Oof. I've seen some pretty awful pictures of what they can do.aggiesed8r said:
Yessir. Fer de lance.
Oof. I've seen some pretty awful pictures of what they can do.aggiesed8r said:
Yessir. Fer de lance.
aggiesed8r said:
Hiking in Central America.
I've watched enough Naked & Afraids to know exactly what this one is.aggiesed8r said:
Hiking in Central America.
just looked them up on wikipedia and theres a picture of an 11 year old with maybe the most necrotic/gangrene leg ive seen.MyNameIsJeff said:Oof. I've seen some pretty awful pictures of what they can do.aggiesed8r said:
Yessir. Fer de lance.
aggiesed8r said:
Hiking in Central America.
Sea Speed said:
Speaking of angles, i didn't see a single brown anole as a kid and now insee SO MANY around Houston. It is wild. We just moved out to the Golden triangle and the browns are gone. Pretty wild.
12th Man Ag said:aggiesed8r said:
Hiking in Central America.
So, are you really this close to that sucker or is there some zoom lens help?
I had a friend doing research on frogs in the DR for her doctorate and she got tagged by one. Nearly died and almost lost her leg. They made a National Geographic special about her. The pics of her leg flayed open due to the venom were things of nightmares.
Because Austin already had the ******* of Texas title.maroon barchetta said:Sea Speed said:
Speaking of angles, i didn't see a single brown anole as a kid and now insee SO MANY around Houston. It is wild. We just moved out to the Golden triangle and the browns are gone. Pretty wild.
I've never understood what is golden about an area inside the Beaumont-Port Arthur-Orange boundary.
maroon barchetta said:Sea Speed said:
Speaking of angles, i didn't see a single brown anole as a kid and now insee SO MANY around Houston. It is wild. We just moved out to the Golden triangle and the browns are gone. Pretty wild.
I've never understood what is golden about an area inside the Beaumont-Port Arthur-Orange boundary.
maroon barchetta said:Sea Speed said:
Speaking of angles, i didn't see a single brown anole as a kid and now insee SO MANY around Houston. It is wild. We just moved out to the Golden triangle and the browns are gone. Pretty wild.
I've never understood what is golden about an area inside the Beaumont-Port Arthur-Orange boundary.
We also went through that park with a guide. The wildlife they can spot is amazing.aggiesed8r said:
About 5 feet away. We were at Manuel Antonio National Park. The guide pointed it out.
Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:We also went through that park with a guide. The wildlife they can spot is amazing.aggiesed8r said:
About 5 feet away. We were at Manuel Antonio National Park. The guide pointed it out.
Our first sloth was on the way to Poas Volcano. There was a tour bus pulled over on the side of the road with about 15 other cars. The little dude was crawling along the electrical lines over the road between poles and everyone was taking pictures. The bus driver said he's usually there about this time every day.Counterpoint said:Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:We also went through that park with a guide. The wildlife they can spot is amazing.aggiesed8r said:
About 5 feet away. We were at Manuel Antonio National Park. The guide pointed it out.
Glad I saw sloths there instead of fer de lances!
agree; big pronounced Hershey KissesDJV2012 said:
Pattern on that one is gorgeous
My understanding of the Fer de Lance is it is by far, the most common venomous snake from central America through Brazil. I'm sure mosquitos are still the most dangerous animal, but only because there's thirty billion of them with about 15 different diseases.MyNameIsJeff said:Oof. I've seen some pretty awful pictures of what they can do.aggiesed8r said:
Yessir. Fer de lance.