View allAll Photos Tagged python
Clarence Brown Theatre Mainstage
Thursday, Apr 24, 2014
Cast
Micah-Shane Brewer ‡
Sir Robin, Guard 2, Brother Maynard
Rachel Britt
Ensemble
Katie Cunningham ‡
Lady of the Lake
Catherine Joy Davis
Ensemble
Alexandra Disterdick
Ensemble
Neil Friedman ‡
Sir Bedevere, Galahad's Mother, Herbert's Father
Brian Gligor ‡
Dennis/Galahad, Concorde, Black Knight
Robert Parker Jenkins
Ensemble
David Kortemeier ‡
King Arthur
Leo LaCamera
Ensemble
Calvin MacLean
French Taunter, Historian, Knight of Ni
Shea Madison
Ensemble
McKinley Merritt
Ensemble
Ethan Roeder
Ensemble
Steve Sherman ‡
Patsy, Guard 1, Mayor
Eric Sorrels
Prince Herbert, Not Dead Fred
Robert Stephan
Ensemble
Tramell Tillman ‡
Sir Lancelot, Tim the Enchanter
Pedro Tomás
Ensemble, Dance Captain
Alex Ward
Ensemble
Kathryn E. Wright
Ensemble
Artistic Team
Bill Jenkins ◊
Director
Terry Silver-Alford
Musical Director
Christopher Pickart ¤
Scenic Designer
Tim Hatley
Costume Designer
Yael Lubetzky ¤
Lighting Designer
Joe Court
Sound Designer
Joe Payne ¤
Projection Designer
Christie Zimmerman
Choreographer
Erica Tobolski
Voice & Dialect Coach
Alex Dearmin
Stage Manager
This is one vicious little creature. He experiences great pleasure from gobbling up freshly killed rodents and poking holes in human skin.
My pet Ball Python, "Puff" outside getting some exercise. She is a female and about four feet long. She doesn't mind being held. She has an interesting skin texture and patterns, called "eyes". Look closely and you can see individual scales.
TAXONOMY
Family: Pythonidae (Pythons)
Genus/species: Aspidites ramsayi
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS: Like the black-headed python,
the Woma’s head is unusually narrow for a python. Gray, olive, brown, or red-brown above with darker olive brown to black crossbands on the body. Sides and undersides pale.
DISTRIBUTION/HABITAT: Central and southwest Australia. Found in arid zones on sandplains and dune fields. Shelters in hollow logs, animals burrows, or vegetation during the day.
DIET IN THE WILD: A nocturnal hunter of small mammals, ground birds, and lizards. Because it hunts its prey in narrow tunnels, it cannot throw coils around its target. Instead the snake pushes a loop of its body against the prey, crushing it to death against the side of the burrow.
ACADEMY DIET: One rat every 2 weeks. (M Avila, Academy biologist)
REPRODUCTION: Oviparous, like all pythons. The female coils around the 5–20 eggs, protecting and warming them with heat generated by muscular “shivering” for the 2–3 month incubation period.
REPRODUCTION: This snake is oviparous, like all pythons. The female coils around the five to 20Meggs, protecting and warming them with heat generated by muscular "shivering" for the two to three-month incubation period.
CONSERVATION: Listed as endangered on the IUCN’s Red List. Threats include the clearing of land for agriculture and grazing, and perhaps high predation by foxes and feral cats.
The Adelaide Zoo in South Australia is coordinating a captive breeding program with offspring being released to the wild. Active research is aimed at returning the woma to its former range.
REMARKS: The woma, like its relative the blackheaded python, lacks the heat-sensing pits that border the mouth of most other pythons. The woma is a prized food item for desert Aboriginal people. Hunters follow the track of a woma to its burrow and then dig it out.
Water Planet Water Independence WP01
5-31-13, 11-7-14, 2015
Python bivittatus
BURMESE PYTHON
Asian dream, American nightmare.
One of the largest snakes in the world and the only protected snake species in Hong Kong.
This is one of the rides we took. It was fast, bumpy, and short- but pretty good for a local fair. Loops are always an adrenaline rush.
Perth Royal Show 2008. Claremont Showgrounds, Western Australia.
A volunteer at the Bucks County Zoo holds an albino python, as my wife, Jan, reaches out to touch it.
while I was mindlessly photographing some ordinary plant, a 2.5m python was gliding across the path right behind me. Too close to the bull ants for me to attempt a more complete shot
Eastern Carpet Python
Shot @ Bharatpur Bird Sanctuary, took this photograph standing just 1 feet away from this beautiful sleepy creature.
This python was minding its own business, coiled up in the water below, when our local creature spotter (in green) took a hefty stick and lifted it out, the better for us to see. He put it down on the bank of the stream, but this seemed the better action shot.
Yashica 230-AF with 70-300 f/4-5.6 and Agfaphoto Vista+ 200
Scanned Epson V500
Postprocessed Photoshop CS6