View allAll Photos Tagged chew
chewing a horn while Etta & Brian hunt lizards behind him.
Daily Dog Challenge: Oops
That could be what he's saying with that expression 8o
Even this rustic cutlery cannot handle concrete.
So, questions arise.
What grade of cutlery would suffice?
Would the placement etiquette still apply?
Who eats concrete??*
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A year of the shows and performers of the Bijou Planks Theater.
Vintage Pewter Dollhouse Place Settings
1:6
Doilies by Paprika
* Maybe they're having Matter Eater Lad over for dinner! No kidding, he's an easy way to clear out some rubbish. As seen in BP 2023 Day 195.
17th September 1989
Oddball freight sector 47/4 47588 heads west at Chew Moor, just west of Lostock Junction, with a WCML diversion heading towards Wigan
My last shot of my walk from Dovestone Reservoir to Chew Reservoir. Thanks for putting up with all my uploads from this walk ... Thank you very much x you can all now breath a sigh of relief ...hee hee
One exposure for the sky and one for the boat and water (high ISO to freeze the boat thus visible noise).
Special thanks to HH&SP.
The weather is beginning to get a little better now (thank god). It was quite a bright day today but rather hazy and overcast. About 5:30 though I noticed the blue sky breaking through and desperate for a sunset I made a last minute dash to Chew Valley reservoir near Bristol.
If I got here earlier I could have walked the circular to find the best spot. I wanted small rocks or pebbles in the water close to the shoreline, but as time was running out I settled for the first bit of ground I could find that was relatively close to the water.
Being here I was unsure if my car would get locked in the car park so I was a little precoccupied with that, especially when I heard a horn go. I like to relax and stay right to sundown but I kinda knew that I had to hurry or risk getting locked in.
This rugged dog toy did not last long. In pieces, it was removed over 2 days. nothing left but the grey plastic bit that you can see in it's mouth.
We found that part on our patio.
I'm not sure if it was a present, .... or a warning !!
One of the famous White Park Cattle herd at the National Trust’s Dinefwr estate at Llandeilo. They were an emblem of the power of Welsh Princes for centuries. Closely descended from Britain’s original wild white cattle, they were enclosed in parks by the nobility during the Middle Ages. By the end of the 19th century such parks had largely gone out of fashion and the breed struggled to survive. The White Park are distinguished in looks - large white animals with black points on their muzzle, ears, eye-rims and feet with wide-spreading horns, usually black-tipped. The breed, with only 750 breeding females now left in the world, is rarer than the giant panda.
ODC-Signs Of Life
My guess is the worm/larvae of the Cabbage White Butterfly has chewed up the leaves on our Broccoli plants. They do love the taste of cruciferous! I had an encounter with them in New Mexico where they ate my Nasturtiums down to the stem, I never grew them again.
Male Yellow-tailed Black-Cockatoo (Zanda funerea), probably looking for insect larvae, although they sometimes chew to sharpen their beaks.
Higher than necessary shutter speed and ISO because I had been trying to capture his comrades in flight and forgot to switch back when I saw this fellow at work.
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although this Bighorn Ewe seems to be smiling, she is really just chewing her cud in the shade at Hemenway Park, Boulder City, Nevada. She is part of a herd of about 50 sheep that were present that morning.
When cattle are laying down like this they are usually chewing their cud. They eat grass and to make is usable they rechew it several times.
If you want more information, do a google search for "Chewing Cud"