Capture Canada Capture Canada
search place Log in Sign up
FR
more_vert
FR Discover Log in Sign up About Capture Canada Photo submission guidelines FAQ License Terms of service Privacy statement
close

Log in to Capture Canada

Welcome back!
or
Continue with Facebook

Forgot your password?

Didn't receive confirmation instructions?

Don't have an account yet? Join us

close

Join us!

Be a part of the Capture Canada community
Passwords Do Not Match
or
Join using Facebook

To register as a business or organisation, click here

Didn't receive confirmation instructions?

Already have an account? Sign in

Forgot your password?

Don't worry.

Go back to log in

Resend confirmation instructions.

Go back to log in

close

Embed this credit badge

Logo
Photo Credit:
@Ingenium

If you use this photo on your website, you can add this badge to give credit to the photographer. This is not required, but it’s just the polite (Canadian) thing to do.

Just copy the HTML code below and add it to your website.

close
Are you sure you want to remove this photo from Capture Canada?

NOTE: Please bear in mind, however, that once you have uploaded your photos with the CC0 license, the license cannot be revoked. Anyone who has already downloaded your photo can continue to use it for free. It's part of the open nature of the CC0 license.

I confirm that I want to delete my photo
Download this free image about Blonds have moo fun
A Blonde d’Aqutiaine cow at the Canada Agriculture and Food Museum. Named for its solid wheat colour, the Blonde d’Aquitaine breed originated in south-west France and was first imported to Canada in 1971. Like the Limousin and Charolais breeds, the Blonde d’Aquitaine is named for the part of France from which it comes (Aquitaine). 
Les blondes? « Meuh » oui!
Une blonde d’Aquitaine au Musée de l’agriculture et de l’alimentation du Canada. Cette race bovine qui doit son nom à sa couleur unie couleur de blé provient du Sud-Ouest de la France a été importée pour la première fois au Canada en 1971. Comme les bovins limousins et charolais, la blonde d’Acquitaine porte le nom de sa région française de provenance (l’Aquitaine). 
 (cow, bovin, agriculture, farm, ferme, museum, musée) (Canada Agriculture and Food Museum, Prince of Wales Drive, Ottawa, ON, Canada) from Capture Canada's growing collection of public domain CC0 photos fullscreen

Ingenium

Uploaded on 2017-11-29

favorite_outline
2
remove_red_eye
253
file_download
234
file_download Download
keyboard_arrow_down
Original 2812x1875
Thumbnail 300x200
Small 750x500
Medium 1024x683
Large 1366x911
Share Share keyboard_arrow_down
code Embed a credit badge
place Canada Agriculture and Food Museum, Prince of Wales Drive, Ottawa, ON, Canada

Blonds have moo fun A Blonde d’Aqutiaine cow at the Canada Agriculture and Food Museum. Named for its solid wheat colour, the Blonde d’Aquitaine breed originated in south-west France and was first imported to Canada in 1971. Like the Limousin and Charolais breeds, the Blonde d’Aquitaine is named for the part of France from which it comes (Aquitaine). Les blondes? « Meuh » oui! Une blonde d’Aquitaine au Musée de l’agriculture et de l’alimentation du Canada. Cette race bovine qui doit son nom à sa couleur unie couleur de blé provient du Sud-Ouest de la France a été importée pour la première fois au Canada en 1971. Comme les bovins limousins et charolais, la blonde d’Acquitaine porte le nom de sa région française de provenance (l’Aquitaine).

#cow #bovin #agriculture #farm #ferme #museum #musée

Technical Details

keyboard_arrow_down
Camera Make

NIKON CORPORATION

Camera Model

NIKON D750

Focal Length

55.0mm

Aperture

f/5.6

Shutter Speed

1/800s

ISO

400

Dimensions

2812 x 1875

CC0, Public Domain

keyboard_arrow_down

All photos published on Capture Canada can be used free of charge for commercial and non-commercial purposes. You do not need to provide credit to the photographer or Capture Canada.

Comments

keyboard_arrow_down