Mother baboon on the wild
Lake Nyasa - The third largest and second deepest…
Concept
Flying team
Moon fire
Friend of very warm places
Surprise . . .
Dhow
Macaco cão
Heard you
Sweet young thing
Hi, now you are really a grown up ...
The family
Get out fast
And crazy as hell . . .one can be . . .
They can not see me
Near Kuamba
Is the limit
Coiffeur, man who combs . . .
MASCARA
Dreams
What is that ? ? ? - see PIP please.
Rice pads
Mother and Father gone fishing . . .
Red-legged partridge
Home
Golden Hour
We are the happy small ones . . .
King Mackerel
The Lagoon
Could you do it ?
Being followed . . .
The Lady is a Tramp
New Home
Mount Namuli
Love
African Sunday.
Lazy River
Stay with the family, I say.
She likes me
Musseln
Javali Africano
She
He doesn't like me.
She likes me
Africa,elephants - scanned from a Kodachrome II…
Fire
On the way
Who are you ?
Tenderness
How to show happiness
East Africa - 1964
Peaceful Elephants
Three dreams
1973 South East Africa - The woman's touch
See also...
" Amazing Nature - Einmalige Natur - La nature unique - La natura unica "
" Amazing Nature - Einmalige Natur - La nature unique - La natura unica "
+9999 photos no limits, no restrictions, no conditions
+9999 photos no limits, no restrictions, no conditions
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Africa - Water is essential
British usage, tends not to use "turtle" as a generic term for all members of the order, and also applies the term "tortoises" broadly to all land-dwelling members of the order Testudines, regardless of whether they are actually members of the family Testudinidae. In Britain, terrapin is used to refer to a larger group of semiaquatic turtles than the restricted meaning in America.General American usage agrees; turtle is often a general term (although some restrict it to aquatic turtles); tortoise is used only in reference to terrestrial turtles or, more narrowly, only those members of Testudinidae, the family of modern land tortoises; and terrapin may refer to turtles that are small and live in fresh and brackish water, in particular the diamondback terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin). Scanned from a 1973 Kodachrome slide.
micritter, RHH, Helena Ferreira, Trudy Tuinstra and 14 other people have particularly liked this photo
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