Wheither its protecting your cubs, or giving eskimo kisses to your lioness, animals feel, and show love. Enjoy the pictures below of animals showing their love for each other.
Draganin Blog
Wheither its protecting your cubs, or giving eskimo kisses to your lioness, animals feel, and show love. Enjoy the pictures below of animals showing their love for each other.
Other times , they may be looking to play rough.
Whether it is a nudge, or a full on attack, animals can’t always talk it out like us humans. The dominance of the animal takes over, and the winner stands tall as a reminder to other animals that they are the stronger one.


The bird; a warm blooded species, that has feathers and lays eggs. Did you know that the modern bird has no teeth? While some birds are hunted, others are kept as pets, like the common parrot. We see birds everyday,in our backyard, when we are out for a walk, or when we are trying to eat a snack at a park, but we never stop and look at how beautiful these animals really are. Go bird watching one day, the beauty of the bird may just happen to suprise you.
Animals love the snow just as much as us humans do. From playing in the snow, to eating it as a treat, check out these photos below of beautiful animals that cannot get enough of beautiful white snow.
We love our house cats just as much as we love our wild, big cats. From lions, to tigers, to cubs, these cats enjoy laying under the sun rays, napping, and catching prey. Would you like to get close to one of these big cats?
The 17-year-old photographer Jessica Trinh shot her dog Chuppy. This lovely golden retriever is very likable.In addition to great photography, I think it is very harmonious relationship of Jessica and Chuppy, otherwise it is very difficult to shoot such a warm photo.
Piles of fluffy snow probably bring to mind images of polar bears, but many different creatures enjoy playing around in the snow as well. We’ve put together a gallery of adorable animals frolicking in the flurries — including reindeer! Luckily some of these animals have their own personal fur coat to keep them warm.
While werewolves are the stuff of folklore, the light and the gravitational pull of the Moon do have real effects on the behaviour and physiology of a host of earthbound organisms — including, perhaps, people. Moonlight can also change animal behaviour. Many marine organisms move up and down in the sea depending on the level of moonlight in order to keep their light levels constant. On land, some nocturnal animals come out on a well-lit night to hunt , others stay hidden to avoid predators.
Dust bath (also sand bath) is the act of an animal grooming and most likely cleansing its skin or fur from parasites by rolling or moving around within dust or sand. Many animals like to roll in sand or dirt to keep the flies and insects away from them and also to help dry off after exercise or being wet. A sand roll, which is a stall or yard covered with deep sand, is traditionally included as part of stable complexes, for use by racehorses after exercise. Dust baths are a necessity for some animals and serve to clean the feathers, skin, or fur similar to the more common bathing in water, or wallowing in mud. Birds cower close to the ground while taking a dust bath and wiggle their bodies. This will disperse loose soil in the air. The birds spread one or both wings. The dust bath is often followed by thorough shaking to ruffle the feathers or preening.
Just because tigers, monkeys, and birds don’t roll out of bed, jump in the shower, and turn on the tap, doesn’t mean they don’t have serious and involved ways to get clean. Bathing has been a central ritual of human civilizations for nearly all of recorded history but many animals, too, need to bathe to maintain hygiene and body temperature. Several species of birds and mammals exhibit the behavior but—while functionally very similar—animal bathing often takes a radically different form. Perhaps the most commonly witnessed animal bathing are birds.
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