Randy Olson, Melissa Farlow Photography

  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
Next
639 images found

Loading ()...

  • An animal activist watches a young mustang foal roll in the dirt. They were out for a walk when the young foal stopped and dropped. <br />
Horses roll for pleasure and to clean their coats with sand and soil.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222822.jpg
  • A hyena carries an animal carcass.
    RANDY OLSON_RF4319_1114435.JPG
  • A young trainer calms one of the 50 unwanted wild mustangs she and her mother adopted.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737133.jpg
  • A trainer works with a wild horse, one of 50 she and her teenage daughter have adopted.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737135.jpg
  • A young horse trainer gets a surprise buss from one of the 50 wild horses that she and her mother have adopted and train.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737131.jpg
  • A glassy-eyed alligator that is blind in one eye glides through reflective waters of the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge in Georgia. This gator, frequently seen in the Suwanee Canal, is thought to have been injured during a fight with another alligator. <br />
<br />
The once endangered species hunts in the darkness of night. An adult alligator can live 30 to 35 years in the wild, growing 8–12 feet long and weighing from 500 to 1,000 pounds.
    MELISSA FARLOW_05842_110250-5.JPG
  • A friendly horse reaches out to pull one of the twin sisters braid. The girls are passionate to save wild horses.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737127.jpg
  • Kitty learned to train horses from her grandfather and now, she works with mustangs and difficult horses on her western ranch. Her daughter rides one of the many wild horses she has tamed and trained.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222915.jpg
  • Young volunteers at Return to Freedom Wild Horse Sanctuary love the animals.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737124.jpg
  • A steer is coaxed into its pen at a feedlot near Garden City, Kansas. <br />
<br />
Sparse population, a semiarid climate, and abundant groundwater turned the southern High Plains into the world’s feedlot capital. A single quarter-pound hamburger requires about 460 gallons of water to raise and process the beef.<br />
<br />
In the High Plains, water is about corn and corn is about beef. Feedlots will exist after the water dwindles then grain will be brought in from outside areas. Texas ranks first with the highest number of cattle on feed followed by Kansas and Nebraska. In rough terms–there’s a 1000 feet of water left under Nebraska, 200 feet under Kansas, and about 30 feet under Texas. If all the cows are put on one side of a scale and humans on another, there are 2.5 times more cattle than people. <br />
<br />
Beef compared to other meats:  Five times the global warming contribution per calorie, 11 times more water, and 28 times as much land. Eating a pound of beef has more climatic impact than a gallon of gas. “When you add it all up, it comes up to about 14.5 percent of greenhouse gas comes from the animal agriculture sector. That’s bigger than all transportation combined,”  James Cameron
    RANDY OLSON_MM8429_2432800.TIF
  • A Pryor Mountain  mustang lifts his lip to catch a scent in a wild horse range in Montana. The behavior is called a Flehmen response when an animal curls his upper lip in this manner.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222832.jpg
  • Beijing at the time of this photo had a "one dog policy." The dog on the treadmill is a Siberian Husky and Beijing police are starting another crackdown on large dog ownership. These folks are starting to train their pet on their friend’s treadmill because if they take it outside for a walk, they risk having it beaten to death in front of them by a Beijing policeman. Owners of big dogs (over 35cm) that live within the sixth ring in Beijing have an illegal pet. Many have purchased treadmills after the crackdown began when pets were pulled out of the hands of their crying owners. A group protested in front of the zoo because there was suspicion that some of the dogs were being fed to the tigers. The activists claim dog owners tried to take policemen to dinner to bribe them, but it did not work. They say the policemen sold some of the nice animals and sent the rest to the zoo.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7493_1176590.TIF
  • Prison inmates ride wild horses at the Warm Springs Correctional Center creating a dusty, chaotic scene. They are training the mustangs to handle stress and to follow the riders directions in all situations. The horses are auctioned off to the public at the end of the training program. Wardens explain that the men and horses must learn to trust one another.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222901.TIF
  • Grizzlies fish for salmon in one of the best spots where the Ozernaya River flows into Kurilskoe Lake under the backdrop of a volcano.  <br />
<br />
Brown bears are not pack animals and an abundant food supply attracts them to the same place to hunt. The Kurilskoe Preserve is the model for poaching enforcement in all of Kamchatka. It is protected and the last wild place that produces all seven species of salmon.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7593_1260983-16.TIF
  • Sandhill cranes fly in to roost in the shallows of the Platte River. They do a courtship dance but this behavior can also be an aggressive or territorial show.<br />
<br />
Every year 400,000 to 600,000 sandhill cranes—80 percent of all the cranes on the planet—congregate along an 80-mile stretch of the central Platte River in Nebraska, to fatten up on waste grain in the empty cornfields in preparation for the journey to their Arctic and subarctic nesting grounds. <br />
<br />
Sandhill cranes among the world’s oldest living birds and one of the planet’s most successful life-forms, having outlasted millions of species (99 percent of species that ever existed are now extinct).
    RANDY OLSON_MM8429_2481082.TIF
  • A brown bear photographed underwater while fishing. Bears thrive on salmon but compete with 137 species of fish, birds, and mammals that also depend on salmon as a main staple of their diet. <br />
<br />
Grizzly bears gorge on rich protein of salmon for three months.  Though they munch on greens and berries, salmon are their main protein source and they fatten up before hibernating in the winter. <br />
<br />
Brown bears in Kamchatka can be 7 to 9 feet in length and weigh 700-800 pounds. Species: U. arctic Genus:Ursus<br />
<br />
Kamchatka has the highest density of brown bears in the world, with almost 15,000 on the peninsula.<br />
<br />
To make this photograph, which was selected as one of the best photographs in National Geographic, I had to be approximately six feet away from bears like this one that was charging into the water to try to catch a fish. The water in Duril Lake is murky, so I had to be close and shot this photograph with a 12mm lens.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7593_1248221.TIF
  • Brown bears fishing for salmon in Kuril Lake. Kurilskoe Lake Preserve is a world heritage site and had serious poaching. But now, two or three wardens are always out on enforcement and they pack out for a month at a time. The official salary for wardens is $200 a month, but the WWF came in and supplemented salaries and bought them the equipment they need to do the job. WWF decided one of the gems of the reserve system that exists in all of Russia should be poaching free - and that also protects the brown bears.
    MM7593_20080818_07671.tif
  • The last thing many migrating salmon see is this: the claws of a massive paw. Brown bears stun their targets with club-like blows, then gobble up their catch. This underwater shot of a brown bear was made at what is known as a Grizzly in Kurilskoe Lake Preserve, a World Heritage Site. A remote location, one must charter an MI-8 helicopter for a two-hour ride each way, so there aren’t many people to bother these bears. Once they memorize your scent they may come very close, and at times I saw 17 bears in the view shed.<br />
<br />
Brown bears in Kamchatka can be 7 to 9 feet in length and weigh 700-800 pounds. Species: U. arctic Genus:Ursus<br />
<br />
Kamchatka has the highest density of brown bears in the world, with almost 15,000 on the Russian peninsula.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7593_1248227.TIF
  • Brown bears fishing for salmon in Kuril Lake. Kurilskoe Lake Preserve is a world heritage site and had serious poaching. But now, two or three wardens are always out on enforcement and they pack out for a month at a time. The official salary for wardens is $200 a month, but the WWF came in and supplemented salaries and bought them the equipment they need to do the job. WWF decided one of the gems of the reserve system that exists in all of Russia should be poaching free - and that also protects the brown bears.
    MM7593_20080818_07674.tif
  • Trainers at a camel contest watch over the valuable animals at night.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7803_1260579.JPG
  • A common sunstar fish or Crossaster papposus is exposed at low tide in the intertidal zone on Moser Island in Southeast Alaska. The sea creature normally has nine or ten arms but like this one growing sixteen, they can have many more. They have a spiny texture and pray on other sea stars, sea urchins, snails, cucumbers and sea anemones.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7258_1075156.jpg
  • A customer holding a large fish at the Guangzhou Fish Market.<br />
Tourists and locals shop from vendors who line their stalls with fresh catch at one of the largest fish markets in the world.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7393_1057981.JPG
  • Blurred motion of a surgeonfish in colorful reef off of Komodo Island in Indonesia.<br />
Surgeonfishes are small-scaled, with a single dorsal fin and one or more distinctive, sharp spines that are located on either side of the tail base and can produce deep cuts. They are primarily algae eaters.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7393_1058015.JPG
  • Friends come together at The Riggin Shack, a general store that is one of a few businesses in Coffman Cove, Alaska, population 200. The community on Prince of Wales Island was settled as a logging town and people stayed although the industry declined. The community offers services for visitors that include a fuel station, liquor store, lodging, guiding for hunters and fishermen, a library with Internet service and outdoor tours.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7258_1075056.TIF
  • A long line fishermen is proud of his large catch.<br />
<br />
Lower greenhouse gas emissions are one of the benefit of long-lining. Also, the seabed is not damaged as it is when trawling. <br />
<br />
Longlines, however, can unintentionally catch vulnerable species and high seas fisheries have been particularly associated with catching endangered seabirds, sharks and sea turtles.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7393_1053899.JPG
  • Yearlings stand in a pasture surrounded by white fences and a historic Thoroughbred horse farm. Located in the heart of the Bluegrass, next to Keeneland Race Track, Manchester Farm holds the distinction as one of the most recognizable farms in Kentucky. What makes Kentucky special is that it is geologically favored for horses. Millions of years ago, layers of shells were buried and the crushed limestone makes the grass rich in calcium. As the land sinks, hills and valley are formed which make a perfect terrain for building strong muscles when horses run.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720968-2.JPG
  • Laundry and stuffed animal on a clothesline in Kireka.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7890_1386333.TIF
  • A Daasanach child chews on an animal jawbone.
    RANDY OLSON_MM8259_2328002.JPG
  • Portrait of a wild horse in the snow-covered Ochoco National Forest in the Big Summit Wild Horse Territory in Oregon. The origins of the herd are not entirely clear according to the U.SD. Forest Service. Early accounts describe local ranchers in the 1920s turning loose quality animals from a good breeding stock to ensure a future supply of good horses. Recent genetic testing has linked the Ochoco Mustangs to Iberian and Andalusian stock, leaving much to be discovered about their true heritage.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222777.jpg
  • A young trainer calms a wild horse she is training, one of 50 unwanted wild horses she has adopted.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737134.jpg
  • A young girl is fearless working with a feisty colt. She adopted the wild horse that was rounded up when he was one month old.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737128.jpg
  • Dot, a former wild horse, patiently waits under a guard dog's watchful eye as a sheepherder checks on the animals in his care.<br />
After the mustang was trained by prison inmates, the horse was sold at auction. He earned respect the first week on the ranch in the Wyoming range when he found his way back to the corral in a blizzard saving the life of his mount.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1201771.jpg
  • A submerged alligator is only visible with his armored back poking above placid waters as he  hunts on the muddy bottom of the Okefenokee Swamp. The reptiles skin has embedded bony plates called osteoderms or scutes.<br />
Alligator populations are considered to have recovered from overharvesting pressures through supplemental farming practices and protections placed on wild animals. However, the species is still federally listed as threatened because it looks like the American crocodile, which is endangered.
    MELISSA FARLOW_05842_110250-2.JPG
  • Father and son in the farm pickup truck (one of two images taken years apart).
    RANDY OLSON_06414_3280_4.TIF
  • Father and son in the farm pickup truck (one of two images taken years apart).
    RANDY OLSON_06414_3280_3.TIF
  • A large field of Thoroughbred horses blur as they run by the twin towers and down the stretch for the Kentucky Derby. This two minute horse race is one most famous in the world.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_737658-5.JPG
  • A large field of Thoroughbred horses blur as they run by the twin towers and down the stretch for the Kentucky Derby. This two minute horse race is one most famous in the world.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_737658-4.JPG
  • A nervous foal waits to be inspected by a veterinarian at a Bureau of Land Management holding facility. After wild horses were rounded up, they were trucked to Palomino Valley where they were vaccinated and given a freeze brand.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222861.jpg
  • If you are quiet, they may approach you. A trusting, wild mustang gently nuzzles a wild horse activist.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1200576.jpg
  • A wild mustang foal nuzzles a wild horse activist.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222789.jpg
  • A female camel gently touches her owner.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7803_1260610.JPG
  • A horse trainer on a wild mustang gallops full tilt across the Nevada desert leaving a cloud of dust. He had thirty days to train a wild horse for a competition in the first Extreme Mustang Makeover established to show off abilities of adopted wild horses.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1200572.TIF
  • A protected wild mustang foal naps in a meadow near his mother. Newborn horses sleep up to twelve hours during the day, but graduate to adults that sleep only three hours -- and often standing.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222774.jpg
  • A young foal rests in a bed of chamomile flowers creating an idyllic scene as he watches the herd graze. Newborn horses sleep up to twelve hours during the day, but graduate to adults that sleep only three hours -- and often standing.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222802.jpg
  • A blue-eyed Palomino mare approaches for a closer look. The U.S. government released Thoroughbred horses at Nevada’s Sheldon range to mix with the Standardbred bloodlines making a bigger, faster “war horse.” During World War I and II, horses were rounded up from Sheldon, loaded onto railroad cars and taken to the East Coast where they were shipped across the Atlantic Ocean. Horses that survived the journey had a bit placed in their mouths and began to pull artillery or serve as a cavalry mount. A shipment of 500 horses left every day and a half to supply American and Allied troops.  Nearly eight million horses died in World War I alone. <br />
Remnants of the “war horse” herds roamed free until they were totally removed from the Sheldon National Wildlife Range.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222829.jpg
  • A trainer uses a rope as she works with a wild mustang on trusting to be touched. She learned gentling methods from her cowboy grandfather and patiently earns their confidence. She was a champion cowgirl going up and competing in rodeos.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222892.jpg
  • A horse stares curious and watching humans who he has never experienced in the wild.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_2737057.jpg
  • A patient cowboy trainer works with his mustang to for the Extreme Mustang Makeover competition. The two-year old Nevada horse had never been handled and within thirty days he was trained and ready to show off their abilities.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222840.jpg
  • A blue-eyed mustang mare is a descendant of horses bred in the Nevada's Sheldon Range. The horses were used as mounts for cavalry, and in later years, shipped to Europe to serve as war horses during WWI and WWII.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222881.jpg
  • A Palomino mustang mare with a blue eye has distinctive, unusual coloration.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222818.jpg
  • With a burst of speed, a white mustang stallion charges at another wild horse.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222805.jpg
  • A young mustang foal romps to play in a meadow running circles around his mother while she grazes with other mares in the horse herd.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222786.jpg
  • Contractors wrestle with a foal attempting to load the colt into the back of a trailer after the herd was captured during a Bureau of Land Management roundup of wild horses in Wyoming.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222837.jpg
  • A wild mustang stallion chases studs away from his mares. Other horses in the herd graze, rarely stopping to watch.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222882.jpg
  • A wild horse trainer coaxes her horse to walk through a curtain made of plastic that could spook a horse.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737108.jpg
  • A pet poodle gets a bath at a pet spa.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7493_1176586.JPG
  • A pet poodle gets a bath at a pet spa.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7493_1176585.JPG
  • A young trainer works with a horse training in a gentle manner rewarding him with a scratch on the neck.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737137.jpg
  • Lured by vegetation, wild horses wander through subdivision yards in the Virginia Highlands.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222842.jpg
  • A frisky mustang foal romps in a meadow.<br />
Foals are often born with a pale shade of their adult color. In the wild, the dull colored coat camouflages babies from predators. However, they typically shed their fuzzy foal coat at three or four months of age and evolve into their adult coloration.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222782.jpg
  • A male lion, sitting on savannah scratching mane.
    RANDY OLSON_RF4319_1114403.JPG
  • A camel with oblong nostrils and drooping lips.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7803_1260644.JPG
  • A camel with oblong nostrils and drooping lips.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7803_1260643.JPG
  • A sleepy, wild horse foal rests under his mother in the Virginia Range as they graze above the highlands near Reno.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222839.jpg
  • Profile of a curious, young, fuzzy mustang foal.<br />
Foals are often born with a pale shade of their adult color. In the wild, the dull colored coat camouflages babies from predators. They typically shed their fuzzy foal coat at three or four months of age, however, and evolve into their adult coloration.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222790.jpg
  • A young man patiently works with a rescued young wild horse foal.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737126.jpg
  • A young man patiently works with a rescued young wild horse foal.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737125.jpg
  • A Palomino mustang mare intently gallops with a blur and ears pointed forward.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222873.jpg
  • An older red stallion scarred from bites and fights intently watches a challenging stud. Battles for dominance in a wild horse herd can be brutal.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222871.jpg
  • Some prized horses live a pampered life in retirement and command large amount of money for breeding rights in the hopes they’ll pass on the best qualities of their bloodline. An Irish farm, Ashford Stud which is part of international horse racing business Coolmore, was built in recent years and features stone barns and bridges creating the charm of an earlier era. Stalls are filled with plush straw for bedding under chandeliers that shine in the cupolas.  <br />
Past Kentucky Derby winner Thunder Gulch's stud fees are as high as $125,000 per mating. A farm worker leads the stallion to a breeding barn.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720965.TIF
  • Some prized horses live a pampered life in retirement and command large amount of money for breeding rights in the hopes they’ll pass on the best qualities of their bloodline. An Irish-owned farm, Ashford Stud which is part of international horse racing business Coolmore, was built in recent years and features stone barns and bridges creating the charm of an earlier era. Stalls are filled with plush straw for bedding under chandeliers that shine in the cupolas.  <br />
Past Kentucky Derby winner Thunder Gulch's stud fees are as high as $125,000 per mating. A farm worker leads the stallion to a breeding barn.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720965.TIF
  • Pin Oak Farm owner and breeder Josephine Abercrombie ran a prominent 4,000 acre  farm near Versailles. A horse lover in her childhood, she brought sugar cubes to her thoroughbreds hoping for a kiss on the cheek from a gentle mare and foal. Abercrombie died in 2022.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7017_720968-2-1.JPG
  • A young cowboy readies himself on his trained, former wild mustang while waiting to compete in a horse show.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222916.jpg
  • Portrait of a young, gentle-natured wild yearling scratching his neck on a tree limb. Ears pointed forward indicate the curious young horse shows little fear when approached in a slow, calm manner.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222792.jpg
  • A young trainer works with a wild horse training him with a gentle calm voice asking him to lie down.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737138.jpg
  • A young trainer works with a wild horse in a gentle manner.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737136.jpg
  • Helicopter chases a stallion that was captured but run out of the trap during a wild horse roundup.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737073.jpg
  • A curious baby camel.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7803_1260627.JPG
  • A brown bear fishing for salmon in icy waters of Kuril Lake. Kamchatka has the highest density of brown bears, also known as grizzly bears, in the world. There are almost 15,000 on the Russian peninsula.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7593_1260960.TIF
  • A brown bear swims with his head underwater as he fishes for salmon in Kuril Lake.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7593_1260955.JPG
  • A trainer rides down a steep embankment trusting his sure-footed mustang. Many adopters of wild horses say they are calm and confident when riding on a trail.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222893.jpg
  • Two wild stallions eye each other and begin a ritual to establish dominance. They paw the ground establishing their turf and next they will either walk away or fight. Horses are prey animals with a strong "fight-or-flight" response where they flee for safety but they defend themselves or stand their ground when their hierarchy is challenged.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222816.TIF
  • A crocodile in water.
    RANDY OLSON_RF4319_1114369.JPG
  • Mother Superior's dog greets her in the morning in the courtyard of Convento de Carmen Alto. The convent is home to cloistered nuns in the center of the historic district of Quito.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2512704.jpg
  • A captured wild horse eyes his surroundings after loaded onto a trailer following a roundup by the Bureau of Land Management.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222854.jpg
  • Wild horses are gentled and trained by prison inmates at the Warm Springs Correctional Center. After several weeks of handling, the horses are auctioned off to the public.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222912.TIF
  • Prison inmates train wild horses and ride them under the watchful eye of a corrections officer in a program run by Wyoming's Warm Springs Correctional Center. Inmates bond with the horses but they are auctioned off to the public after they are handled which makes them more adoptable.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222859.jpg
  • A volunteer takes a feral cat to the vet.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM6842_964870.jpg
  • An African fish eagle.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7661_1306574.JPG
  • Grown men tussle with a caged crocodile.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7112_763203.TIF
  • A rescued orphan foal leaves little time for sleep, so a bed is moved into the makeshift horse nursery in the house.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737103.jpg
  • A hoist lifts a camel into a truck for her journey home.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7803_1260630.JPG
  • A young trainer works with a wild horse training him to calmly walk through a pool filled with plastic bottles for the first time.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2737139.jpg
  • The religious community of Georgian Dukhobors relocated near Tambov.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7890_1386419.TIF
  • An illegal large pet dog exercises on a treadmill at a pet spa.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7493_1176583.JPG
  • An illegal large pet dog exercises on a treadmill at a pet spa.
    RANDY OLSON_MM7493_1176582.JPG
  • A blue eyed rescued feral cat.
    MELISSA FARLOW_RF4115_1114558.jpg
  • A moose crosses a road on the Gaspe Peninsula.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MT6827_1547369.jpg
  • Former wild horses are rewarded with oats after a long day working a Wyoming ranch with sheepherders. Camp is set up near the sheep and herders live on the range.
    MELISSA FARLOW_MM7517_1222890.jpg
  • Nuns at Convento de Carmen Alto, a cloistered convent, gather with their dog that all the women love.
    MELISSA FARLOW_04526_2512711.jpg
Next