View allAll Photos Tagged cuddle
Kudzu (left) loves her friend Lily very much, and often nuzzles Lily with her head. They are among seven Nigerian dwarf goat living at Belmont Audubon Habitat. There are camp kids just to the right of Lily, out of the frame.
Pose: Jess Poses - Couple Bento #30 (Coming April 15 to the Virtual Design Event)
Model: My dearest Cykes Silver. He's one of those people I can just instantly connect with and I was so thrilled he was available to shoot with me. Cuddle Piles with Cykes are the best, even when he falls asleep on me.
Pants: These are a group gift by Blueberry and available at the Main Store.
A word about the pose ... when my model and I sat on our pose balls, we assumed the pose and it alligned well and we both felt it was adorable. However, the balls themselves did not disappear. I was able to right click > Edit, then increase the transparency to 100% to make them go away. Just a note to the creator that she will want to fix that in future efforts.
Credits: p.o.s.e
Woodland Event june 5 th
p.o.s.e - Cuddles TD - LB
p.o.s.e - First steps - LB
p.o.s.e - Happy - LB
Head: Akeruka kids #1
Body: TodleeDoo
Hair: Barberyumyum S15
Details:
Not exactly kittens. These two are our 15 year old Oriental Shorthair cats: Tia and Bootstrap Bill. They are siblings and snuggle like this quite often.
I had so much fun watching these two little cuties snuggling during their naptime! These Canada goose goslings were taken near a small pond in Connecticut!
Model: Nisha & Stu
Location: Sunny's Studio
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Sunny%20Side%20Up/212/43/1201
Pose: Mademoiselle Couple
Nisha
Body: Maitreya
Head: Lelutka
Hair: Truth Natalie
Pants: Cynful
Shirt: Coco
Stu
Body: Signature Gianni
Head: GA.EG Rick
Beard: Magnificent Faded
Hair: Stealthic Reach
Pants: Lapointe & Bastchild
Black-Necked Stilt (Himantopus mexicanus) ~ Sarasota, Florida
Black-necked stilts courting is a wonderful sight. There is a dance involving splashing water on each side of the female, followed by 'the deed' and then a moment where the two almost embrace.
Thanks for visiting!
Sitting on the ground is perhaps 'living dangerously' with a big dog who would like to get 'close' :)
As the humans watch tv, color in or garden someone else thinks it's time for a cuddle. A teddy, quilt and comfy cushion, it's meant to be. A quick nap before dinner, no one will notice me here!
Farm rescue cats.
They really do love each other,unlike the other 2 Brucie and Bertie,Bertie is always chasing her little sister Bruce! Fuzzy is the only tom and is just starting to come out of his shell.
There was a time I and Ryhios spend lots of the time at Sunny Photo Studio.
Now again there. love the place and can say heaven for the people of second life
Taxi: bit.ly/3sbAawN
Pose: Cuddle Season
Looking through some old photos, and I came across this photo of Cuddles, having a rest after playing with his ball. I think this photo was taken about 2004/5
Greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus), male
These famous pink birds can be found in warm, watery regions on many continents, from West Africa eastward throughout the Mediterranean to South West and South Asia, and throughout sub-Saharan Africa.. They favor environments like estuaries and saline or alkaline lakes. Considering their appearance, flamingos are surprisingly fluid swimmers, but really thrive on the extensive mud flats where they breed and feed.
Greater flamingos are likely to be the only tall, pink bird in any given locale. They also have long, lean, curved necks and black-tipped bills with a distinctive downward bend.
Their bent bills allow them to feed on small organisms—plankton, tiny fish, fly larvae, and the like. In muddy flats or shallow water, they use their long legs and webbed feet to stir up the bottom. They then bury their bills, or even their entire heads, and suck up both mud and water to access the tasty morsels within. A flamingo's beak has a filter-like structure to remove food from the water before the liquid is expelled.
Shrimp-like crustaceans are responsible for the flamingo's pink color. The birds pale in captivity unless their diet is supplemented.
Greater flamingos live and feed in groups called flocks or colonies. They find safety in numbers, which helps to protect individual birds from predators while their heads are down in the mud. Greater flamingos also breed while gathered in groups. Once mating is complete, a pair takes turns incubating their single egg. Young flamingos are born gray and white and do not turn pink for two years. In years when wetlands and pools are dry and food scarce, flamingos may not breed.
The colony works together to protect each other from predators and to take care of the young. It is believed that flamingos are monogamous, according to Sea World. Once they mate, they tend to stay with that mate. A group of flamingos will all mate at the same time so that all of the chicks will hatch at the same time.
For more information, please visit www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/birds/g/greater-flamingo/