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In the TWU Butterfly Garden, thriving at temperature of above 100F

 

'The widely adaptable dwarf Mexican petunia (Ruellia brittoniana) has been named a Texas Superstar® by Texas A&M University.' texassuperstar.com/plants/ruellia/ruellia.html

Runepriest.

My sigfig for GoH

I was judging a recent photo comp in Maumere, Flores.

 

A Dwarf caiman (Paleosuchus trigonatus) next to a jungle swamp in Iwokrama, Guyana.

More first bloomers for us. They keep comin!

 

April 23, 2019

Columbia, Missouri

Southern Philippine Dwarf Kingfisher ( Endemic to Philippines )

 

Mapawa Nature Park, Cagayan de Oro, Mindanao, Philippines

This image shows a dwarf galaxy in the southern constellation of Phoenix named, for obvious reasons, the Phoenix Dwarf.

 

More information: www.eso.org/public/images/potw1838a/

 

Credit:

ESO

First bloomers for us today.

 

April 23, 2019

Columbia, Missouri

Strobist info:

SB-700 boomed over the tank with a magic arm and aimmed downward into the tank,camera center. Set at 1/2th power. Triggered with PWIII.

Burrow Farmer:

 

Although dwarves are renowned throughout the lands of Warscape for their mining and crafting abilities, there are several niche businesses that select few dwarves partake in. One of these niche markets is the farming of the rare Burrow.

 

A Burrow is a mole like creature that lives in the mountain halls that the dwarves call home. They are unique for one reason: they are able to chew tunnels through solid stone. They gnaw away at stone and dirt alike, creating tunnels that run through the dwarven kingdoms. Seen as a sort of pest by most dwarves, they would be stomped on like rats if they didn't have a particular use that is their place as a dinner delicacy. Many rich nobles and lords in the Warscape lands love the taste Burrows and will pay top dollar to have the tiny critters included on their dinner platters.

 

Burrow farmers shepherd the Burrows with the help of their loyal herding dogs and exercise the Burrows daily, forming the meat for peak deliciousness. The farmer ranges the mountainsides, often chewing on the rough stalk grasses that he passes through as he eyes his tasty, and expensive, livestock.

Głazy Krasnoludków (Dwarfs' Rocks) Reserve, Poland

Dwarf Hunting Team:

 

The dwarves of the cavernous mountain holds love their food. They seek out any excuse to hold a feast and celebrate almost anything good that happens. The beer tankards run constantly while the noble dwarves and commoners alike sit down to exotic meats and dwarven specialties. These rare foods are brought in from the outside world by the dwarf hunting teams, skilled hunters that etch out a life on the bleak and harsh lands of Warscape.

 

The dwarven hunting teams will trek out in small groups, for it is always nearly perilous to adventure on the mountainsides alone. They bring with them blackpowder guns, able to fell prey at a hundred paces, and other weapons like skinning knives and crude hammers for protection. They pile their hunting trophies on top of their rare Mountain Rams, one of the few beasts of Warscape able to pass the treacherous mountainsides. They are a stubborn and stalwart group, able to push through harsh weather and calamities to seek their prey.

 

This particular hunting team has invested in a team of owls cared for by a young beardling, able to kill smaller specialty prey that many dwarven lords like to feast on, and will pay good coin for. A veteran hunter brandishes his crude war hammer as he scans the mountainside for goblin raiding parties while a greybeard leads the mountain ram on and another hunter takes a swig of 'Dwarf Lighting' brew.

A huge dwarf in Tokyo.

Leica S(006) Bothel Park

Zinnia x hybrida

 

Zinnia x hybrida cultivars are a cross between Zinnia elegans and Zinnia angustifolia. They have the short, compact size and profuse flowering of the former and the disease resistance of the latter. Flowers average between 2 and 3 inches in diameter.

 

Zinnia x hybrida is considered a dwarf group -- they have been bred to be much shorter and bushier than the species plants.

 

homeguides.sfgate.com/characteristics-zinnia-hybrida-9781...

This young Dwarf Mongoose came out to greet the early crowd on Saturday. His/her parents were close by keeping an eye the youngster.

From the Swallowtail Garden Seeds collection of botanical photographs and illustrations. We hope you enjoy these images as much as we do.

Railroading is a big industry - with big locomotives and big trains - but in the mountains of Northwest Montana it is dwarfed by the stunning nature that surrounds it. On a sunny July morning, an eastbound BNSF Railway train rolls along the southern boundary of Glacier National Park near Stanton Creek, Montana.

An 840 local is dwarfed by its surroundings as it heads down Winston Hill toward a stop in Townsend.

More first bloomers for us. They keep comin!

 

April 23, 2019

Columbia, Missouri

Taken at the Botanical Gardens, Singleton, Swansea

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Oriental Dwarf Kingfisher

 

press L to see Large

 

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[Explore No. 85]

Villa valmarana ai Nani.

Vicenza 2014.

 

Kodak film.

Purchase Prints | Portrait Website | Instagram | Facebook

 

Dwarfed oak trees along a ridge line of Mt. Roberts in Moultonborough. The trees here have been sculpted by the vicious winds and ice storms that constantly batter this section of the mountain.

Dwarfed by the large silo complex in the township of Cummins, Genesee and Wyomings 851 cruises through enroute from Port Lincoln to Thevenard to take up working gypsum train duties on 18-9-2018.

Heavy fruiting in a Dwarf Papaya

A selection of dwarf conifers are planted around large boulders. These low and slow growing trees have their own section in the garden. These tiny trees can also be found in the front of larger plantings too.

My goal of designing a perfect LEGO dwarf spider droid is complete (With a few exceptions)

 

First of all the 4x4 hemisphere would be the perfect element if only there was a stud on the very top for connecting a little would be antenna. (Major oversight by the designer of that part)

 

Since other part configurations simply does not look as correct, the most elegant solution is to drill a small hole directly in the center of part 86500 (Purists look away) this will allow a foil/épée sword to stick through the shell and complete the look.

 

Now for the two large optical sensors sitting directly on the spherical chassis, this was the hardest part to incorporate over to a LEGO frame. Again because I'm going for maximum movie accurracy THE best part to use is without a doubt 3614b.

Because its compatible with balljoints the eyes can sit flush to the head at a slight angle (Exactly what we want)

Unfortunately it's an old part not produced since 2003, but the part should be available albeit slighly expensive at least only two is needed to complete the model.

 

A tiny Cape Dwarf Chameleon clings on tightly to the stem of a plant in a garden in Cape Town.

DWARFS, NOT "DWARVES"

 

These are actually soft rubber bath toys, but even with their inaccurate color schemes, they're perfect in size for a 12'' Snow White doll. Sadly... they're not mine.

"Dwarf" light auxiliary drone.

Used to transport equipment and support infantry squads. Can also be used as a

sapper.

I still can not install photoshop, so I can not post more serious works.

MOC is improved version of drone that built by Hsiroulff (www.flickr.com/photos/157131608@N06/).

The CN Tower is dwarfed by the brushed metal columns outside the CBC Building on Front Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

 

Become a fan of the cool Froz’n Motion Facebook page at FACEBOOK or visit www.froznmotion.com

Live exhibit,

American Museum of Natural History, New York

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The museum's new exhibition, "Crocs: Ancient Predators

in a Modern World," includes the adorable African dwarf crocodile.

-- Gothamist

   

Another example of a 'dwarf car' on display at Ernie Adams' Dwarf Car Museum in Maricopa, Arizona.

OK, Christmas is over, I can get back to posting my desert shots. As a child, I always had an image of a desert being endless sand. Not so! The desert areas of the American west contain some of the most beautiful varied terrain you can find. I always marvel at how anything can survive out here, but the variety of tracks we found in the talcum powder like sand attests that there are plenty of living things out here.

 

I usually don't like people in my landscape shots, but I like the way my group of friends making their ways down the trail gives proportion to the rock walls. This is the White Domes trail in Valley of Fire State Park in Nevada.

This is less than an hours drive from the Vegas Strip and a big part of the reason I return to Vegas year after year. It is a shame that more of the millions of people that go to Vegas to gamble won't take a trek to see what is out here. Or...maybe not, I like it just fine without the hoards of tourists.

 

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