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A queen wasp (Vespula vulgaris) crawling through the Andrena colony in the garden. Not sure if she was looking for a nest site or hunting the bees. She was an impressive insect - over 2 cm long!
[C.Yfashion] Queen May
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I think this is a copy of the Pietro Annigoni portrait of the Queen which is my favourite depiction of her. There have indeed been some ghastly clunking portraits but this is how I will remember her. I am not an avid follower of all things Royal but I think she was an estimable woman who took her responsibilities extremely seriously and in many cases her dignity far outshone the circus of recent political nonentities that have paraded before her. So thank you.
A Queen Butterfly Danaus gilippus at the butterfly garden of the Tucson Botanical Gardens, Tucson, Arizona
Featured on Flickr EXPLORE #36 2021-12-01
African leopards (Panthera pardus pardus) are one of the two big cats, along with the lion and included in the big five of Africa, that inhabit the continent of Africa.
Queen Lorian, a very famous and senior female leopard, was found dead yesterday morning, mauled to death by either Lions or another Leopard. She has left behind a 14 month old son, Roho who shall to fend for himself in the wild.
This was my latest sighting of her during a photography Safari on an early morning game drive in the Maasai Mara Game Reserve, Kenya.
Autumn bowed to place a beautiful crown on the Queen of Morning, and her velvet robes sway merrily in the chilly breeze. ~Terri Guillemets
Last spring, I saw and enjoyed watching a beautiful paper wasp beginning her nest. It's something I look forward to every year.
How incredible is that? To take a mouthful of wood fibres, chew and mix with saliva, then build intricate, tiny, perfectly shaped hexagonal cells, all connected together for your babies.
This female will become the queen if the colony can be established.
Polistes humilis 20 mm body length
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The queen butterfly (Danaus gilippus) is a North and South American butterfly in the family Nymphalidae with a wingspan of 70–88 mm (2.8–3.5 in). Here in the TWU Butterfly Garden, Denton, Texas.
Featuring:
* [Bad Unicorn] Falling Hearts Backdrop. Exclusive for FaMESHed (NEW)
* ERSCH Pomona Cloth and Pastie. Exclusive for FaMESHed (NEW)
* EarthStones Diamond Love Necklace - Heart -. Exclusive for FaMESHed (NEW)
* WINGS EF0208-HAIR .Exclusive for Collabor88 (NEW)
The Pose:
*Luanes Poses Romantic Dreams - one of 5 poses (Romantic Backdrop and roses included, not shown here)
credits - kairis-kloset.blogspot.com/2021/12/queen-drip.html
Yung Gunz - The Queen Chain & Drip Earrings @ Anthem
IDTTY - Winter Glam Collection
Sintiklia - Alinna Hair
ilcocoli - Zaria Outfit
Yorke - Reign Booties @ The Grand
Betrayal - Genesis Fur Coat @ The Arcade
“From scenes like these old Scotia's grandeur springs” - Robert Burns
This beauty spot was named after Queen Victoria's visit in 1866 - she loved the view so much it was named after her! With its panorama of loch and mountain scenery, the "Queens View" is said to be one of the most photographed views in Scotland. Its location in Highland Perthshire has everything – lochs, mountains and forests.
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Queen of Spain fritillary / Kleiner Perlmuttfalter (Issoria lathonia)
Fresh from the forest ;)
This migratory species is widespread in most of Europe, in North Africa, Canary Islands and in the East Palaearctic ecozone (Central Asia, Himalaya, Baluchistan and Western China).These butterflies live in open areas, in dry lawns, agricultural wastelands and in extensive crops at altitudes between sea level and 2700 m.
Olympus E-M1 Mark II + Olympus Pro 40-150/F2.8 + Spacer 21mm
Thanks to everyone who stopped by to watch or leave a comment/ award :)
All my photos are © All Rights Reserved. The pictures are for viewing, not to be downloaded and shared on any other site or for personal use without my explicit permission. Thank you! :)
- Living Jewels of Nature: 11, Precious Living Jewels of Nature: 11, Members Choice: 13 'MoP'
- Nature's Carousel: 11, Nature's Golden Carousel: 11, Nature's Platinum Carousel: 10
British Ocean Liner, retired in 1967. Permanently docked at Long Beach, California, serving as a hotel and stage for special events.
I'm still pulling more images from last year until I can figure out some trips for this year... During our vacation last year, we wanted to take the kids to visit Queen's Bath on Kauai...on our trek around the island, eventually to Ke'e Beach (see earlier post). Given the island trek, we weren't here at the best time of day, but still fun for all. They made their way into the 'bath' while I turned my camera towards the crashing waves. Some crazies were actually climbing onto the rocks you see here and diving in. So dangerous... A note on this image....I did my best trying to capture some interesting water in the foreground while trying to also capture a nice wave crash...but...I was unsuccessful. So, I ended up taking the two and layering in the crashing wave.
The Queen Mary is a steam cruise liner built in the 1930's in Scotland. The ship was in service from 1936 to 1967. Since that time, it has been converted to a floating hotel and museum in Long Beach,California permanently.
Night falls on the marsh, the hunt begins for the queen of the night, the barn owl (Tyto alba)
Cae la noche sobre la marisma, comienza la caza para la reina de la noche, la lechuza común ( Tyto alba)
If not working as a guard dog or a highly specialized food detector, Lucy loves to lounge in one of the beds.
RMS Queen Mary 2 (also referred to as the QM2) is a British transatlantic ocean liner. The ship was officially named Queen Mary 2 by Queen Elizabeth II in 2004 after the first RMS Queen Mary of 1936. Queen Mary had in turn been named after Mary of Teck, consort of King George V. With the retirement of Queen Elizabeth 2 in 2008, Queen Mary 2 is the only transatlantic ocean liner in regular service between Southampton, England, and New York City, United States. The ship is also used for cruising (here seen in DUbai), including an annual world cruise.
Length = 345.03 m
Beam = 41 m (waterline)
Height = 72 m (keel to top of funnel)
Draught = 10.3 m
14 passenger decks (18 total)
Capacity = 2695 passengers + 1253 crew
Installed power = 117320 kW
Tonnage = 149215 GT
2: Queen’s Ferry runs a daily sky route between Queen’s Resort and Andor. A few dozen tourists fly on it every month, making it the most inefficient use of coal on any route I’ve ever flown. It’s the most luxurious ship to ever wander the skies, built fifteen years ago at a massive expense by WINGS.
You can imagine my excitement when WINGS hired me to fly Queen’s Ferry. I signed and started the same day. Queen’s Ferry is a beauty, shining inside and out. I’ve loved all my airships, but this one is special. I love the way it speeds smoothly through the skies, the way the warmth of the balloon soaks through the cabin, the way the hold creaks eerily and the way the wind moans through it as though there were something alive down there.
I’ve flown Queen’s Ferry for four years now and enjoyed every moment. Well, almost every moment. Sometimes I ask myself questions, and I don’t want to know the answers.
Has no one else has ever questioned the real purpose of Queen’s Ferry?
Why did WINGS spend millions to build an airship for a few hundred tourists a year? Why do they continue to spend twice as much on fuel as they recoup in passenger tickets?
Why is the hold always locked? Why does the wind moan through it like a troubled spirit?
What am I really carrying?
In four years of flying I’ve saved up enough to take a vacation. I’m going to get some answers.
—Anna Kant
I realized after starting on this airship that the concept art I was using for inspiration was one of the ones from the contest posters--see if you can recognize which one! I mean, it should be obvious. XD Also, take a guess: is the sky background real or not?
Took me about five days to build this which was three more than I had planned. But I really wanted to get it just right and there were some really tricky SNOT parts and also it just kept getting bigger and bigger!
I hemmed and hawed a bit on doing a canvas balloon on top, I was afraid it would be the low effort solution. Let's just say after doing it, I no longer think it was low effort. Respect to everyone who does cloth sails!
Lots more pictures in the first comment below!
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