| Heading up the foothills trail on Tortugas (Tortoise) Mountain |
| Plume Coldenia (Tiquilia greggii) flower |
| Plume Coldenia is also called Plumed Crinklemat |
| The western flank of Tortugas and the distant Organ Mountains |
| Chihuahuan Desert floor |
| Three sisters? No, a single Hedgehog Cactus |
| Loop road that circles the mountain |
| Deer-apples, aka Cutleaf Globe Berry (Ibervillea tenuisecta) |
| Unripe Deer-apples |
| Marble-sized red melons on a vine that attaches itself to other plants |
| Late-blooming Ocotillo (pronounced o-co-TEA-yo) |
| Serendipity |
| A beak made for this type of trumpet flower |
| Posing for the nature shot |
| Can't get enough of this stuff |
| Hummingbirds beat their wings between 70 and 200 times per second |
| Trying another side of the flower |
| Sunbeams breaking through the cloud cover |
| Clouds blanketing the Organ Mountains |
| A sandy arroyo bottom (desert stream bed) |
| Chinchweed still carpets the desert floor |
| Flower of the Stingleaf plant |
| Prickly Pear Cactus (left), Ocotillo and Barrel Cactus |
4 comments:
Packrat, those are incredible photos of the hummingbird.
Thank you, Dr. K.
:)
Some REALLY fine images today, Packrat! Do you know what kind of hummingbird you photographed? And, those balloon-like melons are striking and unusual.
I'm not certain about the hummingbird, Scott. It could be a female Rufous. The Cornell website shows a female that looks an awful lot like "mine."
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