Photographers accidentally make mutants out of wild animals
Two-headed ponies, stuck-together zebras and headless penguins — this is a collection of very timely pictures that you will want to look at more closely. Photographer Jofrey Baker's jaw literally dropped when he saw his picture of a wild pony-it looks like the animal has grown a second head. Another photographer, Miguel Margarido, was traveling with friends in the Kruger National Park in South Africa, where he shot two zebras. In the photo, they turned out to be Siamese twins. Another picture was taken when tourists drove past a giraffe, which at the time of shooting wanted to scratch. The result was a mutant of some sort. All these great photos taken "at that very moment" are collected in one collection.
The giraffe wanted to scratch itself.
The pony had grown a second head. Gower Peninsula, Wales, United Kingdom.
The camel has completely lost its head. Rajasthan, India.
The eagle landed, but the head didn't.
The Canadian red-headed woodpecker is rare, and the two-headed woodpecker is even rarer!
As you know, penguins can't fly. And the head, apparently, still could.
Three bodies, two heads, five paws. Q: How many flamingos are there?
Snake Gorynych, you?
A two-faced cheetah.
And how well the print matched!
Split giraffe personality.
Double-headed. Feathered. Your.
Keywords: Animals | Photographer | Positive | Movement | Wildlife | Funny | Mutant | Photomoment | Case