Here’s another photo from the Comedy Wildlife Competition. There’s no doubt that this otter mom has everything under control!

https://www.comedywildlifephoto.com/
Have a good weekend. 😉
Here’s another photo from the Comedy Wildlife Competition. There’s no doubt that this otter mom has everything under control!

https://www.comedywildlifephoto.com/
Have a good weekend. 😉
It might be autumn, but in the Okanagan, there are still many lovely boating days left.

Happy Thursday.

Pictures to entertain, bring joy, and, if you like, inspire you to create with words or images. Whether that’s a poem, story, play, novel, memory, …
Today’s #PictureOfTheDay and #writingprompt: 15/Sept/21
Beautiful flowers courtesy of Stuart. 🙂
The Comedy Wildlife Photo competition has some very cute entries this year. Here’s one of them.

I assume the pigeon got rid of the leaf and went on with much clearer vision!

These seem to be a type of daisy, but they are very bright autumn flowers, no matter what they are called. 🙂

Pictures for your entertainment, joy, and, if you like, to inspire you to create something with words or images. Whether that’s a poem, story, play, …
Today’s #PictureOfTheDay and #writingprompt: 13/Sept/21
A Mediterranean beach, courtesy of Stuart. 🙂
Penticton’s dog beach at Lake Okanagan.

There were some very happy dogs running around!
Happy Monday; happy week. 🙂
They are coming to the end of their season …

Happy sunflower Sunday. 🙂
Good morning Morning Glory!

Happy weekend. 🙂
I found the following photo in a piece from Live Science (https://www.livescience.com/) and couldn’t resist sharing it. Below I have excerpted the article about the photo.

‘A stunning photo captures a group of cheetahs, the world’s fastest land sprinters, struggling to swim through a raging river in Kenya.
The group of male cheetahs was fording the Talek River in the Maasai Mara National Reserve in an effort to access better hunting grounds. The striking photo is one of the highly commended entries in the 2021 Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition.
Buddhilini de Soyza, an investment banker and amateur photographer, took the photo on a trip to Kenya in January 2020 while with her husband and a Maasai guide, after spending several hours watching the cheetahs pace up and down the river bank. Suddenly, the lead cheetah jumped into the water, and the rest followed.
“I just couldn’t believe my eyes,” de Soyza told Live Science. “I don’t actually remember clicking [the photo]. I obviously did because I’ve got a good 50, 60 shots of them crossing. All I do remember shouting is, ‘Oh my god what are they going to do? They’re going to die!”
Cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) are strong swimmers, but like many cats can be hesitant around water. The river in the photo was rough following heavy rain and flooding, but the cheetahs needed to cross it to reach the larger side of their territory, which had more prey, according to de Soyza. She took the photo as the cheetahs hit the most turbulent part of the river.
“I feel like the lead cheetah is talking to me,” de Soyza said of the photo. “He’s looking straight at me, so it almost feels like he’s just saying, ‘Put down that camera and help me.'” The river’s current dragged the cheetahs about 330 feet (100 meters) downstream, but they successfully made it across.’
What a wonderful capture!