Progress!
Still not entirely sure how much yarn this will need since I added colors and changed the body a bit but so far it looks like I will have a lot left over. Fair isle hats for everyone!
Pastel owlet moth, Eulithosia plesioglauca, Stiriinae, Noctuidae
Found in the southeastern United States and Mexico
Photos 1-3 by gaudettelaura, 4 by muir, 5-6 by silversea_starsong, 7 by berkshirenaturalist, 8-9 by suecar, and 10 by blisowsky
(via nice-beetles)
weavers and spinners
Pakistani | Navajo | Qashqai | Japanese | Romanian | Guatemalan | Benin | Kurdish
(via paranoidgemsbok)
Sampler (1849) - México
Cotton, plain weave; cut and drawn work embroidered with silk in overcast stitches; embroidered in double running and long-armed cross stitches; beaded with glass beads
(via polkadotmotmot)
No no, no no no no, no no no no,
no no there’s no limit!
A snake in Thailand spent enough time sitting still in the water to grow moss and turn into a dragon, apparently.
I don’t think that is healthy for the snake, I hope is fine
Oh it’s almost certainly not good for it, especially since the moss climbing up towards the eyes where it would obscure vision and the added water drag may slow down strikes on prey, but if the snake is otherwise healthy, the moss will likely be removed with the snake’s next shed. However, it IS a fascinating wild phenomenon captured on film.
I wonder if the fact that it now looks almost nothing at all like a snake would make up for the slowed strikes. Like, if it took me about a minute to decide that that’s a snake, a fish might get awfully close before reaching that conclusion
It’s possible, although fish don’t avoid predators only by sight, they use their lateral lines to detect movement. I would guess it would have more luck against something like frogs or lizards, but it’s also possible the movement of the moss itself might confuse a fish’s senses. Unfortunately the moss also makes it impossible to tell body condition to tell if the snake has been successful at hunting or not previously. It would be a fascinating case study, to see what it is doing in the wild, and whether or not it’s working well.
Also since @howlsmovingnutsack asked (even though they didn’t ask me), it is believed by local experts to be a puff-faced water snake! As far as I have been able to find out, the family collected it to bring to researchers, and has been feeding it while it awaits pickup.
(via bunjywunjy)

















