View allAll Photos Tagged COMING
Professor Oppa is finally going to make his debut.
Photo by Wang Hae-Jin,make sure to follow them for amazing photos! Pure art *chefs kiss* ♥
Continuing with some more images from the Ag Fields folks and continuing to test the new lens, of which I am very pleased with in all respects so far, as you will see with some up-coming images. Thanks for the visit and have a great day.
Hi Aliens!
This set of criss cross sits filled with personality will be out at SaNaRae on the 26th!
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Spring%20Morning/177/130/4010
Hi Aliens!
I am super SUPER STOKED to announce that Space Cadet will be in the November round of Collab!
This set comes with 5 bento sitting poses and a color change mug (left and right versions included).
Taken in the Arizona desert from the front of my dear cousin's home. Magnificent views in all directions.
Another Banded Sphinx Moth Caterpillar found sporting a few racing stripes......
I've read that the young Instars come in a variety of colors, and there is some color variation in mature Instars as well.
They have a series of false eye patterning to ward off birds and other predators......
Kind of hard to tell which direction they're facing sometimes, as their markings can be deceiving.
Credit my ole Pal Brody for peaking my interests in finding these Marvels of Nature.
Thanks for viewing !
Have a great weekend ahead my friends. :-)
Minus 4 C. Although there are still leaves on the willow tree, the pollard willows have lost their branches.
Midden-Delfland, The Netherlands.
Another old image which I took in June. Can't wait til the weather gets better to take some beautiful frosty landscapes shots :) Hope you like it!
The photo was fortunately taken in January 2021 but it's so cold that we can feel the breath of the coming winter...
Coming back into Whitby after rain i saw this beautiful rainbow disappearing fast, so it was a mad rush to get out of the car to capture it, you can see the Abbey and Viaduct from my previous uploads.
Usually I shoot from the house and up the hillside across the howe .... but this was shot coming home down the hill. You can see almost the whole village strung out along the road - and the spire of the Kirk after which the village is named ;o)
A sunny morning last month - I guess it will be quite some time before I see that view again!
My Fence Friday photos set: Here
My landscape set Here
Across the Howe set here Here
@The Liaison Collaborative
押し花タトゥーてやつです!
Pressed flower Tattoo !
では、寝る。そして明日またしゃかりきです!!
毎日眠い。梅雨の間はしゃーないなあ。
I did a bit of research yesterday. This sheep often has dark liquid coming from the slit next to the eye. Sheep don't have a lacrimal gland, they have an infraorbital organ, a gland that produces a substance with unknown purpose. There are three theories about this substance. A: the moor substance, the more dominance. This could really be it. This sheep is the boss. B: the substance smells good (from a sheepical point of view) and could be a self-produced perfume. Maybe that's why my sheep look so befuddled. C: The substance is a self-produced skin-care. Sounds unlikely, but sheep have scent glands between their toes and while I thought that those interdigital glands produce a substance to nourish the keratin part of the toes, I read now, that the interdigital gland has a sexual function too. And I guess the feet smell better.
This is a sego lily or a mariposa lily. "Sego" is a Shoshone word, meaning "edible bulb," referring to the root organ that the Native American tribe considered a delicacy. "Mariposa" is a Spanish word for "butterfly," referring to its most colorful pollinators. About 60 species of sego lilies are native to western North America -- This is Gunnison's sego lily, Calochortus gunnisoni, named after explorer Capt. John Williams Gunnison, who was also honored by the naming of the Gunnison River and Black Canyon of the Gunnison. It thrives from mesas at the lower edge of the ponderosa pine belt to high mountain meadows.
Photographed in Cement Creek, near Crested Butte, Colorado.