Frequently Asked Questions

General photo club help

Shorbler

I really like how the environment looked around this Bay-Breasted Warbler. It was foraging along the shoreline with other warblers from the same migration flock.

Sparkles

A Canada Jay photographed on a conifer, backlit from the setting sun. Over the Canada Jay, another Jay on a high branch shakes off some snow, which looked like glitter thanks to the awesome backlighting!

Shasta Daisy

The word "daisy" comes from the Old English dægesege, formerly dæges eage meaning "day's eye," because the petals of some species of daisy open at dawn and close at dusk. Daisy is a common name for composite flowering plants in the Asteraceae family, characterized by a central disk of yellow florets surrounded by white, pink, or red ray petals. The term is most scientifically associated with Bellis perennis (English or common daisy), though it also widely applies to species like the Shasta daisy (Leucanthemum × superbum) and oxeye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare). -- Web search

Photo contests and competitions

Shorbler

I really like how the environment looked around this Bay-Breasted Warbler. It was foraging along the shoreline with other warblers from the same migration flock.

Sparkles

A Canada Jay photographed on a conifer, backlit from the setting sun. Over the Canada Jay, another Jay on a high branch shakes off some snow, which looked like glitter thanks to the awesome backlighting!

Shasta Daisy

The word "daisy" comes from the Old English dægesege, formerly dæges eage meaning "day's eye," because the petals of some species of daisy open at dawn and close at dusk. Daisy is a common name for composite flowering plants in the Asteraceae family, characterized by a central disk of yellow florets surrounded by white, pink, or red ray petals. The term is most scientifically associated with Bellis perennis (English or common daisy), though it also widely applies to species like the Shasta daisy (Leucanthemum × superbum) and oxeye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare). -- Web search