i and my son, along with six others had taken a birding trip last week
to desert national park, or dnp, in jaisalmer, rajasthan, in
northwest india, close to the pakistan border.
the dnp is a rather large park, situated in the thar desert and is home
to the critically endangered great indian bustard and has rich avian
life. we got to see and photograph a wide variety of birds but they are
still in the sd card. i'll post a GESO once the photos have been
processed. meanwhile a small selection of photos taken with the mobile
last 40 km or so were on road.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/162506484@N07/albums/72157720162634209
comments welcome....
~subash
Interesting.
I love that tree, and #2 is a particularly strong composition that
effectively dis play the tree and it habitat.
Dan Matyola
https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery
https://tinyurl.com/DJM-Pentax-Gallery
On Sun, Nov 21, 2021 at 3:33 AM Subash Jeyan pdml.live@gmail.com wrote:
i and my son, along with six others had taken a birding trip last week
to desert national park, or dnp, in jaisalmer, rajasthan, in
northwest india, close to the pakistan border.
the dnp is a rather large park, situated in the thar desert and is home
to the critically endangered great indian bustard and has rich avian
life. we got to see and photograph a wide variety of birds but they are
still in the sd card. i'll post a GESO once the photos have been
processed. meanwhile a small selection of photos taken with the mobile
last 40 km or so were on road.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/162506484@N07/albums/72157720162634209
comments welcome....
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follow the directions.
On Nov 21, 2021, at 4:39 AM, Daniel J. Matyola danmatyola@gmail.com wrote:
Interesting.
I love that tree, and #2 is a particularly strong composition that
effectively dis play the tree and it habitat.
I like the one that is close to the end, it might be 4, of the low lying tree.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/162506484@N07/51695005549/in/album-72157720162634209/
I’m very much looking forward to the rest of your photos from the trip.
--
Larry Colen
lrc@red4est.com
thank you Dan, Larry. hoping to finish processing the bird photos
today...
On Sun, 21 Nov 2021 14:34:14 -0800
Larry Colen lrc@red4est.com wrote:
On Nov 21, 2021, at 4:39 AM, Daniel J. Matyola
danmatyola@gmail.com wrote:Interesting.
I love that tree, and #2 is a particularly strong composition that
effectively dis play the tree and it habitat.
I like the one that is close to the end, it might be 4, of the low
lying tree.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/162506484@N07/51695005549/in/album-72157720162634209/
I’m very much looking forward to the rest of your photos from the
trip.
Looks like a fascinating place. Was the tree trimmed so that the low
branches are all the same height from the ground, or does it grow that
way? I hope the birding was productive.
Mark
On 11/21/2021 3:32 AM, Subash Jeyan wrote:
i and my son, along with six others had taken a birding trip last week
to desert national park, or dnp, in jaisalmer, rajasthan, in
northwest india, close to the pakistan border.
the dnp is a rather large park, situated in the thar desert and is home
to the critically endangered great indian bustard and has rich avian
life. we got to see and photograph a wide variety of birds but they are
still in the sd card. i'll post a GESO once the photos have been
processed. meanwhile a small selection of photos taken with the mobile
last 40 km or so were on road.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/162506484@N07/albums/72157720162634209
comments welcome....
%(real_name)s Pentax-Discuss Mail List
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thank you Mark, it is an interesting place. as for the low branches
being of the same height from the ground, my guess is that the leaves
of the tree are staple food for camels and they have been eaten away by
them...
On Tue, 23 Nov 2021 11:21:17 -0500
Mark C pdml-mark@charter.net wrote:
Looks like a fascinating place. Was the tree trimmed so that the low
branches are all the same height from the ground, or does it grow
that way? I hope the birding was productive.
In this set, I like #2 and #6. #2 for the way it emphasizes the solitude, #6 because the person is just so very relaxed!
stan
On Nov 21, 2021, at 3:32 AM, Subash Jeyan pdml.live@gmail.com wrote:
i and my son, along with six others had taken a birding trip last week
to desert national park, or dnp, in jaisalmer, rajasthan, in
northwest india, close to the pakistan border.
the dnp is a rather large park, situated in the thar desert and is home
to the critically endangered great indian bustard and has rich avian
life. we got to see and photograph a wide variety of birds but they are
still in the sd card. i'll post a GESO once the photos have been
processed. meanwhile a small selection of photos taken with the mobile
last 40 km or so were on road.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/162506484@N07/albums/72157720162634209
comments welcome....
%(real_name)s Pentax-Discuss Mail List
To unsubscribe send an email to pdml-leave@pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.
Yes, it's as high as animals are able to eat. You see the same sort of
thing on country lanes in the UK where sheep are the culprits.
Alan C
On 23-Nov-21 07:33 PM, Subash Jeyan wrote:
thank you Mark, it is an interesting place. as for the low branches
being of the same height from the ground, my guess is that the leaves
of the tree are staple food for camels and they have been eaten away by
them...
On Tue, 23 Nov 2021 11:21:17 -0500
Mark C pdml-mark@charter.net wrote:
Looks like a fascinating place. Was the tree trimmed so that the low
branches are all the same height from the ground, or does it grow
that way? I hope the birding was productive.
--
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