View allAll Photos Tagged dinker

Hi guys.....it's me Dink.....yeah the other day you people saw me gagging on a peanut....well now I'm gonna try and shove my foot down my throat....yeeeahhhh.....

 

lol....April fools everybody...I ain't gonna try that......I'm just picking my teeth...lol..lol....fooled ya...eh!!!!

I had to chase this truck for three blocks to get this shot!

Dink Pop 25 @ Petit Village Day 2 - Thanks to all the great singers ♥

 

petitevillage.blogspot.com/2025/05/here-we-go-dink-pop-25...

The night it snowed in London.

Leica M6

Zeiss 35mm f/2 Biogon T* ZM

Kentmere 400

Dev: Legacy Pro L110 1:31 for 5.5 min at 68 degrees

Oh, how I love these! A few summers ago I worked at a camp and we made shrinky dinks for arts and crafts. I'm thinking about making these into magnets and giving them out as Christmas gifts. What do you think?

In Saint Louis, Missouri.

 

Built in 1916 - William Levy architect. Clad in Terra Cotta in the 1920s. It spent most of its life as a laundry and linen supply, but has been rehabilitated to apartments and a restaurant.

Leucistic Common Dink Frog ( Diasporus diasterna)

 

On Christmas night my son and I went on another night hike to a new area we hadn't visited before on the Osa Peninsula of Costa Rica called La Tarde. I decided to use the same guide we had the night before since he said he knew the area. We got there a little later than I wanted to and everything was pretty wet but it was still warm outside. We hiked down a very steep trail to a stream. The first animal we found was another blunt-headed tree snake but I didn't get any good photos of it for some reason probably because I was in a hurry to find something new.

We didn't have a lot of time unfortunately because my guide had to meet the 10pm curfew and he thought that applied to us as well but I learned later that it did not which was kind of disappointing as we would have liked to have spent more time in this area considering it was a long drive and it was very nice habitat to explore.

 

We still managed to find around 9 species of reptiles and amphibians most of which we hadn't ever seen before so that was nice. I will post each one in Chronological order.

 

All photos were taken with the Olympus E-M1X and 12-100mm F4 lens with Olympus FL-900R flash and Godox dome diffuser. I decided this was much more versatile than mounting my 30mm or 60mm macro lenses. That came in handy too since a lot of the animals were pretty high up in trees or bushes or on the edge of steep drop-offs. It would have been even better to have mounted my 100-400 lens but I was trying to travel lighter than usual.

 

Here is a Leucistic Common Dink Frog ( Diasporus diasterna). These frogs are named after the call they make which sounds like a little dink or pink sound. They can be difficult to see in the trees and bushes because they are good at hiding on top of leaves or between leaves out of sight and they are only about 1 inch long. This specimen appears to be Leucistic meaning it is missing most colors in its skin pigmentation. Its not an albino because it still has dark eyes.

Enjoying a roll in the sand, whilst walking at the seep! No pesky hippos to deter us!

just made this baby, a flying hair alien to protect me from evil

I wasn't doing anything...

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