A Jumping spider (maybe a Hyllus sp.) from West Java, Indonesia
“Sheep-stack” (stapelschaap) is part of a series (acryllic and ink on paper) I did for a book of my paintings combined with humorous animal poetry (from various authors) called “Het stapelschaap en andere dierengedichten” ISBN-10 90 77408 27 4. This is the one that got used for the cover (and title) of the book.
View from Clingman’s Dome parking lot.Dead fir was cause by the balsam woolly adelged
Sheep with lambs on fresh green meadow
Taken in Needham in the summer of ‘08
Willy with his favourite umbrella, his pot of tea, and of course, his monocle.
up at the crack of dawn we thought we had a head start on everyone. around the next corner our rental KA came to an unexpected halt….nobody told these citizens about the new zealand traffic law….keep left….lake hawea is on the right, lake wanaka ahead on the left . we followed the makarora river up through the haast pass to the west coast and north to fox glacier
Kaiju Shokushu Ni
Banksia baueri or Woolly Banksia also goes under the names of Possum Banksia and Teddy Bear Banksia and is a West Australian shrub from the Albany region. The soft downy flowerheads are the largest in the genus and can grow to 40cm long and 18 cm wide. The flowers are yellow and the down is a soft grey-mauve shade. /
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 !
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 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 !
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 !
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
Asian elephant 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 !
This small ground cover is ‘battling’ for existance in the garden…..turns this lovely red-orange in winter!! Its growing up the side of a “woolly Tree”!!
wallabys at manor park, wales it was lovely to roam freely among these beauts
Best Viewed Large All Rights Reserved / @ Julia Wright
Canberra
Dwarf Woolly Meadowfoam (Rare & Endangered). / Only grows on the Table Rocks near Medford Oregon. Very small flower, I had to lay down in the water to get this close. Luckly it was a warm day and I dried off quickly. Fellow hikers thought I was nuts though! “Dwarf meadowfoam’s cream-colored, howlshaped / flowers and pale-green herbage can be found along the margins of vernal pools and intermounds from late March to May. The leaves are deeply pinnately lobed, and the solitary / flowers produce nutlets for fruits. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service presently classifies dwarf meadowfoam as a category 1 candidate for listing under the Endangered Species Act.” EXIF Info. / ImageDescription – Dwarf Woolly Meadowfoam (Rare & Endangered) – 0116 / Model – Canon EOS 20D / Software – Adobe Photoshop CS2 Windows / DateTime – 2006:10:24 15:58:27 / Copyright – Copyright Bart Elder / ExposureTime – 1/320 seconds / FNumber – 10 / ISOSpeedRatings – 400 / ApertureValue – F 10.00 / ExposureBiasValue – 0.00 / MeteringMode – Multi-segment / Flash – Flash not fired, compulsory flash mode / FocalLength – 80 mm
Mammoth appears out of the dark. / 18×24 scratchboard
Shot this around a month ago – I bet this little lamb has grown. The mother sheep are very protective so getting the little woolball on her own was lucky! It’s a shame the lambs lose their attractive coat patterns as they grow up. Background partly removed. Canon EOS 5D MkII with Canon EF 70-200mm L IS f/4 handheld
This is a macro photo of a native Kangaroo Island wildflower. The background has been digitally painted so the flower didn’t need to be picked for a more ‘studio’ look. Lit by sunshine. The original background was a dark grey to black colour as it was shadowy brush and it was a bit messy-looking. I love Riceflowers. Kangaroo Island has 4 varieties: KI Riceflower which is really large; this one the Woolly riceflower; the Heath Riceflower which is a tiny version; and the Yellow Riceflower, a mid-sized flower that is more yellow.
Big, Woolly Sheep at Edgar’s Mission, Victoria Pentax k10d / sigma 70-300 / no crop / levels in ps
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