View allAll Photos Tagged sambar

Another one of my.."click as u cook" shots !!

...but the hour cometh again...and again...and again...hoje à noite, tudo que eu necessito é música!

The Sambar is a rear-engine microvan with a rear bumper that doubles as a hood and folds down to reveal the equally-micro power source.

a quite friendly Sambar deer looking back at me in Ranthambore NP, India

 

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Bandhavgarh National Park, India

Bandhavgarh National Park, India

The sambar is a large deer native to the Indian subcontinent, South China, and Southeast Asia that is listed as a vulnerable species on the IUCN Red List since 2008. Populations have declined substantially due to severe hunting, insurgency, and industrial exploitation of habitat. This species is mainly found in central India.

At Ranthambore National Park

India

Inde - Kerala

Canon 7D et Sigma 150-600mm

Sambar deer are common in Wilpattu National Park, Sri Lanka.

Yala National Park, Sri Lanka

Malay: Burung Sambaraja Nila, Kelicap Ranting, Sambar Tengkuk Hitam, Sambar Uban Hitam.

 

Black-naped Monarch is a slim and agile passerine bird belonging to the family of monarch flycatchers found in southern and south-eastern Asia. They are sexually dimorphic, with the male having a distinctive black patch on the back of the head and a narrow black half collar ("necklace"), while the female is duller with olive brown wings and lacking the black markings on the head.

 

Call: Almost similar to Asian paradise flycatcher,

 

Habitat & Behavior: Tropical forest habitats, pairs may join mixed-species foraging flocks. Populations differ slightly in plumage colour and sizes.

 

Sambar Dear inside high grass at Bandhavgarh National Park

One of many sambar deer (a stag) seen during our photo-safari in Ranthambore National Park, India.

 

Ranthambore National Park is a large wildlife reserve that located in northern India in the Sawai Madhopur district of southeastern Rajasthan. The park covers 1,334 sq km (515 sq mi), and is famous for its Bengal tigers which roam freely throughout the park. It is also home to many other protected animals and plants including the Indian leopard, sambar, sloth bear, nilgai, wild boar, striped hyena, southern plains gray langur, rhesus macaque, mugger crocodile, chital and a wide variety of trees, plants, birds and reptiles.

 

For more information:

www.ranthamborenationalpark.com/ranthambore-national-park...

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranthambore_National_Park

Canon Powershot Sx50 HS

Bandipur, Karnataka, India

15 Jul, 2017

This photo was taken in Ranthambhore Natioanl Park in India!

Sambar deer in Bandhavgarh, India

The Sambar is a large deer native to the Indian subcontinent, southern China and southeast Asia. Although it primarily refers to Rusa unicolor, the name "sambar" is also sometimes used to refer to the Philippine Deer and the Javan Rush. This female was seen in Gir National Park, Gujarat, India.

 

Thanks for your visit… Any comment you make on my photograph is greatly appreciated and encouraging! But please do not use this image without permission.

  

Great to see this JDM oddity on my trip up North. First registered in the UK back in 2006.

1994 Subaru Sambar Classic (1.2 46 hp) at Delft

 

26-LJ-LR

Sambar Deer - Sariska National Park

A sambar deer stag pauses briefly before disappearing in the lush green djungle of Bandipur Tiger Reserve, India

Just added sambar masala. Tasting good. I like!

- Taken at 5:41 PM on May 20, 2007 - cameraphone upload by ShoZu

Sambar Deer (Rusa unicolor unicolor) Sri Lankan Sambar Deer is a sub-species of sambar deer that lives in Sri Lanka. This subspecies is one of the largest Sambar deer species with the largest antlers both in size and in body proportions. Sri Lankan Sambar live in lowland dry forests and mountain forests.

Sambar are nocturnal or crepuscular. The males live alone for much of the year, and the females live in small herds of up to sixteen individuals. Indeed, in some areas, the average herd consists of only three or four individuals, typically consisting of an adult female, her most recent young, and perhaps a subordinate, immature female Like most deer, sambar are generally quiet, although all adults can scream or make short, high-pitched sounds when alarmed. However, they more commonly communicate by scent marking and foot stamping.

A female at Yala National Park, Sri Lanka

 

Ranthnambhore day day 1, this evening you get the 2 for 1 as I couldn't decide if I liked the colour or B&W of this male Sambar deer.

He was very accommodating as we were driving through zone 3, I'm assuming they are somewhat habitualised to the amount of jeeps that pass through the area on a regular basis.

These are numerous in the park, and to give some context, I I guess you could compare them to the European red deer in size. As you can see from the image they are starting to shed their winter coats.

The sambar deer is fairly shy and is mainly active at twilight or at night. This species is very alert and silent, and will freeze instantly if disturbed. The sambar deer is one of the few deer that attacks sizeable predators, and it prefers to hold confrontations in shallow water. When confronting predators, the sambar deer produces a loud alarm bark and the hair on its neck erects. A female sambar deer is also incredibly protective of her young and, if confronted, will stomp and warn off attackers

Car: Subaru Sambar.

Year of manufacture: 1997.

Date of first registration in the UK: 1st September 1997.

Registration region: Glasgow.

Date of last MOT: 11th April 2022.

Mileage at last MOT: 104,920.

Date of last change of keeper: 31st July 2022.

Number of previous keepers: 2.

 

Date taken: 5th April 2023.

Album: Carspotting 2023

@ BANDIPUR NATIONAL PARK

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