostrich 54:1-18; 1984. Proc. 5th Pan-Afr. Orn. Congr.:799-808.

Diet Sparkling Appletini
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Image by slgckgc

Fire exit

August 16, 2015 · Posted in Diet · Comment 

A few nice diet images I found:

Fire exit
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Image by Bev Goodwin
Taken outside an abandoned warehouse in Liverpool’s docklands. There is a coke can everywhere 🙂

Cosmetics and Dieting Aids
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Image by sjrankin
Advertisement from a Hokkaido newspaper featuring cosmetics on the bottom and dieting aids on the top.

Diet Coke Ad
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Image by NapInterrupted
We did the United Way Day of Caring at Christopher House, which is part of Hospice Austin. Weeding, vine cutting, tree trimming. At this point the sun had cleared the buildings and trees and it was heating up.

(Diet) Irn Bru By the Pale Sunlight

August 7, 2015 · Posted in Diet · Comment 

A few nice diet images I found:

(Diet) Irn Bru By the Pale Sunlight
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Image by neuro

Diet Coke Coca Cola
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Image by JeepersMedia
Coca Cola Diet Coke

Diet Coke

July 28, 2015 · Posted in Diet · Comment 

A few nice diet images I found:

Diet Coke
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Image by Thomas Hawk

Shedding
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Image by Christi Nielsen

www.christinielsen.com

Nice Diet photos

June 22, 2014 · Posted in Diet · Comment 

Some cool diet images:

Char Kway Teow in Georgetown
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Image by pmorgan
We lined up for longer than I felt was going to be worthwhile at the Joo Hooi Lane Cafe on Jalan Penang in the UNESCO World Heritage area of Georgetown, Penang, Malaysia. I have to admit the old woman made a fine Penang Char Kway Teow (although I am too innocent and mild in this area of food appreciation). And the crowded grimly surrounding changes after a few minutes into something more comfortable and lively. The chendol – the right brown sugar substrate – was great.

Bruce Davidson interviewed by The Guardian:

"What, I ask, has a lifetime of taking photographs taught him? "That often what makes a good picture is almost subliminal. It could be a look on a face or a detail on a piece of clothing. You just have to go with the flow sometimes. When I was a kid, I played baseball and you heard the sound the bat made when it really connected with the ball; you knew you had a great hit. It’s the same with photography: sometimes you hear that click of the shutter and you know you’ve caught something really special."

www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2011/apr/24/bruce-davids…

This photo slowly became one of ‘my darlings’ and is therefore at risk of undue personal beautification and I know it isn’t perfect; too grainy etc. But I like the colours and the light. I learned a lot about printing too trying to get this right.

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