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Thursday, October 6, 2011

LEPORIDS (RABBITS and HARES). Another one of my non-traditional MAXIMUM CARDS with YOTH (Year of the Hare), from USA, made with a folded card which I can "postcardize" anytime, should I want. Should I? Pictorial postmark from Los Angeles, California, February 5, 2011

LEPORIDS (RABBITS and HARES). Another one of my non-traditional MAXIMUM CARDS with YOTH (Year of the Hare), from USA, made with a folded card which I can "postcardize" anytime, should I want. Should I? Pictorial postmark from Los Angeles, California, February 5, 2011.

All domestic LEPORIDS are rabbits.
The one above has flaccid downward ears.
The wild ones, rabbits and hares - don't.
What happens when a heart shape elongates its lobes? Won't it resemble a hare head shape, with upward ears? Find it in the above image.
If not, I'll find it for ya.

See my previous blogpost about the differences between RABBITS and HARES:

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2011

Guest Heart Thursday #78


Welcome to Guest Heart Thursday -
A place to share YOUR heart!

2 comments:

  1. I see a heart in the ear, and kinda-sorta a couple of hearts on the rabbit's back!

    YOTH? I've never heard of it said quite like this - as a word.

    I find myself wanting to say "Yah, I yike the YOTH, I yike it a yot!" Perhaps that's just my inner child bursting forth, much to my teenaged daughters' dismay :=}

    I hope you have a wonderful weekend, Dorin!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hahaha--Clytie's comment made me laugh! lol

    I see a heart shape in the combination of the little piggy and the white rabbit. I see another in the face of the rabbit sniffing the kitten, and another in the kitten's fur.

    Lovely choices for GHT! lol

    ReplyDelete

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