View allAll Photos Tagged beardeddragon
This little millipede decided that it could tame the dragon and hitch a ride, except the dragon wasn't going anywhere.
(っ◔◡◔)っ ♥ STORM BREWING OUT BACK OF THARGOMINDAH ♥
Here we have a magnificent male Inland Bearded Dragon (Pogona vitticeps) in a threat display during unstable weather. I spotted him on a vast, undulating gibber plain. He was seen in an alert and upright stance along an ephemeral drainage line in the far south-western corner of Queensland. I was happy to see that there were so many beardeds active in that region on that day, and many were displaying to conspecifics as we drove past. This one is typical of specimens from that area in that they grow to a large size, are built like a brick shithouse, and have beautiful, conspicuous yellow barring throughout the dorsum, legs, arms and tail. This one bit Kelly hard, drawing claret on both occasions. Then I lost my lens to him when he bit it so hard, scratching the element monumentally and rendering it out of action. Man, what a lizard.
“Out of the dragon’s claws and into the fire, there’s a moment in every man’s life when he must decide what is wrong and what is right.”
— Bryan Adams
This quote seemed kind of appropriate for the times we are facing
This is a photo of our pet bearded dragons claw.
Our Bearded Dragon went on vacation without us but at least he is sending us some great vacation photos. Most people have no idea just how considerate and thoughtful Bearded Dragons are.
Canon 7D MII, Canon 100-400L II. Aperture 5.6, shutter speed 1/500, ISO 640
This Australian Bearded Dragon flattened itself in the middle of the footpath, soaking up as much of the morning sun as it could.
It always makes me happy spotting these mini-Dinosaurs. They look so ancient :D
The new Bearded Dragon which has just been added to the Reptiles at Captivelight Photography. A brilliant days photography with Lillian under the expert instruction of Miles the owner of Captivelight Photography.
The Bearded Dragon originated from Australia. It grows to between 30 to 50cm long. They can live for up to 12 years. Diet consists of live locusts, meal worms and various fruit and vegetables.
Thanks for visiting.
Take care out there.....
Locust on a bearded dragons head. Taken during a macro shoot in March. (No locusts where harmed during the taking of this picture!)
Characteristics include broad, triangular heads and flattened bodies with spiny scales arranged in rows and clusters. These are found on the throat, which can be expanded when threatened, and at the back of the head. These scales are used to scare off predators, yet they are not very sharp. Bearded dragons display a hand-waving gesture to show submission, and a head-bobbing display to show dominance between dragons.
This Bearded Dragon was in the middle of Tattenhoe park eating damselflies, someone has either had an escape or thrown it out? Thankfully the RSPCA have been told and are in the process of collecting it
Juvenile bearded dragon (captive/pet) just 10 cm in length. The common name 'bearded dragon' refers to the 'beard' of the lizard, the underside of the throat which turns black if they are stressed or see a potential rival.
Native to here in Australia.
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Bearded dragons at the pet store. Well my laptop has officially stopped working and until I can afford to fix it I'm unable to edit any photos. This leaves me with my iPhone as my only option for taking and editing photos, if I want to continue to upload a new photo here everyday as I've done for I think two years or so now.
A stunning male Nullarbor Bearded Dragon puts on an impressive threat display. Taken on a Canon EOS 5D DSLR coupled to a vintage Contax Carl Zeiss 60/2.8 C/Y Makro Planar T* 1:2 lens with a Leitax adapter.
Tripod, manual metering, manual focus and a multi-flash set-up utilized. Taken fully stopped-down @ f.22 & 1/80th sec.