View allAll Photos Tagged Mouse
Out on Tuesday with Pauls Pix 53 and ianbartlett for a wander around Rye.
I thought this a cute addition to someone's railings.
Wood Mouse - Garden. Another image of our little furry friends around the waterfall feature in the garden.
Mouse’s Tank is named for a Southern Paiute Indian renegade (“Little Mouse”) who used Valley of Fire as a hideout in the 1890’s after he was accused of killing two prospectors and other crimes in the area.
Taken in the Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada.
Valley of Fire State Park is the oldest state park in Nevada, USA and was designated as a National Natural Landmark in 1968. It covers an area of almost 42,000 acres (17,000 ha) and was dedicated in 1935. It derives its name from red sandstone formations, formed from great shifting sand dunes during the age of dinosaurs. These features, which are the centerpiece of the park's attractions, often appear to be on fire when reflecting the sun's rays. -Wikipedia
The park is a popular location to shoot automobile commercials and many feature films and TV shows were shot here including all the outside Mars scenes from “Total Recall” (starring Arnold Schwarzenegger) and “Star Trek Generations.”- Wikipedia
Located approximately one hour’s drive northeast of Las Vegas it is worth the visit whenever you are in the area. We explored it first in 2009 and once again in the fall of 2012. These first photos come from the earlier visit and were some of my first digital work shot on my then new (used) Nikon D40.
Jeff was on the back deck about to come in the house when he hollered for me to look outside. This tiny baby mouse was right at the back door. We have no clue how he got there. He's so young he can't open his eyes yet. Jeff asked what we should do with it so I told him to take it across the street into the field. We couldn't get him out of our heads so Jeff went back to get him. We figure maybe his mom will come back to the deck looking for him. We fed him skim milk from a syringe and some sort of biscuit mix Jeff found in the cupboard. He drank the milk and ate the mix so that was good because he kept opening his mouth looking for food. We made him a little bed in a cup with some of the mix soaked in milk. I doubt he'll survive the night. :(
Update: We think the mom came and got him last night.
UPDATE #2: OMG. I was just outside on the back deck and saw a little chunk of fur. It was a mouse head. Likely this poor little guy's. :(
After finishing her skirt, Mrs. Mouse enjoyed a glass of wine and a quiet moment.
Her peace did not last long though because her baby was calling.
New mouse in my 1:12 scale dollhouse.
This is a tiny mouse that I made for my sister in law. I vowed I would never make something so small again, but she saw my little white mouse and requested one to go with her lilac kitty cat I made for her birthday a few years ago. It was as fiddly as the first one LOL.
I will be away for a few days visiting my brother and his wife and I am not sure whether I will be able to spend time on the internet, so I will be in touch when I can.
Another old photo I was recently reminded of. A mouse went down a crack in the ground, turned round and then squeezed out. It was amazing to see. I thought it would get stuck.
A friendly house mouse who lives under my friend David's garden shed.
This fella pops out every now and again to say hello!
www.flickr.com/photos/stuart166axe/tags/mouse/
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_mouse
My creatures album flic.kr/s/aHsjuGcmT6
Photograph taken by and copyright of my regular photostream contributor David and is posted here with very kind permission.
This white mouse has to climb over this cable. When it falls she gets eaten by my amazing big snake
If you press "L" she's gonna' make it. Peacy.
Wood Mouse (Apodemus sylvaticus).
aka Field Mouse or Long tailed Field Mouse.
We shared a marmalade sandwich then went our separate ways.
I found this baby mouse traumatised on my drive yesterday. I have no idea what had happened to her as she had no marks at all on her body. I put her in a box with some food and water and after a few hours she recovered her composure and started tucking in. I released her but she hung around just long enough for me to get a couple of shots before disappearing from site.
Wood Mouse at Eye-Level
Had to lie down to get low enough for this shot as the mouse foraged close-by.He didn,t seem at all bothered by a large lens pointing at him though and remained feeding for several minutes before eventually running off into the hedge!
Taken in Devon.
Thank you to everyone for taking the time to view and fave/comment on my images.Its much appreciated.
Harvest Mouse - Micromys minutus
The tiny harvest mouse lives in long tussocky grassland, reedbeds, hedgerows, farmland and around woodland edges. It is mainly vegetarian, eating seeds and fruits, but will also eat invertebrates. Harvest mice build a spherical nest of tightly woven grass, high-up in the tall grasses, in which the female will give birth to around six young.
The harvest mouse is the only British mammal to have a prehensile tail: it can use it like a fifth limb, holding on to grass stems with it.
Here's another shot of Mouse Creek Falls as it inters Big Creek in the GSMNP in Haywood County, NC. Hope you have a great Friday!
This tiny island is found in Corfu and is called pontikonisi or "Mouse Island"
It's got that name because it's a tiny island :)
I like the little boat with the people in it as well, so one sees how tiny the island actually is.
35L on 5d
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'Mickey Mouse is a cartoon character and the mascot of The Walt Disney Company. He was created by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks at the Walt Disney Studios in 1928. An anthropomorphic mouse who typically wears red shorts, large yellow shoes, and white gloves, Mickey is one of the world's most recognizable characters.'
This is a fully grown Harvest Mouse (Micromys minutus), Europe's smallest rodent. I typed Harvest Mouse into Flickr and there are thousands of images but I did not see one that looked like it was of a genuinely wild individual. So I have broken the habit of a lifetime and followed suit (all of my other photographs are of wild animals in the wild - I think). A good friend had some captive bred individuals and he was kind enough to let me photograph them.
The dark side of the moon was found to be sparsely inhabited by huge, three-eyed, tusked creatures classified as Moon-Indigenous Cheese Eaters (MICE). Once domesticated by the early colonists, these turned out to be excellent cheese prospectors. Shown here is a Mouse Rider searching for new cheese seams.
For more photos, see the full set.
The starting point for this design was this lovely mouse MOC by [https://www.flickr.com/photos/vir-a-cocha/].