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Character: Grey Fox
Game: Metal Gear
Model: VEGA Cosplay (UAE)
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At 10:41 pm I had a really cool visitor to my yard. First one since last winter. I want to see one in the daytime but happy to know they are around. Nice of it to pause before leaving so the camera can focus on that dark stripe down the tail that nails the id.
Gray Fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus)
Garland, TX
My videos can also be found at kapturedbykala.com
Zorro Chilla - Zorro Gris - Zorro Patagónico - Grey Fox (Pseudalopex griseus)
Tierra del Fuego.
Febrero de 2009.
Cámara Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi.
Lente Canon EF 100-400mm f4.5-5.6L IS USM Telephoto Zoom.
IMG_9636
Went to the Grey Fox for the SumTimes Cabaret yesterday. The tables were covered in glitter. Other than that, though, it was a good time.
The keeper had just applied some scent to the stone this gray fox is writhing on.
I must like the Desert Museum. I managed to mostly fill a memory card in two hours on Wednesday May 4th.
RAW file processed with RAW Therapee/Nik Collection.
_5046925-nik
I have seen this little fox many times since last September... he/she lives in the left side woods and the racoon lives on the right side woods... sometime he appears in the middle of a bright sunny day. A neighbor had warned me about a fox, in last spring, though I moved to my place six months later in August.... his tail is almost bigger than him...large has more detail: www.flickr.com/photos/rioazul/3568439410/sizes/o/
SumTimes Cabaret at the Grey Fox. This woman was called up for Audience Participation during Justin Served's first set and she was a great audience participant.
This guy stopped to search for food in my backyard for several minutes. After feeding, he trotted off toward the woods . . . but he stopped to pose one last time. Unfortunately, I was shooting through a window with screen and I had difficulty focusing properly from so far away. I didn't like the resulting photo but loved the pose. Naturally, just like the rest of you, I had to monkey around with the image until I got something acceptable.
Gray foxes remain solitary for most of the year. They are primarily a nocturnal animal, but have occasionally been spotted during the daytime as in this photo. Though usually not very large, they can approach 20 pounds in weight.
Gray foxes prefer dens close to a water supply. The den may be located under or between large rocks, in an underground burrow, or even in hollow tree trunks or limbs (they can climb due to their retractable claws). They are the only member of the Canidae that can climb trees. Some of the physical traits unique to the gray fox (e.g., short legs and retractable claws) have lead researchers to suggest that they are one of the more primitive members of the Canidae family. They communicate by barking and growling.
The primary predators of the Gray Fox are bobcats, coyotes, golden eagles, and great-horned owls.
Gray Foxes have oval-shaped pupils and the area around the eyes has a thin black stripe from the outside corner of the eye to the side of the head. Additionally, a thick black stripe runs from the inside corner of the eye, down the muzzle to the mouth. Gray Foxes are sometimes misidentified as Red Foxes (Vulpes vulpes), however Red Foxes have slit-shaped eyes, larger feet, longer legs, and a leaner body.
8-22-13. This photo was taken on July1, 2013. The range of the Gray Fox is not supposed to include my home area. I figured this guy (gal) was a transient. Today, 8-22-13, as my wife and I sat on our back porch, we saw four (4) Gray Foxes trot across our backyard, spaced about 40 feet apart, one after the other. It caught us quite by surprise and we thought, maybe, it was a mom and her three little ones (though they were nearly the same size and in our surprise we were unable to make an accurate size comparison). We are now convinced that our area should be considered part of the Gray Fox range.
This guy stopped to search for food in my backyard for several minutes. Gray foxes remain solitary for most of the year. They are primarily a nocturnal animal, but have occasionally been spotted during the daytime as in this photo. Though usually not very large, they can approach 20 pounds in weight.
Gray foxes prefer dens close to a water supply. The den may be located under or between large rocks, in an underground burrow, or even in hollow tree trunks or limbs (they can climb due to their retractable claws). They are the only member of the Canidae that can climb trees. Some of the physical traits unique to the gray fox (e.g., short legs and retractable claws) have lead researchers to suggest that they are one of the more primitive members of the Canidae family. They communicate by barking and growling.
The primary predators of the Gray Fox are bobcats, coyotes, golden eagles, and great-horned owls.
Gray Foxes have oval-shaped pupils and the area around the eyes has a thin black stripe from the outside corner of the eye to the side of the head. Additionally, a thick black stripe runs from the inside corner of the eye, down the muzzle to the mouth. Gray Foxes are sometimes misidentified as Red Foxes (Vulpes vulpes), however Red Foxes have slit-shaped eyes, larger feet, longer legs, and a leaner body.
8-22-13. This photo was taken on July 1, 2013. The range of the Gray Fox is not supposed to include my home area (i.e., the extreme northwest area of Michigan's lower peninsula). I figured this guy (gal) was a transient. Today, 8-22-13, as my wife and I sat on our back porch, we saw four (4) Gray Foxes trot across our backyard, spaced about 40 feet apart, one after the other. It caught us quite by surprise and we thought, maybe, it was a mom and her three little ones (though they were nearly the same size and in our surprise we were unable to make an accurate size comparison). We are now convinced that our area should be considered part of the Gray Fox range.