View allAll Photos Tagged Mmmm...
that felt good, let the smoke drift out of her mouth, it has done its job well and while she might like to hold on to it longer, it must be exhaled. will need to go back for more any second now...
Today is 'the for happy" 40 days old ,we took them for an outing,they love grass and flowers very much!!
Going crazy in my mind. Thinking OMG to it, when wearing clothes from #187# at the the Color Me Event Purple. Tops and shoes. Feeling me, in the purple way and all els, that is me.
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This is what Miss Daisy forgot at the grocery store the day before. Sorry honey....but it just ain't food for the soul without it. So she just had to turn her sexy butt around and sashay back....for the fatback! 💋
I'm recycling some old MOCs, and discovered this - yay ABS dust!
This is what you get when you run things non stop over conventions.
I am so grateful for the sweet things in life, like dark chocolate. Particularly when it comes in little bite-sized pieces like these new dark chocolate M & M's. Mmmm. Happy Saturday, friends!
Project Gratitude: 5/30
but Mum told me I musn't eat in the bath!
The handsome fellow made it into Explore - Jul 25, 2009 #193 - Thank you ;0)
Very rarely, the Bengal Tiger produces white specimens. The earliest recordings of sightings of white tigers date from the mid 16th century, but only a dozen sightings have been noted in the last 100 years. The last wild white tiger was sighted in 1951! White tigers are neither a separate sub species nor albino, but instead have reduced pigmentation. White tigers are produced when two carriers of the recessive gene, who may not necessarily be white themselves, breed. This condition is known as leucism.
All tigers are now strictly protected and are the most endangered of all the big cats; having no predators except for man. Population numbers have decreased dramatically due to habitat destruction and large scale poaching. Tigers are an umbrella species, meaning that in order to save tigers from extinction we must commit to save their habitat. There are now more tigers in captivity than there are in the wild and a recent census of the Bengal Tiger, undertaken by the Wildlife Institute for India, has estimated that there are only 1,300-1,500 left in India; that is less than half the population previously estimated in the 2001-2002 census.
Nikon D7100 + 70-200mm f2.8G VR II
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