View allAll Photos Tagged mane
NS 180 steps through Hapeville, Georgia on the Griffin District with Blue Mane AC44C6M 4004 leading. January 20, 2020
Trwyn
We went for a walk on the coast path from Porth Ysgo to the headland at Trwyn, we saw this gang up on the top of the hill, when they spotted us approaching they came racing down. Some of them stopped for a drink from the trough on the right, the others just wandered around on the path. A bit of a tense moment wondering if I was going to get nibbled, but we managed to go on our way without incident. They were still hanging around on our return, again I managed to escape without any bite marks.
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Fjord mane - Update for Friesian & Shetland Teeglepets
Seen here:
Teeglepet Friesian
*Cinnamon* Fjord White Dun
*Cinnamon* Fjord mane for Teeglepets
This hair style looks familiar ?
stock image from pexels
www.pexels.com/photo/chestnut-horse-with-lush-mane-on-pas...
Wooden Unicorn ornament with a fluffy mane and tail. I have a large Unicorn collection as I have been collecting Unicorns for more than 40 years.
The reddish egret during the breeding season develops an incredible mane and beautiful mating colors along his beak. They certainly know how to put on a great performance and we always feel thrilled when we do not miss it.
Have a great Saturday !!!!!!!!!!!!
This was a rare find in the woods at camp..I was thrilled by it , I had never seen one before..I had no idea of the medicinal properties of it until I identified it..If I knew of the greatness of the mushroom I would have plucked it up and ate it..As many know it is not a good thing to eat mushrooms of the woods unless you know for sure they are not poisonous. This one has no other copy cats , it stands alone and nothing of look of other mushrooms to fool you. You can just eat it with no worries about it being nothing other than what it is ..It was growing on a log that had fallen down and rotting. Amazing how the decay of the log can produce such a wonderful mushroom to live there. It was huge too about the size of my hand spread out
The Cantabrian or Monchino horses are a rustic breed of horses from the eastern part of Cantabria. They are raised in the wild and are semi-wild. The beauty of this specimen captivated me and for a few minutes we were observing each other.
Los caballos cántabros o monchinos es una raza rustica de caballos de la zona oriental de Cantabria. Se crian en libertad y son semisalvajes. La belleza de este ejemplar me cautivo y durante unos minutos estuvimos observandonos.
Another of my captures that I have added a splash of Fractalius to.
With this one, I wanted to retain the detail and original features of the lions face so this was isolated beforehand.
X I guess all horses are photogenic but I really loved the little Icelandic ones. With their long manes blowing freely in the perpetual winds the country is blessed with. This horse posed quite nicely being used no doubt to visitors with cameras
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Their caps and gills liquefy with age and just drip away. Note the "ink" dripping from the cap and veil ring on the stalk of the dark mushroom on the far right in the group.
A little past it's eat by date but these are one of my favorite edibles. Taken with a 55 micro and an F3 on Velvia film.
(Maner)
Twenty-five kilometers west from Patna on the Danapur-Daltonganj road lies the sleepy town of Maner, or Maner Sharif, perhaps the most significant medieval site in Bihar after Biharsharif. Maner was a bridgehead for the sultans of Delhi, as they pushed their frontiers eastwards towards Bihar and Bengal in the early 13th century; and with their armies came scholars and preachers who, having left Delhi for one reason or another, settled in Maner, when they did not drift further east towards Darbhanga, Lakhnauti, Sonargaon, or Rajshahi. In later medieval history, and especially under the Mughal empire, Maner was replaced by Azimabad (or, Patna City) as the political center of Bihar, where resided the imperial governors and faujdars. Still later, Bankipore would replace Azimabad as the political hub of Bihar under the East India Company’s rule. But despite these changes, Maner’s position as among the chief spiritual centers of Bihar has not suffered in the last eight centuries, and to this day the leading khanqahs of Patna defer in matters of ritual and doctrinal authority to the khanqah of Maner, which is one of two main centers of the Kubrawiya-Firdausiya sect in India, the other being Biharsharif.
The principal shrine at Maner, popularly known as Bari Dargah, has the humble open grave of Shaikh Yahya Maneri (d. 1291), the founder of the Firdausiya sect in India, and the father of Makhdum-ul-Mulk, Shaikh Sharfuddin Yahya Maneri, the celebrated author of the Makhtubaat-e-Sadi, whose grave is in Biharsharif. Bari Dargah stands within a walled garden on top of a mound that according to some archaeologists conceals an old Buddhist site. Bari Dargah also has a small mosque that dates from the late-thirteenth century, a pillared court built in the fourteenth century, and the graves of Shaikh Maneri’s disciples and descendants.
Some two hundred meters north from this shrine is the imposing and well preserved mausoleum of a later Firdausiya shaikh, Shah Daulat, built in 1616 by his disciple Ibrahim Khan, the Mughal governor of Bihar under Jahangir. Shah Daulat’s mazaar, which is popularly known as Choti Dargah, is built in the high Mughal style using Chunar sandstone, and it is perhaps the finest medieval monument of Bihar with its elegance of conception, size and remarkable stone ornamentation. The two-storied Choti Dargah, with its one central dome and four cupolas on the four corners stands on a raised pediment, within a large walled courtyard and garden after the classical charbagh style. The formal gateway on the north of the mausoleum and the three-bay mosque on the west were added some years later by Jahangir himself. To the south of the courtyard is a vast water tank, or baoli, with ghats, stone embankments, and chatris.
The shrines of Maner, which lie outside the town and are surrounded by lush farms, are still an important pilgrimage, where once Babur and Jahangir came for ziyarat.
Cow Moose
Jasper National Park, Alberta
I found this moose’s mane interesting as I have never seen a moose’s mane laying flat like this. She looks pregnant to me, perhaps hormones caused her mane to go flat. Or maybe she’s just having a bad mane day.
Moose choose habitat based on trade-offs between risk of predation by wolves, food availability, and snow. Little or no snow makes them easier prey for wolves, deep snow limits their mobility for escaping wolves. They can dive up to 20 ft (6 m) and stay under water for about 30 sec. to reach aquatic plants at the bottom of rivers and lakes. Their large nostrils act as valves that keep the water out while diving, much like a snorkel.
I did not go far on this day! I just went to the lawns of our condos!
It was the Shaggy Mane/Inky Cap that caught my eye initially. I found just a few other fungi growing along the paths.
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And then there were the outtakes...a continuation of my trip down to the farm.
My friend has a 5 acre parcel that is currently home to numerous rescued farm animals. It was muddy beyond what I wanted to deal with...so I relied on my zoom and took these shots at a safe distance. Besides, there was a rescue llama in the pen and I did not want to chance having to outrun it. In the stable with the Ewe was this rescue pony...seemed too big for a miniature horse. I thought it was kind of unusual...the Mane flowing like water out of a fountain.
NOTE: THIS ENTIRE SERIES WAS DONE HAND-HELD WITH NO CROPPING.
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Walter C Snyder