Blue heron.
Camouflage.
No introductions needed.
Skunk Works, baby!
Curtiss P-40 Kittyhawk on the left, Vought F4U-1D Corsair on the right.
Northrop P-61 Black Widow
Yup, that's her. Enola Gay, the very same.
Boeing 367-80.
Junkers Ju 52/3m.
Boeing 307 Stratoliner.
Camouflage II.
They're *doin'* it! :D
Watching me watching them.
I didn't even know there was a spiderweb there. My camera's jumpy autofocus takes credit for this one.
Kissy-face!
What? Who? Us? No, no, we were just... *talking*. ............ (Is he gone yet???)
The lower half of the picture is actually a reflection of the ceiling, in water that's only an inch or so deep. Feel free to blither now.
And boggle.
And gape.
And goggle.
More of the same. You may continue dropping your jaw.
And more...
... and more.
See www.luraycaverns.com for detailed desciptions, explanations, and pictures by the pros.
I couldn't tell if the green stuff was algae, growing because of the [human-introduced, artificial] light, or because of copper ('cuprous', rather) compounds dissolved in the water being precipitated out.
Looking straight up at the ceiling.
I thought it looked like a Buddhist sculpture/temple. My companion thought it looked like an ice-cream cone swirl.
Pirate's treasure? No - just pennies in the 'wishing well'.
These *are* `living' caves, let me remind you. The rock formations are still forming! But they're still inorganic, though, even if they do look like organic, fleshy tissue.. :)
The first bicycles! :D
Would a bicyle with a hundred wheels be called a 'centicyle', or a 'centipede'?
<ironic> You can tell this was a racer - it's got dropped handlebars! </ironic> ;)
Ford's hood ornament / symbol was a duck? (Goose?)