View allAll Photos Tagged Digging
The dogs like to dig. They attack any hole with a vigor: gopher, ground-squirrel, rabbit. Dig, dig, dig.
The funny (embarrassing?) thing about this is that they have little or no interest in the occupants of the holes. I suspect that if R0ndo ever actually caught one, he'd just fling it aside to get it out of the way of the important digging.
This was around 1993 when I decided to build an extension to the back of the house. As can be seen I needed to dig out a fair bit of soil by hand, no Kuboto mini digger for me!
Rowdy was sure he was close to getting a mouse out of this hole he was digging. I never seen anything even close to looking like a mouse, but like I have said Mom and Dad are giving everything to him so I have to humor him and wish him good luck. Besides I really like the look on his face. The lighting is harsh I just liked his look.
Tom digging the drain in the Blind Pit (the pit is on a fault; breccia on the right, slickenslides on the left wall)
Digging for worms!?!
This is the first in a series of illustration i am creating for a the story i am writing about Lucy. The little girl who likes mud & to play outside, bugs & adventure, picking flowers & never wearing shoes. She is also very often inclined to pick her nose!
Sketch to Illustration:
This is the cellar after 2 months of digging. (Girl in snowsuit is Erwin's daughter Susanne.) Image (2)
Patrolling the horizon, in search of some nectar, this honeybee drone happens upon the Halifax Public Gardens. After some intensive searching of other blooms in the vast land of perennials and annuals; avoiding hungry ducks, pigeons and spiders, the drone finally reaches the largest of the crop in the Park. The sunflower. An immense flower with a head the size of a dinner plate, this sunflower offers enough nectar to satiate the quota for this and many other of the hive workers. Gathering to the fill, the bee quickly takes flight and heads back to the hive, ready to tell the other drones of his find. Soon, a small army, of even smaller proportions, will be dispatched for the Gardens in hope of finding the many other brethren of this sunflower, to make the honey that is enjoyed by all.
Participants got a chance to dig for treasure at the 2013 "Dig into Reading" Summer Reading Kick-Off Day Party at the Rapid City Public Libraries
Jim and I worked for amost an hour, digging around this huge chunk and hoping it would be a nice agate - unfortunately, it turned out to be only black jasper and may have weighed in well over three hundred pounds - it is still there!
“We found a wooden board!” On days of good weather, we actually did some work, digging up and dismantling seismic stations. The first indication of progress was hitting a piece of plywood overlying a big box full of batteries and a hard drive. It could sometimes take quite a while to find the wood, which was sometimes buried two meters deep.