I’m leaning towards AI on this one. I don’t know all, or even most equine breeds, but that eye looks way to human and the tuft of hair on the forehead is unlike any equine I’ve seen.
Donkeys can have eyes like that, black rimmed like they’re wearing eyeliner.
They also have that fluffy tuft of hair, and then a short, upright mane… not long and silky like a horse’s.
…
One interesting thing I found out long ago at the county fair is that horse/donkey crosses tend, but not absolutely, to have the mother’s face and the father’s rear.
So this one, to me, looks like it could be a hinny… Mama donkey, Papa horse.
But hinnies are much less common than mules, stallions being much bigger than jennies (lady mules).
You can usually recognize them by their donkey faces and somewhat flowing horse tails.
…
A mule (Mama horse, Papa donkey) can have a longer, more horsey mane, and almost always has a tufted donkey tail.
If she’d only stand up we could check!
…
BTW I said a baby mule because I think a lot of people just call them all mules, and don’t know the word “hinny.”
Kitty just proved one of my favorite observations.
When things are far away from you, they’re very small.
When they get closer, they’re much, much larger.
…
If you wanted to, say, steal a car, you would just have to close your eyes, reach across the street, and pick it up.
You CANNOT look at it until you set it down in front of you, or it’ll be the wrong size.
The problem with this plan is that, usually, our arms are too short to reach things where they’re tiny.
That’s why, in fact, Tyrannosaurus Rex was bound to become extinct… those tiny short forearms.
…
Kitty could catch and eat the flying saucer because, you’ll notice, he didn’t look at it when he pulled it close, so he could still pop it into his mouth.
The one he saw up close, though, was WAY too big to eat!
(Another science lesson for you, absolutely gratis. You’re welcome.)
.
We here in New England are not Lakers fans. That’s the reason for the thumbs down.
Not a Lakers fan either, but the pup wins my vote.
..
In a sci-fi movie, that middle section would blast off into space, full of Earth hostages.
..or when Claude pushes a red button
,.
Not around all those parrots. They probably scarfed it right up.
I think I found it…. The resolution isn’t the sharpest but it looks like a butterfly to me anyway.
See what you think….
I think you have it
Wow, I was looking for something much larger. I think that’s it, though.
Easy. It’s sitting on the green tractor.
And that’s why that tractor is different!
,
Claws IN, Missy!
I just refinished that table!
,,
There sure are a lot of strewn clothes near the entrance to the tunnel of badly written love.
I’m not sure it’s any tidier in well-written love.
Gotta love the unicorn romance.
I love the plot hole leading to suspended disbelief. Because if you don’t suspend disbelief, you’ll fall like Wiley Coyote, when he looks down,
,,,
..
Reminds me of the late Duchess of Windsor’s gold bracelet, by Cartier…
which sold at auction earlier this century for 4.5 million dollars.
If he is not the model for the muppet character Beaker I’ll eat my hat.
Well, here’s another nice mess you’ve gotten me into!
.
Sweet face.
I think it’s a baby mule.
I’m leaning towards AI on this one. I don’t know all, or even most equine breeds, but that eye looks way to human and the tuft of hair on the forehead is unlike any equine I’ve seen.
Donkeys can have eyes like that, black rimmed like they’re wearing eyeliner.
They also have that fluffy tuft of hair, and then a short, upright mane… not long and silky like a horse’s.
…
One interesting thing I found out long ago at the county fair is that horse/donkey crosses tend, but not absolutely, to have the mother’s face and the father’s rear.
So this one, to me, looks like it could be a hinny… Mama donkey, Papa horse.
But hinnies are much less common than mules, stallions being much bigger than jennies (lady mules).
You can usually recognize them by their donkey faces and somewhat flowing horse tails.
…
A mule (Mama horse, Papa donkey) can have a longer, more horsey mane, and almost always has a tufted donkey tail.
If she’d only stand up we could check!
…
BTW I said a baby mule because I think a lot of people just call them all mules, and don’t know the word “hinny.”
Kitty may have bitten off more than he can chew.
What an effort just to get Kitty to the vet.
Kitty just proved one of my favorite observations.
When things are far away from you, they’re very small.
When they get closer, they’re much, much larger.
…
If you wanted to, say, steal a car, you would just have to close your eyes, reach across the street, and pick it up.
You CANNOT look at it until you set it down in front of you, or it’ll be the wrong size.
The problem with this plan is that, usually, our arms are too short to reach things where they’re tiny.
That’s why, in fact, Tyrannosaurus Rex was bound to become extinct… those tiny short forearms.
…
Kitty could catch and eat the flying saucer because, you’ll notice, he didn’t look at it when he pulled it close, so he could still pop it into his mouth.
The one he saw up close, though, was WAY too big to eat!
(Another science lesson for you, absolutely gratis. You’re welcome.)
Kid Rock was listening to Warren Zevon when he wrote the super original All Summer Long.
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