View allAll Photos Tagged Rabbit
I take a walk every morning and I always see quite a few birds, rabbits and squirrels. They are never close enough for me to shoot with my walk around lens so this morning I snapped a telephoto on and figured today woutd be critter day. Well you would think somebody sent out a warning. I just didn't see very many birds and animals. I guess this guy didn't get the memo.
Three squirres, two chipmunks and a rabbit all at the feeder at once. Low light levels made it a tricky photo session... Oh - some birds were there too...
© All Rights Reserved
Use of my photos requires credit in the form of a link back to the original photo. Please visit my photo permissions page for full details.
In the wintertime of last year, once in a while this bunny show up in my backyard. Sometimes I threw a carrot over, not just because of his existence, it's nothing but a ground of dull white snow to me. Instinctively I thought a dot of color may give it a kick. Or... maybe I just wanna make sure he's around!
He kept coming in summer and became a nuisance to me. He still looked like a cutie pie, except that he had been chewing away my tea roses in the garden day by day. Chasing after him did not do any good to those roses. Suddenly, I learned what people told me - "Rabbits eat and copulate a LOT!" :-) All roses were dead and gone... Then, all I could do is making a truce with him. Last but not least, get a picture of him and tell you this story.
Still, once in a while, again the bunny pops up in this winter... with his family.
wild rabbits. photo taken at Fo Guang Shan Hsi Lai Temple where the rabbits are allowed to run loose on all grass lawn
Desert Jack Rabbit
This denizen of the desert is most distinguishable by its enormous ears, which serve as radar-like protection against coyotes and other desert predators.
Photo by Margaret Kurzlius, naturalist, at the Wickenburg Inn, Tennis and Guest Ranch Wildlife Preserve
This is Mum (rt) and Dad (lft) browsing on the grass at Locarno Beach. We saw 2 little ones as well but the hid in the log pile at our approach. He is obviously a wild rabbit and she is descended from domestic pet stock.
Rabbit Mountain © Steve Frye. Photo taken on the Flying Circus Birders of Boulder Walk on June 26, 2021.
While I was at the Grand Canyon last month I saw this bunny hopping about. I thought I'd be lucky to get a decent picture but then it wandered to within about ten feet of me and posed quite nicely.
The more I look at charts of rabbit genetics and their possible breeding combinations, the more it confuses me.