Can you explain this one a bit more please for me because I am thickActually, if you enhance, pan right, zoom in and take a hard copy right there, you can see a reflection of the face of one of the other replicants.
Can you explain this one a bit more please for me because I am thickActually, if you enhance, pan right, zoom in and take a hard copy right there, you can see a reflection of the face of one of the other replicants.
Blade Runner.Can you explain this one a bit more please for me because I am thick
Looks like it's narrowly avoided a "gunging" on an infantile novelty quiz show from the 1990s.here is a picture i took of a heron. not saying this is a competition to see who can take the best picture of a heron. just saying. that this is a picture of a heron. that i took.
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i'll keep an eye out for dead pigeon's today
This is theoretically not an insect egg, but it was produced because of the laying of an insect egg. This is a Gall. Galls are growths produced on plants, usually because of an insect or mite, though fungus and other causes may produce gall-like structures. This is probably the result of a Gall Wasp in the family Cynipidae. The Gall Wasp lays an egg, and when the egg hatches, the larva releases an enzyme that causes the Gall to grow. The Gall Wasp Larva then feeds on the tissue in the Gall. Galls do not harm the plants. Here is a similar photo on BugGuide, and one on Wikimedia.
As a tribute to A. A. Milne and/or the Clangers?Didn't know owls tesselate.
My wife calls them "wols" on purpose.