View allAll Photos Tagged mastiffs
Just had to share - I was sitting by the lake taking a break from hours of walking and just watched this scene unfold. Mr Mastiff had obviously just been for a long walk in the hot sun and had to cool down. Off comes the lead as he wades into the lake and just stands there. After about 10 minutes owners call him back. Mr Mastiff is not budging.
Then the shouting starts to get him back, the treats come out to lure him back but alas he aint going anywhere! Was so comical as you could just see what he must have been thinking as he watched all these mad humans try to get him out f the water while he was just chilling!
The end result was someone having to walk halfway into the lake to get him. :)
I spent a couple of days with my family in a forest lodge in San Rafael, Colombia, and this beautiful mastiff followed us around all weekend.
"Mastiff in Fractalius"....I found an old version of fractalius and loaded it onto an old laptop. As I use solely mac for photoshop now it was a reminder of some of my really old editing from years ago. Hope you like it.
Watchful, aloof, imposing, and intimidating: The ancient Tibetan Mastiff is the guardian dog supreme. These densely coated giants are mellow and calm around the house, sweetly devoted to family, and aloof and territorial with strangers. Coming face to face with this ancient behemoth, an intruder up to no good will likely move on to easier pickings.
A digital artwork of the Tibetan Mastiff. The Tibetan Mastiff is listed #147 on the AKC list of most popular dog breeds
One of the most ancient types of dog breed. They rate 5 out of 5 in 'affectionate with family', 'incredibly kid friendly', 'size', and 'drooling potential'. They prefer the comforts of home and presence of family and will try their best to be a lap dog.
This gentle giant belongs to our Daughter and Family.
Thank you for viewing
The M-68 Mastiff, commonly referred to as the Mastiff LRV (Light Reconnaissance Vehicle), is an American light infantry mobility and reconnaissance vehicle developed for the United States Army. Entering service in the late 2130s, the Mastiff was designed to supplement heavier infantry fighting vehicles and replace aging light tactical platforms in high-threat, drone-saturated battlefields. The vehicle is manufactured by Oshkosh Defense, leveraging the company’s long experience with tactical wheeled vehicles.
The Mastiff is optimized for rapid infantry transport, reconnaissance, and urban combat support, prioritizing mobility, modularity, and low logistical burden over heavy armor. It is intended to operate alongside dismounted infantry, unmanned ground vehicles, and rotary- or tiltrotor-borne formations, particularly in expeditionary and dense urban environments.
The vehicle features a four-wheeled (4×4) configuration with independent suspension, allowing for high off-road mobility while maintaining a compact footprint suitable for airlift and shipboard transport. The Mastiff typically carries a crew of two—a driver and vehicle commander—while accommodating four fully equipped infantry soldiers depending on mission configuration.
Protection is focused on small arms fire, fragmentation, and blast mitigation, with modular add-on armor and electronic countermeasure suites available as mission kits. Unlike traditional infantry fighting vehicles, the Mastiff relies on speed, situational awareness, and networked support—such as unmanned aerial systems and precision fires—for survivability.
By the early 2140s, the M-68 Mastiff program was estimated to cost between USD $18–25 billion, with procurement plans ranging from 8,000 to 12,000 vehicles across active, reserve, and allied forces. Average unit cost was projected at $2–3 million, depending on configuration and electronics fit.
1:43 scale
Exactly a year since I uploaded the M40 Vanguard, I introduce the newest member to the US forces motor pool, the M-68 Mastiff. I wanted the vehicle to be similar in function and design to the Warthog and Razorback from halo and the GAV Swan from Avatar, while not ripping off the designs too much. In the end I think I was successful. The angled sides, thanks to the hinged plates, were inspired by the C-0T Light Transport by Louis K. on Flickr. The digital renders look a little bare on details, whenever I build it irl I will flesh it out with a rear roll cage, steering wheel etc. It will prob be the last US forces vehicle I post in a while, shifting my focus now to the UAS side of things, especially since I got a camo scheme going for them…
More photos available on my instagram
Neapolitan mastiff puppies - 1 day
born.13.01.2009
Dam: BAJKA Krzyk Uwielbienia
(Mł. Ch.Pl., Winner Champion of Champions 08')
Sire ORION Millefiori
(Interchampion , HD A , Ch.Pl., 2x Zw. Klubu, Mł. Zw.Klubu 05', Zw.Pl. Zwycięzca Europy Środkowej i Wschodniej)
A fine view of the size and affability of our one-year-old Newfy/Mastiff mix, Sofa. He gained ten pounds in one week. Literally. He is simply the best dog ever.
I found this on a recent road trip and couldn't resist getting a photo of this rather rough looking Leyland Mastiff.
With the registration being a Q plate I've no idea how old this particular lorry is.
A centuries-old, rare breed from the Pyrenees Mountains in Spain, this livestock guardian protected flocks from wolves, bears and thieves. Today, while it is still an effective guardian, many families have found the joy of owning the gentle and loving, yet independent, Pyrenean Mastiff.
One of the most ancient types of dog breed. They rate 5 out of 5 in 'affectionate with family', 'incredibly kid friendly', 'size', and 'drooling potential'. They prefer the comforts of home and presence of family and will try their best to be a lap dog. This is our Daughter and Family's one year old female.
Thank you for viewing.
"Everybody in this family hates me!"
"Then maybe you should ask Santa for a new family."
"I don't want another family. I don't want any family. Families suck!"
Je ne sais pas qui a prit cette photo. Elle vient en complément de l'autre , juste pour faire voir la ou ils vivent et apparemment, le berger ne le crains pas du tout . Tout les commentaires sont pour celui ou celle qui a pris cette superbe photo .
Ma modeste participation est un recadrage et un peu d'ajustement sur la netteté et les contrastes.....
C'est ,quand même, un beau toutou impressionnant....
bref au tibet , en plus , je parle pas le tibetain.....
j'aime ces regards, cette vue , dont je ne suis pas l'auteur et surement pas à la hauteur. Quelle puissance pouvons nous deviner dans ce magnifique chien.... et cette osmose entre l'homme , le chien et la nature......