View allAll Photos Tagged predator
As all you know this is type of the falcon's family, in our country called (Gernas) in Arabic (قرناص), and easily to be or become tame and accustom to human. you can see the note on shot where the falcon is tied up by rope and during it's meal the owner catch it!
Sorry for bloody scene, but this is life!!
Explored Dec 30, 2009 #9
The break between the beginning and the end of the work was huge, but unlike other WIPs, here I found the strength to finish what I started.
GET TO THE CHOPPA!!!
Get Instructions here: buildbetterbricks.com/collections/our-newest-products/pro...
Very smart predator. The milkweed blossoms attract tons of flies, bees, wasps, butterflies even before fully open. Not to mention aphids. Perfect place for an assassin to hang out.
Leafhopper Assassin Bug (Zelus renardii)
SUNSET / BLOOD FLOWER Scarlet Milkweed (Asclepias Curassavica)
My photos can also be found at kapturedbykala.com
Do you see a victim or do you see a predator?
I'm not sure if I should just stick to the naturey stuff?
25/365
-Name will be changed once I think of it...
As I said yesterday Carson and I went adventuring around Lost Lake which can be seen here. Basically its this really nasty lake that's usually green because of algae and is surrounded by 200ft cliffs that we like to play on. Here I'm on a little ledge that drops right off. While exploring in this area we also made friends with a porcupine that we named Josey. He made super cute sounds too!
"Harmony with the land is like harmony with a friend: you cannot cherish his right hand and chop off his left. That is to say, you cannot love game animals and hate predators...the land is one organism."-Aldo Leopold
Adult. San Luis Obispo County, California, USA.
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Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias) - Circle B Bar Reserve, Florida
This young Great Blue Heron struggled for 15 minutes working this fish down. Many times it got to the position in the photo before having to throw it back in the water and 'tenderize' it a little more.
I must add that I personally had similar poses and expressions on my vacation to Nova Scotia. I really took advantage of the fresh seafood.
Thanks for visiting!
Locally known as the Bakerwals, the shepherds spend most of their life roaming from one pasture to the other with their flocks and family.
Living in the mountains of the Kashmir Valley for the summer months, away from towns and cities, they manage everything by themselves — from childbirth to funerals. A Bakerwal family undertakes such tedious walking exercises at least twice a year — once up into the mountains and then back to the plains. They breed ferocious looking shepherd dogs that protect their flocks in the mountains from predators like leopards and bears. The women work alongside the males and do almost everything the males do. They tend their flocks, milk their cattle, cook food and take care of children.
Photo: Svilen
Edit by me
Photo for Honest Cosplay photosession of The Predator
2019
All rights reserved® to Honest Cosplay, Sofia, Bulgaria.
My friend Sophia has pointed out that this is most likely a juvenile bald eagle, seen in the Sacramento National Wildlife Reserve. Bald eagles are not actually bald; the name derives from an older meaning of "white headed". The adult is mainly brown with a white head and tail. The sexes are identical in plumage, but females are about 25 percent larger than males. The beak is large and hooked. The plumage of the immature is brown.
Thanks, as always, for stopping by and for all of your kind comments -- I appreciate them all.
© Melissa Post 2015
All rights reserved. Please respect my copyright and do not copy, modify or download this image to blogs or other websites without obtaining my explicit written permission.
This creation is based on my own photograph of a female sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus), taken seven years ago, in Essex. She was a mighty fine predator. This image inspired me, today, to play with colour. Thank you for taking time to view it. NB: Dave Culley, who’s extremely knowledgeable on all things sparrowhawk, ‘favourited’ my original photo, on which this art is based. He was also very generous in sharing his knowledge with me.