^ I’ve decided that I’m going to post random pictures I’ve snapped at the top of my blog posts every once in a while. You can click them to see the full image, or just ignore them completely. For those who read my blog about a year ago, I recall mentioning a bunneh who had decided to inhabit my backyard. Well, he’s back. <3 A couple of months ago I saw three rabbits running around my front yard chasing each other (this was when the weather was just starting to get warm). These days I’ve only managed to catch a glimpse of one of the three. Perhaps the other two have moved out (I sure hope they didn’t die… I have a major road right outside my house, so it’s worrying). As I was about to say, I’ve been taking a few pictures of various creatures as the weather has developed. One includes a robin which has nested 4 eggs on top of a lamp that sits over my balcony, and just under my roof. The past few weeks I’ve been observing the creature who seems freakishly unfrightened when I step near it (clearly, this robin would die protecting it’s 4 eggs). A couple of days ago I checked the nest and saw a mass amount of feathers inside and I believe the baby birds were hiding their heads below. Today, I checked again. This time, when waving a camera phone across the top of the nest, a baby bird popped up expecting me to feed it. Each time the phone was swiped over the nest, the bird would pop up. Childhood circus memories of whack-a-mole instantly sprung to mind. (Don’t worry I didn’t whack them
).
Anyway, I wasn’t supposed to blog about birds or bunnies or pictures for that matter, but it’s a little too late and I’m a little too unwilling to turn this blog into an essay:
Fin.
Filed under: Abstract, Nature, Photos | Tagged: american robin, eastern cottontail






That robin picture was taken with a camera phone?! o_O I guess I am stuck at the times when the pictures were very sucky and squareish.
Oh, no. Not that one. xD That was just a digital camera. Camera phones still suck ass.
The one on the camera phone is still on the camera, and I really don’t know how to take it off.