This newborn pudu deer sleeps in a flowerpot. IT SLEEPS IN A FLOWERPOT.
dirt enthusiast

oozey mess

blake kathryn
noise dept.

Love Begins

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shark vs the universe
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
AnasAbdin
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KIROKAZE

if i look back, i am lost

Kaledo Art
One Nice Bug Per Day
Show & Tell
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NASA
ojovivo
RMH
macklin celebrini has autism

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@dioptasy
This newborn pudu deer sleeps in a flowerpot. IT SLEEPS IN A FLOWERPOT.
raven boy
Fox n dogs
★ IMJAYU | Uraraka & Tsuyu ☆ ✔ republished w/permission
I was soaked and freezing cold by the time we reached this alpine lake, but something about the sound and tranquility kept me completely unbothered.
For RTmonsters4
Wing beast’s evolution.
Meet Kingsley Gsd
Credit: @blackwolfblackpanther
Traditional Chinese hanfu by 阿文S-image
Traditional Chinese hanfu by 張mo_
Isn’t this ravens plumage gorgeous?
The angels again! (Nihil)
Stunning photos from Vogue of traditional Mexican women equestrian riders in the sport of Escaramuza (rodeo sport). Article by Mariel Cruz, Photos by Devin Doyle.
Last year, photographer Devin Doyle, who’d spent two years photographing high school rodeo culture in the United States, became curious as to what the Mexican equivalent might look like. After all, he says, “It’s the same land, the same ranching culture.” What he found was an exciting competitive equestrian sport performed by women dressed in stunning traditional costumes, a sport directly inspired by the Adelitas—the female soldiers who fought in the Mexican Revolution.
Escaramuza, an event within the larger rodeo-like sport known as charrería (now recognized as Mexico’s national sport) is comprised of teams of up to 16 women (though only eight can compete at a time) performing a series of routines inside a lienzo charro, or stadium, at breakneck galloping speeds—all while riding sidesaddle.
i’m ready for the fight & fate
コーラ [Pixiv]
The empress of Great Han is still right here. I will safeguard the Han Empire until the very end.
Metamorphosis | Hiroko Otake