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The Mad Hatters Bunnies have escaped... Can you find them all?
18 things are hidden in here, including the Bunnies. Look for : 7 white & brown bunnies, 2 black bunnies, 2 black & White bunnies, 1 purple bunny, 3 golden bunnies, 1 egg with carriage, 1 blue egg, 1 camouflaged bunny. Have some hoppin' fun!. Can you find the camouflage Bunny? If you do find him please don't take a snapshot of him, as he likes to remain HIDDEN. If you enjoyed this game please leave a comment below. This Gigapan is made up of Apx 300 images, permission granted for press use. Other GigaPans: Olympic Football Stadium http://gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=8036 The Pub http://gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=3328 The clock http://gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=4280 Big Ben http://gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=3332 |
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18 bunnies to find... Can you find them all? contains 1 matching snapshot(s):
Snapshot: digging for clues: Bunny is digging, looking for the Easter Eggs
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The largest open-air market in Central America, held every Friday. | ||||
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Market at San Francisco El Alto, Guatemala contains 1 matching snapshot(s):
Snapshot: Chickens: Do people buy their own chickens to eat? Or for laying eggs?
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This is a test of a technique to capture action in low light. I used the Canon G10 to capture the scene at .25-.60 second, ISO 80, accepting the fact that I could not capture peak action. I then shot action with the Nikon D3 at ISO 1000 and patched those parts into the scene in Photoshop. The Canon fits the GigaPan but has poor high-ISO performance; the Nikon works superbly at high ISOs but won't fit even the Epic 100. Let me know if you think the result is realistic. This GigaPan has been sized down to fit the 3K-per-side limit for JPG files-- the larger TIFF and RAW files would not upload.
Gibbons are apes, not monkeys. These gibbons come from Southeast Asia. There are seven gibbons, eleven ducks and an English sparrow in this image -- can you find them all? Stitching notes: GigaPan Stitcher version 0.4.3865 (Macintosh) Panorama size: 1166 megapixels (46842 x 24910 pixels) Input images: 140 (14 columns by 10 rows) Field of view: 101.0 degrees wide by 53.7 degrees high (top=23.9, bottom=-29.8) Settings: All default settings Original image properties: Camera model: Canon PowerShot G10 with Raynox DCR-1540 tele convertrer Image size: 4416x3312 (14.6 megapixels) Capture time: 2009-06-27 12:32:30 - 2009-06-27 12:50:49 Exposure: 0.25 - 0.6 at f/8 ISO: 80 Focal length (35mm equiv.): 219 Exposure mode: Manual Horizontal overlap: 23.4 to 36.9 percent Vertical overlap: 17.1 to 40.4 percent Camera model: Nikon D3, 70-210mm Nikkor Exposure 1/80 at f/8 ISO: 1000 Focal length (35mm equiv.): 210mm Computer stats: 8192 MB RAM, 4 CPUs Total time 1:55:41 (0:49 per picture) Alignment: 5:44, Projection: 14:46, Blending: 1:35:10 |
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White-Cheeked Gibbons, Minnesota State Zoo contains 1 matching snapshot(s):
Snapshot: House Sparrow: Known in North America as the English sparrow, this is an invasive species that is one of the most common birds in North America. This one has obviously gotten in from outside. Although cute, they aggressively evict other cavity-nesting birds and destroy their eggs, especially bluebirds and martins.
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This is a close-up view of one of the display cases in Grandpa Stubbs's store featuring small wooden figures which he carved. | ||||
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Case of carvings contains 1 matching snapshot(s):
Snapshot: Pysanka: Three pysanka (Ukranian handcrafted Easter eggs). These were made either by Grandma and/or Grandpa Stubbs.
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An Easter Egg hunt on my front porch. There are three dozen eggs 'hidden', as well as two Easter bunnies, two Mainzelmännchen, one Eeyore, one Rubber Duckie, and if you look really closely you'll find the reflection of the photographer pointing to one of the hidden eggs.
Happy Easter and Happy Hunting!!! [Permission for media use is hereby granted.] |
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A Front Porch Easter Egg Hunt contains 1 matching snapshot(s):
Snapshot: Why no virtual egg here?: I thought there should be an egg in the split edge of the porch column. :-)
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A photo for the virtual Easter egg hunt taken in the new park behind my house. The rocks and tree branches are part of the park's landscaping. Some construction in still in progress where the orange webbed fences are located. Approximately 30 eggs are hidden in the photo. The winds picked up while taking this panorama and blew some of the eggs out of their places. As the wind blew the eggs down, I ran through the scene staying just ahead of the robot and out of view of the camera putting the eggs back in their places. Members of the press may freely embed and use this image in their publications. |
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Not the best lighting, but sometimes you have to take what you can get. | ||||
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Yellowstone Falls from Artists Point (Afternoon) contains 1 matching snapshot(s):
Snapshot: Eagle or Osprey on the nest?: Comparing Ron's other Gigapan showing this nest shot the next day and one I shot 6 days later,
http://www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=30717
http://www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=29725
there is a "bird like" object on this nest that is not in the other Gigapans. Two white objects that look like eggs are also evident in both of Rons Gigapans.
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The largest King Penguin rookery in the world is in St. Andrews Bay on South Georgia. The penguins have a complicated reproductive cycle, and this rookery is occupied by penguins year-round. They are a noisy group, but they are not as smelly as the Adelie, Gentoo or Chinsatrap Penguins that we met on this voyage. The King Penguins eat mostly fish, not krill. The difference in diet accounts for the gentler aroma of the colony. There are probably a few hundred thousand King Penguins in the panorama. Count them if you wish, but do look for other things that are going on amid this multitude of birds. | ||||
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St Andrews Bay South Georgia contains 1 matching snapshot(s):
Snapshot: fuzzy brown penguin...: are these juveniles? (if so why are there so few?)
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Ka`ena Point Natural Area Reserve, the westernmost tip of O`ahu. I used manual exposure settings; the bands are caused by rapidly moving clouds blocking the sun. How many nesting Laysan Albatross can you find? | ||||
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Ka`ena Point, O`ahu contains 1 matching snapshot(s):
Snapshot: Albatross #1: Laysan Albatross on nest. Laysan Albatross began recolonizing the dunes at Ka`ena Point Natural Area Reserve after off road vehicle access was blocked. So far in 2007-2008 nesting season there are 45 nests. The eggs will hatch in January, and the last fledglings will leave for sea by June.
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(at least, that's the best guess I can make for the name of these peaks from Google Earth). |
