The religious community rallied around a turtle with "God" seemingly grown on its shell. "Saint Shelley" as she came to be known, was the figurehead for "take that Athiests" movements. Then is was revealed the picture initially taken of the turtle, was done in a mirror. In related news, the inaguration of our first canine president is next week...
yep, i was amazed the first time i saw it, there are few more videos from the same person, and to fly with him would be an amazing experience, maybe some day i will arrange for a fly, at least he works in my same continent even if not so close, and that part of france is worth to visit anyway.
There is an American Robin nest in a bush right next to my porch.
I took the pictures of the inside of the nest while the mother was away. She came right back a few minutes later, and I then took the two pictures of her through the porch window. There are two babies and one egg inside the nest right now. I wouldn't worry about that last egg being bad though, since all three of the eggs were unhatched just yesterday when I looked (although one had a hole pecked in it by the baby). The last remaining unhatched egg looks to have cracks forming on one side, so it will likely hatch very soon.
Sorry about the poor quality of the picture of the inside of the nest, I was kind of in a hurry to get out of there before the mother came back. Robins are very skittish of humans and sometimes abandon nests if there is too much human activity. I have been very careful not to disturb her, and if she can put up with the very loud construction going on just on the other side of the bush, then it is quite unlikely that she will abandon the nest from my few visits while she is away (especially now that the eggs are hatching).
My wife forgot about the wreath she had hung in the backyard and we ended up with these guys in there.
I was going to try to get a better picture, then post about it here. But this weekend, I noticed the wreath was askew. When I went to look, the nest was empty.
So some crow (I assume) got a meal, and we got to clean up the crap earlier than we thought we would. Circle of life, I guess.
Judging by the eggs, these were house finches. I never saw an adult near the nest.
Comments
Even cuter than the real deal~!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2P5bFr3B6qs
I see your dog and counter it with a wild baby!
https://youtu.be/HTjX8YilcJg
https://youtu.be/4xJyxo5MJp0
Trachycephalus resinifictrix are the best froggies evar~!
I want one the size of a small dog.
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/god-turtle-image/
also here's my girlfriend's cat, O'Malley He's five to Lucky's nine, and he has these chattering, burbly meows.
I took the pictures of the inside of the nest while the mother was away. She came right back a few minutes later, and I then took the two pictures of her through the porch window. There are two babies and one egg inside the nest right now. I wouldn't worry about that last egg being bad though, since all three of the eggs were unhatched just yesterday when I looked (although one had a hole pecked in it by the baby). The last remaining unhatched egg looks to have cracks forming on one side, so it will likely hatch very soon.
Sorry about the poor quality of the picture of the inside of the nest, I was kind of in a hurry to get out of there before the mother came back. Robins are very skittish of humans and sometimes abandon nests if there is too much human activity. I have been very careful not to disturb her, and if she can put up with the very loud construction going on just on the other side of the bush, then it is quite unlikely that she will abandon the nest from my few visits while she is away (especially now that the eggs are hatching).
I was going to try to get a better picture, then post about it here. But this weekend, I noticed the wreath was askew. When I went to look, the nest was empty.
So some crow (I assume) got a meal, and we got to clean up the crap earlier than we thought we would. Circle of life, I guess.
Judging by the eggs, these were house finches. I never saw an adult near the nest.