I don’t know which is funnier, finding characters from Edgar Allan Poe’s Murder Mystery Dinner Party in a book about Jane Austen’s childhood, or the fact that one of those Poe Party characters aided in the murder of the person this whole book is about
Whaaaaa?!!!!
oh please please please can I has Poeparty: The Ilustrated Novel???
Oops; upon further investigation I wasn’t at this show. The video is from last Tuesday (September 3, 2019) at the Hollywood Palladium; I was at Thursday’s show. But yeah, it was wonderful.
I usually don’t talk up my own photos, but I really like this one. This guy was chatting with another one a hundred feet down the fence.
We are riding in El Tour de Tucson this year to raise money for PACC in Legend’s honor, please consider donating (free gift for all donations over $10)! http://bgboydphoto.com/rideforpacc
📷 Canon EOS 6D Mark II
🔭 EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM
📋 263mm | 1/1250s | f/5 | ISO-500
📅 August 2019
🚲 The Loop, Tucson, AZ
This Buff-sided Robin (Poecilodryas cervineventris) emerged from vine scrub next to the Cox River in Limmen National Park to look for insects in burnt scrub during our visit last week. What a treat to see this charming and cheeky little bird for the first time. While it can be found in riverine habitat from the southern Gulf of Carpentaria coast to the Kimerbleys it is local, patchy and generally uncommon.
Top Shot features the photo with the most votes from the previous day’s Daily Dozen, 12 photos selected by the Your Shot editors. The photo our community has voted as their favorite is showcased on the @natgeoyourshot Instagram account. Click here to vote for tomorrow’s Top Shot.
“Every summer we get to experience this incredible phenomenon of low summer fog rolling over the hills into the city,” writes Your Shot photographer Tanmay Sapkal. “When hot inland temperatures create a low-pressure zone over Northern California’s Central Valley, hot inland air rises and the heavier cold ocean air rushes in to replace it. This flow from the high to the low-pressure zone pulls the fog through the Golden Gate passage and into the Bay.” Photograph by Tanmay Sapkal
Some of the red maples, Acer rubrum, are making their move already. Henry Thoreau says of their species: “this modest Maple,… without budging an inch, travels in its reputation,—runs up its scarlet flag on that hill-side, which shows that it has finished its summer’s work before all other trees, and withdraws from the contest.”