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[Lelutka] Skyler Head

[Signature] Gianni Body

[Not Found] Gianni Body Applier [Medium]

[Motiv8] Pose S-24 Pack

[Exalted] Beanie @[Level Event]

[Amias] Dewey Outfit @[Men Only Monthly] (Closing Date: June 15)

[Val'More] Specialist Bag

[Paleto] Backdrop:. Dead file @[The Men & Women Jail Event]

50:52 Nostalgic

 

I love old fashioned ornaments!

 

Update: We are making progress! We have found my mother in law a wonderful care home only minutes away from our house. She can move in anytime after Christmas!

 

Still a lot to do but the part that was worrying us the most is done!

 

Thank you each and everyone one of you for your kind words of support! You are all awesome!

Credits Popper Jack

Found Gpa Chicken Nuggets

Credits Popper Jack

Popper Jack Kids - Im a Foodie Gacha

Wearing

Popper Jack KIds - Im a Foodie - Bebe - 9

Fits bebe, bebe Youth ,Tdb

At The event The Boys Room Event

 

This little white feather, about 20 mm across, was sitting on top of a coleus leaf in the garden...

La Ceja, Colombia.

 

Heliconius clysonymus clysonymus Latreille, [1817]

 

Heliconius clysonymus is distributed from Honduras to Peru. In Colombia it is found in the 3 Andean mountain ranges between 1.200 and 2.300 meters. They are seen in deforested areas and small patches of forest, where they feed on nectar and pollen. The Heliconius are among the longest-living butterflies.

 

www.comfenalcoantioquia.com/Turismo/ClubesyParques/Parque...

I'm in love ❤💕

 

"Today we are shining a spotlight on Yu Zhu, a multi-talented Resident with an impressive array of skills, from photography to vlogging to styling, and even landscaping!"

 

second.life/spotlight-YuZhu

 

#SecondLife #SecondLifeSpotlight #VirtualWorld #Metaverse #VirtualPhotography #Machinima

 

Now I have 4 chipmunks running to me begging for sunflower seeds. And I don't know which one is Perry! I do know which ones are girls and boys so lets just say there is a Perry 1 and a Perry 2:)

Found at the Hypica from Rio de Janeiro. Sorry, I don't know the ID.

At last I found the caterpillar of the swallowtail..

Fall colors this year were beautiful where they hit, but unfortunately the drought across much of Minnesota hindered many places from turning at all. I found this beautiful patch of Maples along the Mississippi River in southern Minnesota. Thankfully even in harsh conditions beauty can still be found everywhere you look. This serves as a reminder that even in the midst of our chaotic world that God still made beauty and He has not forgotten His people. Praise be to God for the love and blessing He has shown us!

Since Finding Nemo came out, it's almost become almost a requirement for aquariums to have Clownfish and Palette Surgeonfish together in the same tank.

The Indian pangolin, thick-tailed pangolin, or scaly anteater (Manis crassicaudata) is a pangolin found on the Indian subcontinent. It is not common anywhere in its range. Like other pangolins, it has large, overlapping scales on its body which act as armour. It can also curl itself into a ball as self-defence against predators such as the tiger. The colour of its scales varies depending on the colour of the earth in its surroundings.

 

It is an insectivore, feeding on ants and termites, digging them out of mounds and logs using its long claws, which are as long as its fore limbs. It is nocturnal and rests in deep burrows during the day.

 

The Indian pangolin is threatened by hunting for its meat and for various body parts used in traditional medicine.

 

The Indian pangolin is a solitary, shy, slow-moving, nocturnal mammal. It is about 84–122 centimetres (33–48 in) long from head to tail, the tail usually being 33–47 cm long, and weighs 10–16 kg. Females are generally smaller than the males and have one pair of mammae. The pangolin possesses a cone-shaped head with small, dark eyes, and a long muzzle with a nose pad similar in color, or darker than, its pinkish-brown skin. It has powerful limbs, tipped with sharp, clawed digits. It is an almost exclusive insectivore and principally subsists on ants and termites, which it catches with a specially adapted long, sticky tongue.The pangolin has no teeth, but has strong stomach muscles to aid in digestion. The most noticeable characteristic of the pangolin is its massive, scaled armour, which covers its upper face and its whole body with the exception of the belly and the inside of the legs. These protective scales are rigid and made of keratin. It has 160–200 scales in total, about 40–46% of which are located on the tail. Scales can be 6.5–7 cm long, 8.5 cm wide, and weigh 7–10 grams. The skin and scales make up about one-fourth to one-third of the total body mass of this species.

 

The Indian pangolin has been recorded from various forest types, including Sri Lankan rainforest and plains to middle hill levels. The animal can be found in grasslands and secondary forests, and is well adapted to desert regions as it is believed to have a tolerance to dry areas, but prefers more barren, hilly regions. This pangolin species may also sometimes reach high elevations, and has been sighted in Sri Lanka at 1100 meters and in the Nilgiri mountains in India at 2300 meters. It prefers soft and semi-sandy soil conditions suitable for digging burrows.

 

Pangolin burrows fall into one of two categories: feeding and living burrows. Feeding burrows are smaller than living burrows (though their sizes vary depending on the abundance of prey) and are created more frequently during the spring, when there is a greater availability of prey. Living burrows are wider, deeper, and more circular, and are occupied for a longer time than feeding burrows, as they are mainly used to sleep and rest during the day. After a few months, the pangolin abandons the burrow and digs a new one close to a food source. However, it is not uncommon for the pangolin to shift back to an old burrow.

 

Unlike its African counterpart, the Indian pangolin does not climb trees, but it does value the presence of trees, herbs, and shrubs in its habitat because it is easier to dig burrows around them. Features that promote an abundance of ants and termites (grasses, bare grounds, bases of trees, shrubs, roots, leaf litter, fallen logs and elephant feces) are often present in pangolin habitats.

 

Few details are known about the breeding behaviour of the Indian pangolin. During the animal's mating period, females and males may share the same burrow and show some diurnal activities. Males have testes in a fold of the skin located in their groin areas. The female's embryo develops in one of the uterine horns. The gestation period lasts 65–70 days; the placenta is diffuse and not deciduate. Usually, a single young is born, but twins have been reported in this species. The young weigh 235–400 g at birth and measure roughly 30 cm. The newborn animals have open eyes, and soft scales with protruding hairs between them. The mother pangolin carries her young on her tail. When the mother and young are disturbed, the young pangolin is held against its mother's belly and protected by the mother's tail.

 

After reading numerous bits of advice about water drop photography, I decided to try my hand at it. Over one hundred photos later, I found that I had captured this floral water drop as it headed for a splash landing. Although I've tried to replicate this exact experience, it will have to remain in my heart and mind. I suppose that is what is beautiful about life. Every event is rather special in its own way. It's interesting how photography can turn one into a philosopher.

Crazy Tuesday : Geometry

I have vintage kitchen items in a a collection. Found this one at a tag sale. Not in use but looks cool on the wall :-)

 

HCT 😎

Found its favourite tree 😊

Found abstract with texture

Bumble Bee getting Lucky.

Last light found them plowing out of Mobridge as they worked on into the night across the western Dakota landscape. We had a great day but now had to face the reality of a 500-mile drive back to Stevens Point.

We found this big fella/gal, and five of his/her friends taking advantage of the first rays of sun in three days. The Nature Conservancy Cheyenne Bottoms Preserve, Kansas.

La Ceja, Colombia; 2.300 meters above sea level.

 

Black-capped Tanagers (Tangara heinei) are vividly-colored tropical birds that occur from Venezuela to Ecuador. This species is primarily found in montane forest edges, at forest clearings (natural as well as man-made), and in tall second-growth forest. Black-capped Tanagers often occur in pairs and sometimes in mixed-species flocks, foraging in bushes and trees for insects and fruit.

 

It is one of the few species in the genus that shows obvious sexual dichromatism, with males primarily gray-blue in color with a distinctive black cap, and females yellow-green without a black cap.

 

neotropical.birds.cornell.edu/portal/species/overview?p_p...

I found this morning glory last week at the Chattahoochee Nature Center. Here's some information about the flower.

 

I'm using executive privilege in inviting this into the Abstract Flower(p)art pool.

 

Blogged by Creativity+ at >a href="http://ifi12.blogspot.com/">ifi12 (note the pun).

 

© All rights reserved. No usage allowed in any form without the written consent of Mim Eisenberg.

   

I consider street photo one of the most difficult styles of photography as your subject is constantly changing. You are not capturing a bridge or a river or a colorful fall forest. You are capturing moments from the city, an urban scenery, you are capturing expressions of random people while they are not posing for you, people doing their every day thing. So quite often I am trying to focus on something static on the street, something that caught my eye and then wait until the "right people" get into my frame. I think I got lucky on this one, as it felt like these 2 guys were just leaving the area after not finding what they were looking for (404 error, web administrators may get the joke). Picture taken at Little Five points, in Atlanta, GA.

 

Shurik'n - Samouraï

www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMBTDuvl6dQ

 

Κατα τη γνωμη μου η φωτογραφια δρομου ειναι ισως το πιο δυσκολο ειδος φωτογραφίας καθως το θεμα σου αλλαζει συνεχως. Δεν φωτογραφιζεις μια γεφυρα, ενα ποταμι η ενα πολυχρωμο δασος το φθινοπωρο. Στη φωτογραφια δρομου το θεμα ειναι οι στιγμες σε μια πολη, ενα αστικο σκηνικο, οι εκφρασεις τυχαιων ανθρωπων που ομως δεν ποζαρουν για σενα, τυχαιοι ανθρωποι που κανουν καποιες κινησεις ρουτινας. Ετσι συχνα προσπαθω να εστιασω σε κατι στατικο, σε κατι που τραβηξε την προσοχη μου και επειτα να περιμενω μεχρι οι "σωστοι ανθρωποι" να μπουν στο καδρο μου. Νομιζω σταθηκα αρκετα τυχερος εδω αφου οι 2 αυτοι τυποι εμοιαζαν να απομακρυνονται απο την περιοχη αφου δεν βρηκαν αυτο που εψαχναν (σφαλμα 404, οι web admins μαλλον θα πιασουν το αστειο). Η φωτογραφια τραβηχτηκε στην περιοχη Little Five points στην Atlanta της πολιτειας της Georgia.

I can hardly believe that I really found the one of our wild orchids that is the most spectacular one to me. It's a bee orchid (Ophrys apifera), so named because its flowers imitate the appearance of bees or bumblebees. It's quite rare north of the Alps and I'm absolutely in love!

Have a wonderful weekend everybody :-)

Ocean Of Light — David Wahler

 

youtu.be/LtlQJWJbREw?si=ku_kuHO63_P2bJ2c

  

“Doing as others told me, I was Blind.

Coming when others called me, I was Lost.

Then I left everyone, myself as well.

Then I found Everyone, Myself as well.”

 

— Rumi

Found this guy in Chatt.,Tn.several years ago. First time I had seen the bagpipes played in person.As of today, last time I have seen them played in person too.

A female (cow) Shiras Moose stands tall and elegant in autumn grasses and willows. We found her in the Bighorn National Forest, Wyoming.

Wolin National Park, Poland

This image was captured for the Macro Mondays theme: "lost/found".

 

Unable to find a subject suitable for this week's theme, I had all but given it up as a lost cause.

 

Then I found a spear thistle. Then I found my inspiration! :-)

 

Captured as it was, on location.

Windy Cross, Dartmoor on a misty day.

Silvereye (Zosterops lateralis)

 

One more from the visit of the Silvereyes during the week.

This squirrel in my yard 3-5 days after leaving its tree cavity may now be my current "yard squirrel." It found my squirrel feeder immediately. All of my yard squirrels over the years proved to be females.

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