Rufus 

1 member found

80 creative works found

  • My Rufus Humming Bird Friend. Always comes every year. Hope you like and comment.

  • The largest living marsupial found on the continent, the Red Kangaroo inhabits a widespread range, from the grass plains to the open woodlands of inland Australia. A ‘mob’ of Red Kangaroos is led by a dominant male. Adult male ‘Reds’ can stand up to 6m tall. Their legs work much like a rubber band, and in full force they are able to leap 9m clear and 2.5m high.

  • This little guy showed up in my yard today and he was very insistant about who could and could not come by the feeder. He chased everyone away. Including buzzing me. He was very accomadating about letting me take pictures though. / This art work is registered copyright© 2008 and any copyright infringement will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law in the USA and International.

  • Another shot of the rufus hummingbird. Here he looks like he is sticking out his tongue at me for taking his picture. Ha! Ha! / This art work is registered copyright© 2008 and any copyright infringement will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law in the USA and International.

  • Rufus bows down his lightmeter head in thanks…

  • This is Rufus. We found him tied to a tree when we came in to work one morning last month. He is the sweetist boy. We don’t know if someone found him and didn’t know what to do with him or if his last owner couldn’t keep him and was desperate enough to tie him to a tree. We weren’t able to find his owner through the local lost pet recovery group or the shelter/humane society and he did not have a microchip. Happily, a very wonderful couple has adopted him and he will go to his new home tomorrow. I hope for a long and happy life for Rufus with his new family. He certainly deserves it and his new owners deserve a great dog like Rufus. I have to make my soapbox statement again. Please microchip your pets so you have a chance to recover them if they ever get lost.

  • Hand carved chess set

  • Bobcat (Lynx rufus) Nikon D2Xs + Nikkor 500/4 AFS-I

  • Rufus Hummingbird was taken in Tucson AZ.with a Nikon D80 /

  • This sly bobcat had his eyes fixed on a bird. Seconds after this shot was taken, he was up in a tree after it. Bobcats dwell in the shadows as is necessary for a predator depending on the element of suprise to ambush and kill its prey. Bobcats are one and a half to two times larger than a typical house cat . Its body ength averages 36” including the tail. The average height of adult bobcat is 14-15” from ground to shoulder. Males range from 16 to 30 lbs, females average 20 lbs Bobcats have tufted ears and a tufted face both marked with bold bands, and a “bobbed” tail that is has a light underside and bold bands on top. The color of fur ranges from grayish brown to tawny to dark reddish brown and lighter on the undersides. It has dark spots in coat and dark bars on the forelegs. It has a lithe, flexible body with legs designed for climbing, pouncing and rapid acceleration. Its eyes are forward-facing yand yellow with black elongated pupils. The bobcat inhabits more of North America than any other native wild feline. It ranges through our Western states, the Canadian border, the Atlantic and Gulf Coast states, and northern Mexico. Supremely resourceful and adaptable, the bobcat thrives in habitats ranging from the dense chaparral of southern California, to the forests of British Columbia, to the citrus groves of central Florida, and to the swampy forests of the Gulf Coast. Like many animals, the bobcat especially favors the environmentally rich “ecotones,” or transitional zones between habitat types, for instance, a juncture of woodlands and grasslands or of old growth and new growth. The bobcat’s varied habitats share certain characteristics, including, for instance sufficient prey, dense cover, protection from severe weather, availability of rest areas, availability of den sites, and freedom from disturbance. / / Bobcats are strict carnivores and prey upon a wide variety of mammals, reptiles, and birds. A Florida bobcat, for instance, may prey – often pouncing from a height – on several dozen species within its range, including wildlife such as rabbits, squirrels, rats, mice, possums, raccoons, quail, jays, robins, wrens, sparrows and, occasionally, even deer. Opportunistic, it may also feed on fresh carrion. Typically, across its range, the bobcat favors the smaller mammals such as rabbits and rodents. As more of a generalist predator than its North American relatives, the cougar or the Canadian lynx, the bobcat has the ability to adapt to a wider range of habitats.

  • Here is the second in my series of two red ‘roo shots. Here he approaches the dam and makes sure that I am not going to shoot and eat him—he was alarmingly unscared of me, considering that ‘roo tail is a very popular dish in these parts. I shot him, but only with the camera! Red Kangaroo (Macropus rufus). Hart’s Range, Northern Territory, Australia. Did I say that Red Kangaroos are the largest extant marsupial in the world? More useless information for you. Featured in the group The Northern Territory on 10 March, 2009

  • Rufus, the beautiful miniature dachsund. / Thanks for looking / Lisa x /

  • This is one of my dogs ..Rufus. He just turned 2 back on Valentines Day 2009 . He is half Lab and half sneeky naborhood dog! lol lol. It was really hot here the other morning so I decided to turn on the hose and let him have fun and cool off at the same time ! I was watching him trying to suck every bit of water that was coming out of the hose ..it was so funny I grabbed my camera and start snapping away and this is one of many that I took on that hot West Texas morning in Mid-July! I did a Time-Line Treatment on these ! I really love the look of …I’m Dancing In The Rain / But I am not so sure about the crop on this one and would love ya’lls opinion on this! Now the reason I don’t have his whole body showing is because I didn’t get his feet in this shot . Thanks for any input ya’ll can give me on this! This was Taken at my Home in Odessa, Texas with a Panasonic FZ50 Rufus at Play / I Gocha…! / Cooling off / Rufus / I’m Dancing In The Rain /

  • Female Rufous Hummingbird “Selasphorus rufus” checking out a patch of flowers for a little lunch at Vaughn Bay, Washington. /

  • Female Rufous Hummingbird in forward flight at Vaughn Bay, Washington. Hummingbirds are the only birds that can fly in reverse. /

  • My Friends little Jack Russell – Rufus

  • You will have to take my word for it but this is an image of a female Rufous Hummingbird, Selasphorus rufus, flying in reverse. Hummingbirds are the only birds that can actually fly backwards. Image captured at Vaughn Bay, Washington. /

  • Female Rufous Hummingbird, Selasphorus rufus, posing for my camera. I’m going to quit while I’m ahead—this is the sharpest image taken during my shoot of these wonderful little birds at Vaughn Bay, Washington. /

  • This is Rufus’s and my shadow casted onto the cement on a very bright day! I was out taking photos of him when I noticed that are shadows were so well outline that I started taking pictures of them alone! he looks like was awaiting my next command …when in fact he was sitting there scratching himself and I was taking photos of him! lol I love how the water hose was going across are shadows adding just a touch of color to this image! / ‘ This was taken at my home in Odessa, Texas with a Panasonic FZ50 FEATURES and TOP 10 WINS* 1. This was a Top 10 Win in the JPG Cast-off s Group in the challenge…Shadow of things unseen! 08/16/09 Rufus and Me …Shadow Playing /

  • these birds visit my garden feeders in a constant stream of color, they are fast fast fast! Winston Oregon USA Nikon D90 Tamrom 300mm zoom 1.7x teleconverter my yard Winston OR USA

  • Rufus humminbird, winston oregon, USA, Nikon D100, TAMRON 300mm zoom/macro lense tamron 1.7x converter (tripod)

  • Bobcat captured at the Sonoran Desert Museum in Tucson, Arizona. Shot with a Canon 20D & Canon 70-300mm IS @ 165mm. Thanks for looking.

  • This is a Rufus Hummingbird .He had gold speckles under his little neck . This was taken in Tucson , AZ at the Desert Museum with a Nikon D90 Tamron 18-250mm. /

RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.

You can buy their stuff

On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.

Risk Free Returns

It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.

About RedBubble

Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 331,500 items to more than 70 countries around the world.

Join In

Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.

Find More…

Rufus T-Shirts

Rufus Wall Art

Rufus Journal Entries

Rufus Writing

Rufus Calendars