Snout
75 creative works found
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Yes I know what you’re all thinking…It’s ANOTHER PET DOG!!!!! Don’t panic you arty farty types…it’s only up for a limited time whilst I make some cards for a friends present. Then it will be strictly back to black polo necks and matching berets. Ciao baby. Postscript (Wow I literally just uplaoded this to make cards for a friends birthday. I had no idea people would comment on it! I feel compelled to point out – as those who know me understand – my humour is very dry and ironic. Don’t take anything I say seriously! Except for my Africa pics and this word – thanks…) :) I MIGHT ADD IF ANYONE WANTS TO BUY IT-GO ON, ON YA, YEAH NOW AND THAT!!!!!!!!!!!! COLLECT THE SET!!
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Happy black bear sitting in an old rowboat.
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This was one of the first waterfall photo’s that I used HDR on. It was a really black and miserable day, looking at the photo’s before converting to hdr they lacked detail or any sense of the mood of the day. Once converted the mood really showed as did the power of the surge of water down the falls… this was the time I decided there was a place for hdr, done subtly it can be realistic, done over the top it becomes a work of art. MY WATERFALLS SET
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Brown bear aka Grizzly bear (Ursus horribilis), captive zoo animal, digitally accented Wilderness lost The victims of human beings come in all shapes and sizes, from the largest to the small. Gone are the days of grizzlies roaming the prairies of North America for roots and wolf pack leftovers. Everything associated with the prairies is turned to dust, blown to the corners of the globe. One has to travel far to seek out the last truly wild places, those nooks of nature that only the sun and clouds visit with regularity. Someday they too will be but a destination on someone’s itinerary. The wandering, restless soul keeps wild places in their hearts, and when they venture forth into the wood they feel the ripples of time and days gone by flowing like the unstoppable river throughout the hollow skeleton of what once was a place of mystery and passion. The great bears have been pushed to the limit, needing protection even in their remaining strongholds, where man is still a visitor. Golden aspens and billowing birch trees, where the sky is the only rooftop and every direction provides a window. We seek so much to regain the things we destroy, in nature and in love, so why should we weep at the humbleness and sad truth of a mighty creature napping in a concrete jungle? Because one glimpse into its eyes reveals the genes forged from rivers and floods, mountains and valleys, winters of endless desolation and summers of famine and frivolity with cubs. Wilderness was a catch phrase, now it is but a ghost, and time marches on leaving the ramshackled remnants of a once great species. Mighty bear, the hunter, the spirit, symbol of what was and still should be American Wilderness. He, the gentile beast, should spend lazy days napping and berry picking and sratching in thickets of tender alders, pondering as only a wild bear ponders the cottonwood seeds. And yet this is not the way the story goes, this bear goes by the name of Bruce. “The idea of wilderness needs no defense, it only needs defenders.” / -Edward Abbey /
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Hedgehogs have changed little over the last 15 million years. Like many of the first mammals they have adapted to a nocturnal, insectivorous way of life. Hedgehogs occasionally perform a ritual called anointing. When the animal comes across a new scent, it will lick and bite the source and then form a scented froth in its mouth and paste it on its spines with its tongue. It is not known what the specific purpose of this ritual is, but some experts believe anointing camouflages the hedgehog with the new scent of the area and provides a possible poison or source of infection to any predator that gets poked by their spines. Anointing is sometimes also called anting because of a similar behavior in birds.
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Hill 60 was a low rise on the southern flank of the Ypres salient and was named for the 60 metre contour which marked its bounds. Today there is a memorial on the hill and a restuarant behind which these piglets were photographed.
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Arctic Fox / / /
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Glacial meltwater full of glacial “flour” looks cloudy as it runs downstream from the glaciers of Mt Rainier.
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A happy bear posing for the camera.
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My girlfriend’s insane kitten. Taking photos of this cat is a camera’s worst nightmare because she’s dark when focusing on her the background tends to come out over exposed. She doesn’t stay still for long so I was lucky to get this photo of her. I wanted to do something interesting with this picture so I gave myself a quick self-taught lesson in Photoshop after I wasn’t happy with the final colours produced in Lightroom. /
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I know, I know it’s my third dog shot in a row. I’m going soft!!!
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Acorn weevil
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An American Snout Butterfly, not uncommon but rarely seen as they so well-camouflaged. Notice his long snout? / Taken in Winchester, VA
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It was a pretty wild day when I took this shot. The North of England had been seeing lots of heavy rains and flooding.. the snout was full of roaring water, a wonderful sight to see. MY WATERFALLS SET
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An old reworked jpeg photo. I’ve already posted photo’s of the the higher part of the falls, this is it’s final plunge. MY WATERFALLS SET
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A trip to the park is all a bit much for my pet whippet (Barnaby)
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Lisa C. Weber ©2008 (Created with Bryce 6.1) Visit My Complete Bubble for all My 3D Artwork. Thanks for dropping by and enjoy!
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Lisa C. Weber ©2008 (Created with Bryce 6.1) Visit My Complete Bubble for all My 3D Artwork. Thanks for dropping by and enjoy!
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Young yellow lab pup sitting obediently on the beach. Riley was told to pose for my camera… more obedient than kids.
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What they need is a damn good whacking
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Big bear poking his head out of a window.
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Lisa C. Weber ©2008 (Created with Bryce 6.1) Visit My Complete Bubble for all My 3D Artwork. Thanks for dropping by and enjoy!
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