Bing Image Archive
23 subscribers
13K files
29 links
Bing Image Archive

Everyday push: @BingImage
Download Telegram
th.jpg
84.9 KB
#480x800
2021-01-21
OHR.RSOakTree_ZH-CN6371993573_480x800
2021-01-21
Red squirrel in the Scottish Highlands, Scotland (© Scotland: The Big Picture/Minden Pictures)
苏格兰高地上的欧亚红松鼠,苏格兰 (© Scotland: The Big Picture/Minden Pictures)


If this picture looks right out of Beatrix Potter's world, we'd say you have a good eye for a story. In 1903, Potter published 'The Tale of Squirrel Nutkin,' about a cheeky squirrel who taunts an owl with silly riddles until he pushes things too far—narrowly escaping with his life, minus a tail. Potter based Nutkin on the red squirrel, the only native squirrel species to the UK. The red squirrel population saw a steep decline here after humans introduced the larger nonnative Eastern gray squirrel in the late 1800s. But today in the UK, the red squirrel is a protected species, bolstering efforts to keep the gray numbers in check and preserve habitat. The UK red squirrel population is estimated to be about 138,000, with the vast majority living in the woods of Scotland, like our little friend here.
th.jpg
2.6 MB
#UHD
2021-01-22
OHR.BloodyBrook_ZH-CN6505728233_3842x2161
th.jpg
334.7 KB
#1920x1080
2021-01-22
OHR.BloodyBrook_ZH-CN6505728233_1920x1080
th.jpg
76.8 KB
#1024x768
2021-01-22
OHR.BloodyBrook_ZH-CN6505728233_1024x768
th.jpg
170.8 KB
#1366x768
2021-01-22
OHR.BloodyBrook_ZH-CN6505728233_1366x768
th.jpg
59.6 KB
#800x480
2021-01-22
OHR.BloodyBrook_ZH-CN6505728233_800x480
th.jpg
336 KB
#1080x1920
2021-01-22
OHR.BloodyBrook_ZH-CN6505728233_1080x1920
th.jpg
54.4 KB
#480x800
2021-01-22
OHR.BloodyBrook_ZH-CN6505728233_480x800
2021-01-22
Railroad crossing Bloody Brook alongside the Connecticut River in Hanover, New Hampshire (© DEEPOL by plainpicture)
横跨康涅狄格河畔血溪的铁路,新罕布什尔州汉诺威 (© DEEPOL by plainpicture)


As the Scandinavian saying goes, 'There's no such thing as bad weather, just bad clothes.' The adventurer seen here, conquering the New England chill on a stand-up paddleboard, is a cold ocean removed from Nordic shores. But this watery winter excursion embodies the Scandie stamina distilled in the word 'friluftsliv,' literally translated 'free air life'—the notion that any time is a great time to be outdoors, weather be damned.
th.jpg
2.5 MB
#UHD
2021-01-23
OHR.ChuDangYa_ZH-CN6673735912_2937x1652
th.jpg
335.8 KB
#1920x1080
2021-01-23
OHR.ChuDangYa_ZH-CN6673735912_1920x1080
th.jpg
76.7 KB
#1024x768
2021-01-23
OHR.ChuDangYa_ZH-CN6673735912_1024x768
th.jpg
171.2 KB
#1366x768
2021-01-23
OHR.ChuDangYa_ZH-CN6673735912_1366x768
th.jpg
83 KB
#800x480
2021-01-23
OHR.ChuDangYa_ZH-CN6673735912_800x480
th.jpg
329.6 KB
#1080x1920
2021-01-23
OHR.ChuDangYa_ZH-CN6673735912_1080x1920
th.jpg
74.5 KB
#480x800
2021-01-23
OHR.ChuDangYa_ZH-CN6673735912_480x800
2021-01-23
Chu Dang Ya near Pleiku in Gia Lai Province, Vietnam (© Quang Ngoc Nguyen/Alamy)
波来古市附近的Chu Dang Ya火山,越南嘉来 (© Quang Ngoc Nguyen/Alamy)


We're looking down on Chu Dang Ya, an extinct volcano that last erupted millions of years ago. Located in the Gia Lai Province in the Central Highlands of Vietnam, Chu Dang Ya, means 'wild ginger' or perhaps 'tough ginger root' in the local Jarai language. The volcano provides fertile soil for crops such as pumpkins, sweet potatoes, taro, and more. Among the best times to visit this rural gem is at the beginning of the rainy season, in late April and early May, and as the rains wind down in November. That's when Chu Dang Ya takes it up a notch—its hillsides erupt with sunflower and other wildflower blooms along roadways, dirt paths, and fields.
th.jpg
6.7 MB
#UHD
2021-01-24
OHR.Molas_ZH-CN6808431428_5118x2879
th.jpg
336.2 KB
#1920x1080
2021-01-24
OHR.Molas_ZH-CN6808431428_1920x1080
th.jpg
76 KB
#1024x768
2021-01-24
OHR.Molas_ZH-CN6808431428_1024x768