View allAll Photos Tagged peanut
I call this wood mouse Peanut as it loves them and peanut butter. It is in a teapot here that I hung up in the hope birds might have nested in it but they didn't so I put seed in it now and of course the mice have found it
Farid mia is a peanut seller. He is one of many people who has come to dhaka to change fortune. But struggle never cease to exist for him. His whole family live in Bhairab and his four sons are married. His sons now have their own families and they dont provide for their father. So here is farid mia selling peanuts and counting the last days of his life.
Our bluejays and squirrels must be healthy from all the peanuts they eat everyday. They've become quite demanding lately "cawing" for breakfast!
© Brian E Kushner
Blue Jay grabbing a peanut. These guys sit in the trees and yell like mad as they get ready to dive bomb. Then they come down and come down fast. Hit the ground grab a peanut and take off. Whole thing takes about 2 seconds.
Size & Shape
Large crested songbird with broad, rounded tail. Blue Jays are smaller than crows, larger than robins.
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Color Pattern
White or light gray underneath, various shades of blue, black, and white above.
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Behavior
Blue Jays make a large variety of calls that carry long distances. Most calls produced while the jay is perched within a tree. Usually flies across open areas silently, especially during migration. Stuffs food items in throat pouch to cache elsewhere; when eating, holds a seed or nut in feet and pecks it open.
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Habitat
Blue Jays are birds of forest edges. A favorite food is acorns, and they are often found near oaks, in forests, woodlots, towns, cities, parks.
Measurements
Both Sexes
Length
9.8–11.8 in
25–30 cm
Wingspan
13.4–16.9 in
34–43 cm
Weight
2.5–3.5 oz
70–100 g
She's a ground squirrel that lives amongst the rocks at the beach. The background is the ocean. I used my Canon EF-S 55-250 IS lens at 232mm at f/8.0 mid-day with a polarizer.
Hard to beat a spoonful of Peanut Butter.
Our Daily Challenge - BALANCE is the topic for Wed March 5 2025
I felt like a balance!
Enjoy taking pictures of your dog? Consider joining the Daily Dog Challenge, with a new topic every day, such as...
#5203. 3/3 “If Dogs Had Thumbs”
… they could hold their own peanut butter spoons!
365:2025 - #64
I call this wood mouse Peanut as it loves them and peanut butter. It is in a teapot here that I hung up in the hope birds might have nested in it but they didn't so I put seed in it now and of course the mice have found it
Peanut with love from the mountains of Urak Valley, Balochistan, Pakistan. <3
© Aliraza Khatri | AR Khatri's Photography
alirazakhatri@gmail.com
Copyright content: Do not use without permision
aka Cacahuète. She does say "Allo Cacahuète", but was renamed Peanut, probably because it's easier to say.
She has a plucking issue. She now lives with some friends who run a "rescue"; prior to that, she lived with other people who started neglecting her in the last few years, which is probably when the plucking started.
Cockatoos are highly sensitive birds.
Roasted vegetable and peanut salad with basil vinaigrette.
www.whiskaffair.com/2015/09/roasted-vegetable-and-peanut-...
Delicious classic peanut butter cookies. Chewy in the center and crispy around the edges!
Recipe from Good Housekeeping: Great Baking
Blogged @ howtoeatacupcake.net
Using ground peanut instead of the traditional peanut butter, the peanut flavor is really kicking through.
Peanut is looking forward to her job :)
Peanut spreads cheer in Nursing Homes with her visits and outfits :)
Daily Dog Challenge: The Underdog
Sterculia quadrifida, also known as the peanut tree, or red-fruited kurrajong is a small tree that grows in the rainforests, vine thickets and gallery forests of coastal Queensland, the Northern Territory and north-eastern New South Wales.
The tree grows to a height of 5 –10 metres and has a spreading deciduous canopy. The bark is a light grey and the leaves are dark green and broad egg-shaped or sometimes heart-shaped at the base. The flowers, which are greenish-yellow and are borne in small clusters in the upper axils, occur from November to January (summer in Australia).
Seed pods are orange outside and orange or red inside when ripe. These pods contain up to 8 black seeds that are edible and taste like raw peanuts.
Alternative common names for this species include kuman, orange-fruited kurrajong, orange-fruited sterculia, red-fruited kurrajong, smooth-seeded kurrajong, white crowsfoot and small-flowered kurrajong.
The bark is used by Aboriginal people in their traditional weaving techniques to make baskets and other products.