Junior 

4 members found (show all)

246 creative works found

  • brown anole. Central Florida, USA. and he say’s “T-Rex was a Punk.”

  • kain is an 11 year old budding photographer and photoshopper

  • David Iori Photography Website / Email Me / . / © Copyright 2008 David Iori Photography, All Rights Reserved / . / Rainbow Lorikeets live off nectar mostly and water they find in leaves. They will fly up to 50 kilometers, (31 miles), to find food and even develop a flight pattern that they follow everyday. During the winter seasons when the food is scarce they will eat fruits that are laid out for them by people. At the Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary in Queensland, the visitors are asked to hold food out for the birds when they arrive in groups of hundreds at around 4pm. They will perch on people’s arms and heads to be fed. Rainbow Lorikeets make very good pets because they can be tamed so easily and have a fun natured temperament.

  • One older white hand and one younger black hand playing the piano

  • The little baby elephant was / no more than two month old! / (Kruger Nat.Park – Sout Africa) /

  • Camera – Canon 350D / Lens – EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro USM (1x macro magnification) / Focal length – 100mm / Exposure – Apeture Priority / Aperture – f/4.5 / Shutter – 1/15 seconds / ISO – 100 / Tripod and cable release / / © Andrew Brown / / Cards / Urban and Architecture / Panorama / Landscape / Portraiture / Macro / /

  • Kalahari lioness with cub. The little one skipping / and running around his mother…. / his belly is full and he is happy… / The capture is not one of the / best ( I was too far) but the / moment was too precious… Kalahari Gemsbok Park / South Africa

  • Sales of this Design? – 1 sale1 so far :) / “Beach Series” card by Karin Taylor A mixed media production, ink, pastel, charcoal and acrylic on paper, Kahuna Junior is the mythical daughter of the great Kahuna himself…. carving up the waves as she heads into an idyllic island sunset

  • to date, since i have been on the volunteer fire dept here in townsend, this was the hardest fire we have fought. this was richmont inn, located in laurel valley here in townsend, along a mountain side. this blaze literally wore us out. we fought it from 9:30pm til 6:10am, and then i had to return around 8:30am and fight it more til around 11am. i had already been up for over 24hrs. i was beat. there was one more call on this fire the next day, and again, a few of us showed up to “finish her off” / this was a task within itself, the inn was about 100foot from where we had to park our truck, and carry ALL of our gear down the mountain side to it. of course we started off at night, so having to watch your step along with carrying gear or a charged hose, was a challenge. / this shot along with 7 others will soon be published in 9-1-1 magazine, four from this fire..and three shots from the fire we had exactly one month to the day in january. two of the shots are already here on RB….”my volunteer job” and “battling the blaze”

  • / Junior: a candid Portrait / / / Photographer For Hire – All Occasions – Mail Me :) / / / My rules for photography and art are very simple – I like it, or I don’t… / / Thanks for visiting my folio :) / I certainly appreciate your taking time to view what I’ve been up to, and enjoy reading your comments. / / Writings (or ramblings) / The 3rd / The 10th / Weaver / High-Flyer / The In-Between Place / The Haggard Crone / Come, Dark / Chandelier Brain / Eat Me / You’re Strange, Rick / Ever-Queen / Sleeping / The Black, White & Grey / /

  • King of Fetch! /

  • Elephant humour Asian elephant (Baby) Amazingly, Asian elephants are more closely related to the extinct woolly mammoth than to the African elephant. The elephant’s tusks are elongated teeth (upper incisors) and tend to be smaller in Asian bull elephants than in the African. The four grinding teeth (molars) wear out and are replaced by new teeth from the back of the jaws; the elephant gets through six sets of teeth during its lifetime. Where they live India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Indonesia and Southern China / Habitat Mountains and forest What they eat Vegetation, fruit, twigs, small branches, bark and roots IUCN status Endangered ! Image was taken at ZSL Whipsnade zoological wildlife park Bedfordshire England UK

  • Young Male Ruby Throated Hummer Arcadia, Oklahoma Nikon D2X / Nikkor 105mm f/2.8 Macro / SB-600 Speedloght / Slik Tripod

  • Read all about this character and all the rest of the “Lighter Side of Dark’ gang in the new series by Paul Rees-Jones and Shannon Rene’ Justice! Available for purchase online! Bee J. aka BeezleB is a character not created by yours truly, but by Paul Rees-Jones for our book collab. Its amazing how he just tapped right into my characters and brought them to life!! This lil guy kinda makes a small apperance in the first book of the series, coming soon!

  • Have I ever mentioned that I’m ridiculous.

  • Here I learned the world is not so pretty as they say. / Here I learned it didn’t matter what they think. / Here I learned that who I am is not who I sat with at lunch. / Here I learned that kids are bullies. / Here I learned that I wouldn’t be. / Here I learned that I wholey, truely, inside and out, / did not want to be ‘popular’ anymore. / Here I learned that love is stronger / Than what they could preceive of me, / Here I learned that it hurts, God it hurts. / Here I learned to speak. Chairs from my old middleschool being thrown out the window into a huge pile as I stood and took pictures. This building no loger stands, but there is a large patch of green grass. / I layed in that patch of grass shortly after our Middle School was torn down with my bestfriend. It started to rain very hard, but we still layed there, staring up.

  • Took about 4 hrs for the entire scene and then used the model featured here, came out well for me here. P

  • Movie Clip

  • Young Great Tit perched in the tree outside my window. Canon EOS 50D with Canon EF 400mm L f/5.6 hand held

  • Sally-Anne was a junior detective / But at solving cases she was the worst; / When she tried to catch the Midtown Strangler / The Midtown Strangler caught up with her first. Ink drawing on paper

  • Donated by TigerfiSH

  • Diptych of two images taken on an Empire-Junior vintage toy camera.

  • Look at this cowboy ride… ©RodeoImagesAus

  • Taken at the Rhino and Lion Nature Conservation The Gemsbok is a powerfully built antelope, and is easily recognisable by its magnificent, V-shaped pair of horns, as well as its distinctive facial markings. Gemsbok are superbly adapted to arid regions, and can survive in some of the hottest places on earth without drinking water. During the sizzling heat of the day, the rapid inflow and outflow of air created by the gemsbok’s panting passes over a delicate network of blood vessels, cooling the flow of blood to the brain. At the same time, however, the body temperature is allowed to rise – obviating the need to perspire, and thus conserving water. Gemsbok are able to survive in even the harshest conditions thanks to an intricate network of blood vessels called carotid rete, situated in the nose which cool down the blood supplied to the brain, thus protecting the gemsbok from deadly temperatures. Living in areas where there is a shortage of drinking water, Gemsbok obtain moisture from melons, and by unearthing succulent roots and bulbs. They are essentially a grazing species, but if in areas of minimal grass cover, they are able to flourish on a diet of browse and ephemeral plants. Gemsbok are dry-region rouphage eaters, with a great capacity to digest fibre. Gemsbok live in herds of 12 or more but break up during the dry season, when food is scarce, into smaller units. They can also aggregate into large herds of 300 individuals after rainfall. The leader of the herd, a territorial male, jealously guards his domain, carefully marking the boundaries with piles of dung pellets to warn off would-be intruder males. If this is insufficient to keep a challenging male away, a duel involving horn-clashing and body bashing will result. Gemsbok do not have a restricted breeding season; a single calf is born at any time of year. As with other large antelope, the young Gemsbok calf remains hidden in the grass, and is visited by its mother to suckle it. It can remain hidden for 3 to 6 weeks, after which the mother and calf will join either a mixed herd or a nursery herd. /

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