View allAll Photos Tagged Cracker
Cracker goût bacon
Bacon flavour cracker
Dimensions du cracker (non croqué !) : 65x48x3 mm
Ma proposition pour Macro Mondays sur le thème "Biscuit"
J'ai mangé presque tout le paquet pendant la prise des 98 images qui composent ce stack, est-ce bien raisonnable ?
I ate almost the whole packet while taking the 98 images that make up this stack, is that reasonable?
"Macro Mondays"
"Biscuit"
Created for Biscuit theme in Macro Monday HMM! :-)
The cracker inspector is inspecting just how much salt is on these Saltine Crackers anyway. Big bits and little bits of salt everywhere!
The Inspector is HO Scale 1:87 (about 1/2 inch), so whole pic is less than 1 inch wide. I used the Laowa 60mm enlarging lens. Hope you like it.
This little bit of cuteness is probably an offspring of the one who coached her nestlings to fledge about a month ago.
A Red Cracker butterfly (Hamadryas amphinome) on a window pane in the Butterfly and Orchid Pavilion of the Tucson Botanical Gardens, Tucson, Arizona
Cracker lake, Glacier National Park.
I decided to revisit some old pictures of mine for ideas on where to visit again. I'll be going back to Cracker Lake for sure. Great hike with such a payoff.
Cracker Lake at Glacier National Park. Stunning lake, must be seen to be believed.
The opaque turquoise color of the lake comes from rock flour (silt) originating from Siyeh Glacier.
ThoSome tiny display crackers balanced on top of each other. Each cracker is about 3 inches long so wont be pulling one of these this year!!
Ashala's account - Asha's first account
Looking through my Christmas pictures and came across this cracker of a picture of Asha looking so cute holding a Christmas cracker. Happy Christmas my dear flicker friends from myself, Asha, Ashala and wee Tilly xxx
Hamadryas species.Male cracker butterflies are known for their ability to make a cracking noise with their wings, which is believed to either be for mating or to ward off rival males. Costa rica.
A moody sunrise at Banff's Two Jack Lake.
Mt. Rundle in the distance.
Took a detour from this Banff series to return to Banff for some more shots, and memorable experiences. Much to love there.
I'll continue this older set for a while till I get a chance to process some of the new ones.
Thanks for taking a look!
Enjoy a wonderful weekend!
It may be hard to understand at first why this gorgeous butterfly with its blue markings would be called red cracker. But that’s because the butterfly spend so much time perched with their wings splayed open. The upperside is black-blue marbled. The underside of the hindwing is brick red. The forewing has a wide white band.
Males and females are similar. It is a medium-sized brushfoot butterfly (family Nymphalidae) with a wingspan of 7,4 - 8,6 cm.
The red cracker (Hamadryas amphinome) is a species of cracker butterfly in the family Nymphalidae (20 members).
They acquired their common name “cracker” due to the unusual way that males produce a "cracking" sound as part of their territorial displays as they fly to interact with other insects.
All crackers species rest head down on a tree trunk, often with the wings spread flat against the bark.
The tropical Red Cracker is native to Mexico, Central America, Cuba and in South America south through Argentina. A rare stray to the lower Rio Grande Valley of South Texas.
This picture was taken in the butterfly garden of De Passiflorahoeve in Harskamp, the Netherlands.
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All rights reserved. Copyright © Martien Uiterweerd. All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written explicit permission.
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This Starry Night Cracker butterfly, Hamadryas laodamia, was resting head down on a tree trunk like many of its relatives that are much better camouflaged. This species evidently relies on toxic chemicals ingested by the caterpillar that makes the adult distasteful to avian predators. These crackers range from central Mexico south to Brazil.
Canopy Camp Lodge, Darien, Panama. September 25, 2022.
The Florida Cracker or Florida Scrub is an American breed of cattle. It originated in Spanish Florida and later in the American state of Florida, and is named for the Florida cracker culture in which it was kept. It is one of the Criollo breeds that descend from the Spanish cattle originally brought to the Americas by the Spanish Conquistadors; among the other North American breeds in this group are the Pineywoods, the Corriente and Texas Longhorn.[8]: 87 Unlike the Pineywoods – to which it is closely related – the Florida Cracker has not been inter-bred with breeds of North European origin.