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Back in January the coldest day of the year 2016, the cold was hard to miss!

On the Snaefellsjökull, Iceland

Snow in March in Manchester!

Jaseur d'Amérique avec ses fruits / Cedar waxwing with its berries

 

@ Montreal, Canada

A snowy Llyn Idwal against the backdrop of Pen yr Ole Wen with its head in the clouds

An early wintermorning this January at Bjorli, Norway. Temperatures were below zero by 24 C and the sun was bleak and powerless. HM King Winter reigned supreme.

Bikes see a little less use when the snow begins to fall. University of Notre Dame, South Bend, IN, USA

Lesser Snow Geese (Chen caerulescens) roosting on a prairie wetland south of Forestburg, Alberta, Canada. They are staging in the area and feeding in the harvested grain fields, as they build up energy reserves for the continuation of their southward migration.

 

10 October, 2015.

 

Slide # GWB_20151010_0460.CR2

 

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Winter in April again, here in the north!!

or light and shadows

Snow Bunting - Plectrophenax Nivalis

 

Double click to View

 

Snow buntings are large buntings, with striking 'snowy' plumages. Males in summer have all white heads and underparts contrasting with a black mantle and wing tips. Females are a more mottled above. In autumn and winter birds develop a sandy/buff wash to their plumage and males have more mottled upperparts.

 

Globally, they breed around the arctic from Scandinavia to Alaska, Canada and Greenland and migrate south in winter. They are a scarce breeding species in the UK, in Scotland, making them an Amber List species. They are more widespread in winter in the north and east when residents are joined by continental birds.

 

They are listed under Schedule 1 of the Wildlife & Countryside Act.

 

The snow bunting lives in very high latitudes in the Arctic tundra. There is no apparent limit to its northern range, while the southern range is limited by the duration of daylight, which influences their reproductive activity. This species is found in the high Arctic tundra of North America, Ellesmere Island, Iceland, higher mountains of Scotland, Norway, Russia, North Greenland, Siberia, Novaya Zemlya, and Franz Josef Land. During the winter, this bird migrates to the circumglobal northern temperate zone including the south of Canada, north of the United States, north of Germany, Poland, Ukraine, and east to central Asia. During the last ice age, the snow bunting was widespread throughout continental Europe.

 

During the breeding period the snow bunting looks for rocky habitats in the Arctic Since the vegetation in the tundra is low growing, this bird and its nestlings are exposed to predators, and in order to ensure the survival of its offspring, the snow bunting nests in cavities in order to protect the nestlings from any threat. During this period, buntings also look for a habitat rich in vegetation such as wet sedge meadows and areas rich in dryas and lichens. In the winter, they look for open habitats such as farms and fields where they feed on seeds in the ground.

  

Population:

 

UK breeding:

 

60 pairs

 

UK wintering:

 

10,000-15,000 birds

And it was só cold because of the wind. I forgot my photo-handgloves...

 

A memory of Hurricane Sandy, 2012

 

Happy weekend :-)

Samyang 8mm fisheye, 7 vertical shots stitched

Mensingheweer,Roden

 

Brecon Beacons Wales.

Aiko loves snow and enjoys it by burying his nose deep into the snow (cheking his NoseBook, no no not FaceBook!), rolling in it and sleeping on it.

After all he is a reindeer herder, being a Lapinkoira (Finnish Lapphund) and his breed is used to the cold.

Went to the cabin in West VA today. Could not drive in due to snow and ice, had to walk :-(

All rights reserved by Saibal Ghosh

Finally got our first real snowstorm here in Utah

for the year. Took this picture of Joshua hiding

under our "umbrella" tree in the yard. With its

snow covering, it really did look like an umbrella.

For more of my creative projects, visit my short stories website: 500ironicstories.com

November 27, 2016: I was enjoying the unexpected birthday snow and view from North Sugarloaf. I set up the shot, and Chris took it for me.

 

In autumn

It seems springtime is knocking at our door, so I thought I try to create a snowy winter image, because I really like snow and frost. You can make great photos then, but we have no snow, no winter.........

Happy Slider Sunday ;-))

Just as I got to the forest it started snowing. Great photographically, but it was so cold on an exposed hillside!

 

Hawk Wood, Epping Forest.

Brecon Beacons Wales.

Leaving Glacier National Park in high winds and whipping snow on a frigid March 3, 1989, an eastbound Burlington Northern freight led by tiger-striped GP50 No. 3140 heads for the great plains of Montana at Grizzly siding, between East Glacier and Spotted Robe.

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