View allAll Photos Tagged puddle
another rainy day, means many puddles in the park and time at home, making plasticine pokemon creatures.
21/365-grateful
There is a relationship between pierids and papilionids during puddling. This photo, as well as several other photos similar to this suggest so. The most recent one I viewed, by a contact, features a group puddling- of Green-banded Swallowtails (Papilio nireus) with a host of white, yellow pierids.
As the papilionid is mostly toxic making it repellent to predators, the pierid may use a little protective cover for its own safety. Now, what could the peirid ever have to offer in return?
Massive puddle in the polytechnic car park.
The poly technic became Sunderland University, and the view is very very different now.
The photo was taken mid 1980's if I recall correctly.
How often do you get to shop in person for your Pullips? This year PUDDLE had several new vendors in addition to the usual ones offering up a variety of shopping opportunities.
Keely's Cute Kimono was back this year, too. Lots of cute wa-loli kimono and casual fashions for Pullips and bjds. She also had Requiem's patterns.
A kid and a puddle. Et voila. Artsy-fartsy alternate here.
{weather note: we are having major rain today. one friend said that the weatherman was practically urging people to build arks. that cracked me up.}
My 365: Create a portrait of someone new each day.
Dear whoever keeps leaving used muscovy ducks in my local pond,
Thanks, I really appreciate it.
Regards,
Lucy
This little boy was having the best time, and his mom was so laid back about him jumping in mud puddles.
The sun shined brilliantly after the morning shower to warm the atmosphere. The butterflies were free to fly again after the compulsory curfew. Many of them looked famished by the way they fervently held on to fresh flowers, undeterred by anything- not even the black-eyed camera. Hunger had taken the better part of them- one of three moments when they are most vulnerable in their short-spanned life.
This black and yellow one was flying very close to the ground like someone intently looking for something. It would settle at a spot first and probe the mineral-rich soil with its long sucker, then move on to another, then another until it found the sweetest spot. The portion with a thin coating of green algae seemed the most preferable. It's been like this on two, three occasions now.