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Straw bales in the fields off Combs Lane...

Recent late winter snow on Combs Lane...

abstract "black and white" architecture pattern

 

Small pocket comb backlit by a lamp

Irediparra gallinacea

 

This very young Jacana was the bravest of a brood that we passed on the Yellow River...

The parent tried it's best to corral the youngsters around it, but this one was easily the bravest and most inquisitive.

"Macro Mondays" "Halfway Point"

There was a steepness in the darkness

I wanted to cut it like a comet crash

Hit the city, where you had echoed from a flash

Made it all seem not so bad

 

'Cause we were parallel lines running through the whole sky

And even in the low light, we were aligned

'Cause we were parallel lines, separate the whole time

But even in the divide, you and I

 

Don't dare repeat this

But when I lay alone that night

I let the city see me cry

And in my weakness

I wish you hadn't closed your eyes

Crossed the city, open mine

 

'Cause we were parallel lines, running through the whole sky

And even in the low light, we were aligned

'Cause we were parallel lines, separate the whole time

But even in the divide, you and I

 

I watched you comb your hands through the light

Every detail spilled from your outline

All at once you filled my eyes

And I could see it all for the first time

 

'Cause we were parallel lines running through the whole sky

(The whole sky)

And even in the low light, we were aligned

(We were aligned)

'Cause we were parallel lines, separate the whole time

(Whole time)

And even in the divide, you and I

 

Attlass

Strange cloud formations ahead of a frontal change

What do you mean today is National Static Electricity Day?

Lucknow , Uttar Pradesh , India

Southern Crested Caracara

Scientific name: Caracara plancus (Miller, 1777)

Portuguese: Carcará, caracará, carancho, caracaraí (Ilha do Marajó),gavião-de-queimada e gavião-calçudo

 

This big, long-legged hawk is easily identified in flight by its large head and white patches at the ends of its rounded wings.

 

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Isomira murina

7 mm

 

Early morning stack of this beetle duo on flowering cock's-foot, Dactylis glomerata.

 

Stacked from 38 natural light exposures in Zerene Stacker.

 

Sony NEX-7, Canon MP-E65 1/13s, f/8, ISO100

Sarkidiornis sylvicola

 

www.texastargetbirds.com

 

_MG_0348-web

Theridiidae Checklist: Comb-Footed Spiders

 

Comb-footed spiders from the family Theridiidae Sundevall, 1833 are small spiders, but it is one of the largest family of spiders living in tree canopies. The “comb”, or serrated bristles on tarsi IV gives the spiders in this family its common name. While some theridiids construct three-dimensional webs or cob webs, several genera do not build webs at all.

 

View checklist here

A lovely iris comb beside a lovely maple leaf comb. I originally left the maple behind in the store, thinking I had spent enough money and didn't need another comb. Then I dreamed about the maple comb that night (yeah, I dream about kanzashi...) and decided to go look for it the next morning. It was right where I left it, so I bought it.

"At night, when the sky is full of stars and the sea is still you get the wonderful sensation that you are floating in space."— Natalie Wood, Actress

  

www.centralcoastbiodiversity.org/lobed-comb-jelly-bull-bo...

Tackling the crux of Comb Gully (IV, 4), Ben Nevis

Comb footed spider ?

her eggs are within the ball and she cares for them like any mother

S160 No.5197 disguised as 'Pere Marquette 1225' is seen passing Combes Brook with Churnet Valley Railway (1992) PLC's The Polar Express™.

 

Note; 5197 was turned to face south towards Froghall for the Polar Express event.

 

Taken on the 15th Dec 2022.

(for #MacroMondays - theme : #Imperfection)

Kakadu National Park, Yellow Water

Local trees on Combs Lane....

Last throes of autumn for a few of trees on Combs Lane...very inconsistent this year...

Comb duck, Sarkidiornis melanotos, male

Late in the day, the light picks up the fissures, folds and textures of Comb Ridge. Cairns in the foreground lead to the left, pointing the way to the Procession Panel, a large series of pictographs portraying a hunting scene. Comb Ridge is now protected as part of the Bear's Ears National Monument.

 

This slick rock is as inviting as it looks--with a little ingenuity and persistence, you can go nearly anywhere. Comb Ridge runs north/south for almost 80 miles.

Sunlight on the fields alongside Combs Lane

3 miles offshore, 4000 feet deep, just hanging out.

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