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- Feb 21, 2010
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2nd roof tile ....up from the bottom....
Topman. Yes. The house sparrow, the most common UK bird, bit still amazing watching the adults copes the young out to fly for the first time, and a fine example of how nature has adapted to the human species. Using houses instead of trees to nest as always as do bats.2nd roof tile ....up from the bottom....
They are an amazing snake ....definitely the largest of the " rat type snakes".....ultra *****'n black , very docile ...but a mean black eaten' machine out in the field . They will consume any poisonous snake they come across ...no problem ....and just about everything else that crosses their path.Nope, I've never found an indigo. I checked in my field guide and they aren't found in Illinois though. I hear they're pretty uncommon. I've only ever found the black rats, ringnecks, garters, northern water snakes, brown snakes, and once a prairie king snake.
WowThis is what I saw in my back yard about a month ago.
Looks nice. Where do you live.As you can probably see, I have a forest in my backyard so I get a wide diversity of different wildlife. I love it!
Nice. It's all connected to nature. And I bet there's a 1000 critters in that photo. Lol . We just can't see them. Lol.View attachment 137143
I know this picture has nothing to do with critters, but this is Mother Nature at her finest! A gorgeous Tucson sunset tonight. I just wanted to share some of the Sonoran Desert beauty in south Arizona.
Is that last one a praying mantus. I was on hols last year in cyprus. We were in a Greek restaurant and a praying mantis fell off the roof onto my dinner. Bit of useless info lol.
Is that last one a praying mantus. I was on hols last year in cyprus. We were in a Greek restaurant and a praying mantis fell off the roof onto my dinner. Bit of useless info lol.
Quite funny to look down at my dinner with a praying mantis staring back at me.