crawling things, amateur photography, macro photography, sci-fi
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Photo

Push th' little daisies and make em come up!
1 note
·
View note
Photo

FIRE
0 notes
Photo

Purple bursting amongst the dead leaves and bare trees.
0 notes
Photo

Found this common house spider crawling around on the dock. New house hunting?
30 notes
·
View notes
Photo

Candy-striped leafhoppers are so tiny and vibrant, you gotta be looking for bugs in order to spot them!
0 notes
Photo



I captured these little beauties at the Niagara Butterfly Conservatory with my canon 660. They’re so vibrant and gentle. Bottom orange one is a Dryas iulia or the "Julia" Butterfly, a part of the brush footed species. In the middle is another Brush-Footed beauty, Pteronymia, part of the Nymphalidae family. The largest family of butterflies on earth! On top is a Malabar tree nymph or Idea malabarica.
0 notes
Photo

Huygens Probe Lands On Titan By: Don Dixon
0 notes
Photo

RED MARS By Don Dixon, artwork used for the first book in Kim Stanley Robinson's outstanding Mars trilogy.
0 notes
Photo

Found this little guy in my bathroom, I haven't properly identified it yet. Looks kind of like a pseudo scorpion but it's more armoured. It moved like a jumping spider, the two long appendages out in front.
0 notes
Photo


Busy, adorable little spiders on the Windsor Waterfront before a downfall. Taken with my iPhone
0 notes
Photo



The Craven Sluck Spend an evening with Mike Kuchar.
0 notes
Photo




Godzilla Island…where I truly want to be.
0 notes
Photo

Hunky David Attenborough.
#sohandsome
0 notes
Photo


I was in LA last fall and had the fortunate opportunity of visiting the spider pavilion at the Natural History Museum.
The top lovely is a Black and Yellow garden spider, Argiope genus and around 3 inches in size.
The bottom beauty is Golden Silk Orb Weaver spider, Nephila genus. This glorious spider was almost 4 inches. This one lost a limb during battles at night for territory with the other arachnids at the pavilion, according the guide we asked.
They are quite timid and do not care about you, or your blood! Respect them.
0 notes