View allAll Photos Tagged Level
A mini spirit level built into a metal set square.
Might be a sign of the times but I used a face mask as a light diffuser on this shot!
HMM!
Credits & Details here.
More photos of the details, makeup and decoration on the blog, facebook and instagram ♥
Thank you ♥
Musée du Louvre, Paris
Camera: Sony A7III
Lens: Sony G 24-105mm f/4
24mm f/6.3 1/160 iso 1250
© Copyrighted photo. All rights reserved.
Mesh Head - LeLUTKA - Fleur Head
Hair - DOUX - Lucy Hairstyle [BASIC PACK] + [DELUXE HUD] ★Level★
Shorts - MILOTA - Nissa shorts [Fat Pack]
Top - MILOTA - Lali Top [Fat Pack]
Drink - Hive - Pink Drink On The Go . Unicorn ★Kustom9★
Earrings - E.marie - Zadie Earrings - Golds
A happy couple at the summit of the rock at Haytor. They were brave to stand upright as it there was quite a blustery wind up there, however they didn't stay long, just enough to enjoy the panoramic views of Dartmoor before descending back to terra firma.
La Ceja, Colombia; 2.300 meters above sea level.
♂ Diglossa albilatera
(White-sided Flowerpiercer / Pincha flor)
12 cm (4.7 in). The male White-sided Flowerpiercer is all black with white tufts on the sides. The female is a uniformly rich brown with white tufts on the sides.
The White-sided Flowerpiercer (Diglossa albilatera) is a species of bird in the Thraupidae family. The hooked, upturned bill is used to puncture the bases of flowers for the purpose of feeding on nectar. It is found in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist montane forests and heavily degraded former forest at altitudes between at least 1800 and 2800 m.
Source: Wikipedia
Currently there are all together three adults and fourteen juvenile Canada Geese, possibly another example of a "gang brood", born and living here in the wild on Bluebird Estates, Alberta, Canada
Of course, within a month or so they will have grown their flight feathers and will then fly away for another year when the birth and maturation cycle will once again take place.
【 HI GUYS! I am SO excited to be part of this Halloween round of LEVEL! I've worked on a special collab with 2 of my best friends and BOY IM SO HAPPY with how everything came out ;__; im too proud to say that these dummies are some of my fav people in the world uwu ♥♥ 】
♠PRODUCT INFO♠
+comes with tiara and the head wings
+mod & resizable
+texture HUD included (which you can test inworld)
【 ♠ 】
The main waterfall at Dividend Pond (Rocky Hill, Connecticut) is a great place to practice.
I was able to move in the stream relatively easily (though still cautiously) side-to-side and forward-backward. It was one of the few times I've been able to tinker with composition quite a bit as large natural waterfall areas are typically pretty restrictive or dangerous for in-person photography.
♪ Flightless bird, American mouth - Iron & Wine ♪
Looks better pressing L
Thanks for your visit and comments.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.
All rights reserved © GoldenCrotalo.
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.
Although the ascent to Markovište and the Catholic chapel is easy, because the path is arranged and there are stations of the "Way of the Cross" on it, the second part of the ascent to the top itself is very tricky. There is no path, and the way to the top consists of a climb over sharp limestone rocks overgrown with young shoots of hornbeam and ash trees. You should be careful on this climb, because even a small mistake can result in fatal consequences. The highest peak of Klobuk hill is only 478m above sea level.