View allAll Photos Tagged attack
i wish i could've added more but i reached my limit for the month :( more tomorrow! check back later! :)
i love how his mic matched his shirt, they played a great set.
rubbish photos as security were putting their hands in front of the lens or threatening to eject if took pics
Even though this pic is blurry, I'm posting it because it cracks me up. It's all, wah-taaah! Come closer and I kick your ass to hell, bitch!
Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 323 (VMFA-323) is a United States Marine Corps F/A-18 Hornet squadron. The squadron is based at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, California and falls under the command of Marine Aircraft Group 11 (MAG-11) and the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing (3rd MAW) but deploys with Carrier Air Wing 9.
Parasitic Jaeger attacking a California Gull
Pacific Ocean off of San Diego
Jaegers attack gulls and steal their food. This one really pounded on this gull - downing him him and then biting him in the water. Unfortunately, my autofocus couldn't keep up and most of the photos were very blurry. This is the best of the series.
Attack of the killer duck. I was honestly fearful for my life.
- Camera phone upload powered by ShoZu
During our walk along the coastline, we unintentionally came close to a nesting pair of plovers. They were very threatening and wouldn't let us pass, so we walked a bit further away via the rocks by the sea so that they weren't so upset.
The Spur-winged plover (Vanellus miles) is so named because it has a sharp, yellow, black-tipped spur on each wing. It is also known as the Masked lapwing and Masked plover. It is a long-legged wading bird with a black head, white belly and yellow facial wattles. Plovers are found Australia-wide. The Spur-winged plover is found mainly in South and Eastern Australia.
Spur-winged plovers are ground-nesting birds, and they usually have two chicks. These birds used to migrate from Australia to Siberia, where they could nest in peace without any predators around. However, they now breed in Australia, and have to constantly defend their chicks against intruders.
Often they threaten intruders by extending their wings and making a loud screeching cry, and they also try to draw potential predators away from the nest by feigning injury.