styofa doing anything

No title available

No title available
Sade Olutola
h
i don't do bad sauce passes
One Nice Bug Per Day
tumblr dot com
todays bird
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.
No title available
sheepfilms
dirt enthusiast
AnasAbdin

Andulka
d e v o n

Product Placement
YOU ARE THE REASON
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from United States
seen from Indonesia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Thailand
seen from Brazil
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Canada

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Greece
seen from Ireland

seen from Greece
seen from Brazil

seen from Malaysia
seen from Brazil
seen from United States
@nickandthecandlestick
One of the coolest things to remember is that because prey animals have eyes on the side of their head, they are looking at you when they're in profile, not facing you! Hot tip for artists and animal lovers!
Okay not really. The thing about animals with eyes on the side of their head: they DO in fact look directly at things and they CAN use binocular vision. I am going to use horse examples because horses are what I know best.
A horse uses binocular vision when it is trying to see something better - monocular vision gives a wider field of view but no depth perception and is not very clear.
When alert, the horse will look directly at something, facing it, using binocular vision to determine what it is and whether it is a threat.
A general rule of thumb with horses is that whatever their ears are pointed at is what they are looking at.
In the first image, the horse is looking at me. In the second, she is not.
In this set of images, she is investigating that blanket. You can clearly see her head pointed at the object and she examines with her binocular vision and nose.
Now, in this case, the horse is looking at me without his head facing me. You can tell he's looking at me with his monocular vision by how he has one ear facing me.
In most of the professionally done horse reference pics you see, the horses are going to have their ears pricked up and alert and be using their binocular vision. Why? Because it just looks better. How? Either the horse is investigating/curious about the camera or person holding the camera OR someone standing where they want the horse to look has just snapped their fingers or whistled or waved an umbrella or something to get the horses attention.
I just find it silly to say that the prey animals are not looking at you when facing head on, when the examples you gave do not seem to demonstrate that. To me, all of the squirrel and bird pictures look as if they are looking at the viewer - with the side view being a more 'relaxed/trusting' sort of look while the front view is a tenser investigation. The horse does not look like its looking at the view in either drawing - the first looks relaxed and looking somewhat to the side, the second looks alert and gazing directly in front of it.
What’s the world’s smallest bear? Weighing in around 103 lbs (47 kg), it’s the sun bear (Helarctos malayanus)! Named for the golden patch on its chest, this species is about half the size of an American black bear (Ursus americanus). The sun bear, which can be found in parts of Southeast Asia, is an excellent climber and uses its long claws to help it move from tree to tree. This bear sometimes even makes nests of branches high in the treetops, where it snoozes up to 128 ft (40 m) off the ground.
Photo: Wich’yanan (Jay) Limparungpatthanakij, CC BY 4.0, iNaturalist
Siberian Squill/rysk blåstjärna. Värmland, Sweden (April 5, 2025).
An enemy is just a friend I haven't worn down
Are you saying that you're the main character of a kids cartoon?
I'm saying that "I'm going to be friends with you" is both a promise and a threat
*baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws* *baps you with my paws*
Reblog to bap the person you reblogged from with your paws
Melancholy (1876) by Odilon Redon
Mister Rogers
by Tom Brown from Kanahau - Utila Research and Conservation Facility
Quokkas can be convincing
heart-shaped crocuses
Mark Carney, Prime Minister of Canada.
Generations of damage. For Putin.
What generation of Pokémon is this?
Philosophy - Dmitry Kochanovich, 2019 (1st) Oil on canvas, 100x120cm
Ideal - Dmitry Kochanovich, 2019 (2nd) Oil on canvas