The Enchanted Cave 2
Delve into a strange cave with a seemingly endless supply of treasure, strategically choos
4.34 / 5.00 31,296 ViewsGhostbusters B.I.P.
COMPLETE edition of the interactive "choose next panel" comic
4.07 / 5.00 10,082 Viewsi drew this today... i dont know what i was drawing but i guess its two earth worms and one is coming home from work and catches his wife cheating on him with a frying pan... now i dont know what i could put of for text but if you guys want you can put it in... and or make your own thing of people cheating on one another.
At 5/9/07 05:34 PM, Delta-ForceZero19 wrote: i forgot the image
Wha? What happened to the quality of your drawing man?
They're usually pretty good. :(
lol... im just fooling around... what i am doing for drawins are awesome but i cannot show because there going to a big project that you will see sometime by mid or late summer.
Wait a second!
"Earthworms are monoecious (both female and male organs within the same individual). They have testes, seminal vesicles and male pores which produce, store and release the sperm, and ovaries and ovipores. However, most also have one or more pairs of spermathecae (depending on the species) that are internal sacs which receive and store sperm from the other worm in copulation. Some species use external spermatophores for transfer instead. Copulation and reproduction are separate processes in earthworms. The mating pair overlap front ends ventrally and each exchanges sperm with the other. The cocoon, or egg case, is secreted by the clitellum, the external glandular band which is near the front of the worm, but behind the spermathecae. Some indefinite time after copulation, long after the worms have separated, the clitellum secretes the cocoon which forms a ring around the worm. The worm then backs out of the ring, and as it does so, injects its own eggs and the other worm's sperm into it. As the worm slips out, the ends of the cocoon seal to form a vaguely lemon-shaped incubator (cocoon) in which the embryonic worms develop. They emerge as small, but fully formed earthworms, except for lacking the sexual structures, which develop later. Some earthworm species are mostly parthenogenetic."
"Pans do not reproduce."
At 5/9/07 05:34 PM, Delta-ForceZero19 wrote: i forgot the image
this looks like its traced with the line tool
i drew it out on paper and i traced it over in photo shop using the brush tool... and yes i know how worms reproduce and i know that pans cant... its just all in the nature of the drawing
At 5/9/07 05:44 PM, OmegaUltimaWill wrote: Important stuff about worms and such.
Hence the "Random things".
GT: Born2Evil