Longhorns 

183 creative works found

  • When I saw this bull in a kneeling position, eating grass on the opposite side of the fence, I turned the car around and stopped to take its photo. I thought it was a classic photo to illustrate the old cliche, “The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence.”

  • Title: Failure / Capture Date: 12/08/2007 / Dimensions: 3872×2495 / Exposure: 1/5 sec at f/5.0 / Focal Length: 65mm / ISO: 1000 / Filter: No / Flash: No / Uploaded Date: 12/08/2007 / Comments: I shot this at my nephew’s graduation from the University of Texas at Austin (GO Longhorns!). I just thought it was interesting that this chair was empty. / Please visit my site: – Charles Dobbs Photography and receive a 10% discount off my RedBubble Pricing when you order RedBubble Products directly from me! © 2008 Charles Dobbs Photography. All photographs and artworks in this portfolio are copyrighted and owned by the artist, Charles Dobbs. Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved.

  • Profile of a Longhorn in the Texas Hill Country, sepia tone photography

  • A longhorn and a calf hanging out together in Travis County, Texas.

  • / Anonymous donation to further my work. / Share my work with friends & family. Texas Longhorns T-Shirt Design • Corresponding Art /

  • The legendary cattle of Texas.

  • This is a true Texas Longhorn, Breeders Association of America sign was posted on the premises. This was a late afternoon shot, lighting was not the best. I will be going back earlier in the day on Monday for some better shots. They are just down the road from where I live in Oak Leaf, TX.

  • Feature Outsiders – 1/12/09 This is a Texas Longhorn baby calf. Him’s was having dinner :) An accent edge filter was applied. I had to remove the “got milk” title from this photo because of copyright laws. Sale of a card to deegarra

  • Another Texas Longhorn. I called out to her “hey wide load” and this is the look I got…evil eyes and the tongue…LOL…so glad there was a heavy duty iron fence between her and I…not even for sure it’s a her…look at those horns!!!!!!!! Update: I feel kinda bad calling her a name now, turns out she just might be with child :) Poor thing…

  • That’s her name, ask her again and she’ll tell you the same :) Yep that’s what the tag says on her ear. She must be extra special. She is a genuine Texas Longhorn, she has the horns to prove it :) Isn’t she grand??? I just took this today, August 11, 2008. Went out for a job interview, stopped back by and took more photos of these beauties. It’s a cloudy, overcast day here in Texas, 93 degrees with scattered thunderstorms in the forecast. Pray for rain, we need it.

  • Title: The University of Texas Tower / Camera: Nikon D80 / Capture Date: 12/0/2007 / Dimensions: 2572×3842 / Exposure: 1/45 sec f/16 / Focal Length: 50mm / ISO: 100 / Filter: None / Flash: None / Tripod: None / Uploaded Date: 01/09/2009 / Comments: The 307-foot tall UT Austin Tower, designed by Paul Cret of Philadelphia, was completed in 1937. Through the years, the Tower has served as the University’s most distinguishing landmark and as a symbol of academic excellence and personal opportunity. Hook ‘em Horns! © 2007 Charles Dobbs Photography. All photographs and artworks in this portfolio are copyrighted and owned by the artist, Charles Dobbs. Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved.

  • borrowby on the north york moors

  • Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Texas. 2008 Red River Shootout…Texas and Oklahoma. Also on the field is the University of Texas Marching Band.

  • Eye to eye with a big Texas Longhorn Black and white Canon EOS 30D Lens: 70-200mm f-2.8 L IS USM

  • Ankole-Watusi cattle are the show-stoppers of the bovine kingdom. Medium-sized animals, with long, large-diameter horns, they attract attention wherever they appear. These regal animals can easily trace their ancestry back more than 6,000 years and have often been referred to as “cattle of kings.” This one i found , not a true breed, from the looks of him.. but oh , what a guy .. so interactive. Thank goodness for the invention of barbed wire. Fort Myers, Florida. The Wedsnday Watusi Cow things to know about Florida : / Dairy farming is an important part of Florida’s agricultural industry. UF/IFAS has estimated that the value of cash receipts from the sale of milk for 2005 was $413 million, up 1% from the $409 million reported for 2004. Total dairy farm receipts were estimated at $444 million dollars. The Florida Agricultural Statistics Service has indicated that there were about 130,000 dairy cows in Florida in December, 2006. That is down from 135,000 in late 2005 and 152,000 at the start of 2002. This decline is consistent with a long term trend showing fewer cows and dairy farms. The number of Florida dairy farms, 151, has continued to decline at a faster rate than numbers of cows due to narrow margins, escalating land values and the uncertainty of the cost of environmental regulations, particularly on the part of owners of dairies with less than 700 cows._ source

  • Rustic in South Dakota Badlands area

  • Taken at Havant Thicket, Hampshire. This is a longhorn beetle.

  • The Red Milkweed Beetle (Tetraopes tetraopthalmus) – a type of longhorned beetle is covered with dew early Sunday morning while resting on it’s food source, the milkweed. / Although it’s not been proven…it IS believed that the beetles achieve a toxin from eating this plant much like the Monarch butterflies do. / Found in NW Missouri while hunting for arrowheads. (that I never found)

  • This photograph was taken in one of the shops in Tombstone, Arizona. I assume that the vignette was created for Halloween, but it might be there all year. Photographed with a Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ28 and combined with three free texture layers from stock.xchng.com. “The Town Too Tough to Die,” Tombstone was perhaps the most renowned of Arizona’s old mining camps. When Ed Schieffelin (SHEF·e·lin) came to Camp Huachuca (hwah·CHEW·kuh) with a party of soldiers and left the fort to prospect, his comrades told him that he’d find his tombstone rather than silver. Thus, in 1877 Schieffelin named his first claim the Tombstone, and rumors of rich strikes made a boomtown of the settlement that adopted this name. During World War I, Tombstone was a major producer of manganese for the government. In World War II, Tombstone was extracting lead for the cause. After both conflicts, Tombstone faded into obscurity, just to be resurrected at a later time. The citizenry of Tombstone decided rather than depending on a vanishing mining industry, they would focus their time and energy on tourism and restoration. Good call! Many of Tombstone’s historic buildings are within an area bounded by Fremont, 6th, Toughnut and 3rd streets. Among them are St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, built in 1882; the Crystal Palace Saloon, one of the most luxurious saloons in the West; and the Tombstone Epitaph building, where the oldest continuously published paper in Arizona is still being printed. Western printing history exhibits in the front office are free to the public. Truly a Historical American Landmark, Tombstone is America’s best example of our 1880 western heritage, which is well preserved with original 1880’s buildings and artifacts featured in numerous museums. / Featured in HORRORAMA/October, 2009 /

  • Shot in Palo Duro Canyon in the Texas Panhandle.

  • This photo was taken just hours after this baby longhorn was born.

  • Longhorn is an ancient and beautiful breed with an exciting role to play in the modern beef industry. Once a Rare Breed, English Longhorns came close to extinction in the middle years of the twentieth century but have proved themselves to have a valuable role to play in the production of quality, healthy beef from grass. English Longhorns are not related to the American or Texas Longhorn whose ancestors came from Spain. They do have a long and fascinating history linked to that of the great livestock pioneer of the 1700s,Robert Bakewell. English Longhorns are large lean beef cattle with an impressive sweep of horns. They are a strikingly attractive breed. The body may be any one of a wide range of brindle colours but they all have the characteristic white line along the back and down the tail, which is passed onto their cross bred progeny. The impressive horns are valued in the pedigree. OLYMPUS E500 / ZUIKO 4/3 14-45mm

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