View allAll Photos Tagged Lizard
The crazy flowers of the mid Kent lizards are unfurling their petals.
Bad havfever day so I couldn't smell the infamous goat perfume, but just enjoyed the chaotic flower shapes.
Dont think they are perhaps as tall as previous years, but there are c50
according to research; the red markings mean she is a lady lizard who is seeking her lizard love (breeding season)
This Uta stansburiana, or Side-blotched Lizard, is a new species for me. I came across it along the Dry Canyon Trail in Redmond, Oregon on April 11, 2008.
Heres the Australian lizard, more commonly known as the Bluetougue lizard. Seen commonly in suburbia, this one was found in my garden, and then decided to go wandering around the outside of our house and into the next door neighbours house...
Q for the librarians: do your patrons give you items as "tips" very often? This is the 2nd CD a library user has given me because I was "so helpful." Is it just Missoula, or is it fairly common?
I think I find it odd because it's usually homemade or locally produced CDs. This one is apparently poetry with sound effects, and according to the gifter it has no profanity, no sex, nothing anyone could object to, "unless they object to love." We're evaluating it for inclusion in the library collection. :-)
Lots of lizards & at least two skinks this year! Roadrunners not seen recently - probably have lots to eat in the neighborhood.
Taken at Ocean Hammock Park, 9/1/18 11:45 am. I tried to photograph many anoles/lizards during my walk to the beach, but this one caught my eye as it was the only black lizard I saw. It was perched on the tree bark, and the only way to photograph it was through the leaves or from directly below it. I attempted both methods in hopes of taking the best image, and this was it. The leaves frame the lizard while keeping it the focus of the image.