Today's Seal Is: Shrimple As That
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A cirek running through the rain with a flying creature far up ahead. Despite the image cireks aren't really built to run long distances, they generally live among thick foliage and waterlogged areas where there's not much use in trying to run down prey. However this one seems to be on a mission.
Not much to say about this drawing, I wanted to try to create some brushes in CSP and use them to speed up backgrounds. Not sure how I feel about the result.
The flying creature is not anything I have worked out yet but I have some ideas and hope I have something to share about them soon.
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Potentially dumb question, but does a guide on what insects cats can eat exist? Not that I want the bugs who sneak in to die, but I'd like to know if they do get caught by my cats before I can get to them that my cats won't be harmed.
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saw a lot of fungi on a hike <3
(image IDs under the cut)
Image 1: Close-up, top view of Mycena roseilignicola (Rosy Mycena) on a mossy log. They have clear pink caps with depressed centres, and stipes (hardly visible).
Image 2: Front view of Amauroderma rugosum on the forest floor. It has a brown stipe. It has a cap with concentric zones of brown and slightly rolled black edges.
Image 3: Fungus in the Flammulina genus on a vertical piece of log, with yellow-brown caps that are darker in the centre. It is broadly convex and has stipes (hardly visible).
Image 4: Rhodofomitopsis feei on a log. It is sessile (no stipe, bracket fungi). It has a cap with concentric zones of brown, and white edges.
Image 5: Fungus in the Trametes family on a mossy log. It is sessile and its cap has concentric zones of brown, light brown, green, and brown.
Image 6: Scattered Mycena roseilignicola (Rosy Mycena) and Mycena chlorophos on decaying sections of a log. The photo is overexposed and the caps of the Rosy Mycerna appear whitish, almost light pink. They have depressed centres and visible stipes. Mycena chlorophos are small and white, with broadly convex caps and stipes.
Image 7: Top view of Mycena chlorophos on a crevice of a log. They are small and white, with slightly recurved edges and less visible stipes.
Image 8: Fungus in the Ganoderma genus on a vertical piece of wood. It is brown with a sandy texture closer to the wood, has irregular concentric zones of darker brown, and is white at the edges.
Image 9: Fungus in the Ganoderma genus on a piece of wood. It is sessile, dark pink near the wood and white or light pink at the edges. It has slightly recurved edges and a moldy-looking texture.
Image 10: A further, point-of-view shot of Scattered Mycena roseilignicola (Rosy Mycena) and Mycena chlorophos on a log. The fungi appear to be very small, clustered along some sections of the log. There are dead leaves on the forest floor and various plants in the background.
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I am lowkey jealous of people whose family heirlooms are jewellery or something normal like that, because the only things that have been passed onto me by my grandparents are a bible in a language I can't read, a creepy china doll, a houseplant that only flowers once a year, a police baton, a dagger and an unidentified animal skin :(
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Today's Seal Is: The Slurper
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THERES A SHARK TAXIDERMY AT A RESTAURANT IM AT SND I DONT KNOW ITS SPECIES
someone help
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Behold, OCs, random doodle I did in class gone wrong, names:
Bnuny: Marshmellow
Deeeer: Pinecone
Multicolored ball of fluff that is not a defined species: Scruffy
The corgo: Floof, more of a persona then an oc
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