Look who showed up on my headstock!.....

Maybe he heard that you were Jim Morrison? Sorry, that was super lame. Very cool photo!
 
Looking for his Mamma... the Small Westie Dragon...:dancing:
 
Anoles eat bugs (or other, baby anoles), so not looking for birds...trying to avoid them, if anything, since birds eat anoles!

(I assume that's an anole - looks like the anoles we have around here in Central FL.)

The real question is: Is that one of the green types that can change color (usually to brown)? If so, was he matching the guitar headstock appropriately?
 
Anoles eat bugs (or other, baby anoles), so not looking for birds...trying to avoid them, if anything, since birds eat anoles!

(I assume that's an anole - looks like the anoles we have around here in Central FL.)

The real question is: Is that one of the green types that can change color (usually to brown)? If so, was he matching the guitar headstock appropriately?

It is a brown Anole. But i really didn't notice any chameleon changes.
 
Ah, you have added the side-pic. He/she seems to have a bit of light green / tan going on there amongst the light brown. Could be one of the green anoles that can change color to brown - they have smoother skin from the brown-only anoles around here. But anole populations differ, I'm sure, and this could just be a light-tan/brown anole...
 
I think he was there to tell you that you could save 15% or more on your guitar insurance if you switched to....

:rofl: :vroam:
 
I think he was there to tell you that you could save 15% or more on your guitar insurance if you switched to....

:rofl: :vroam:

Sigh. Look, that's a silly cockney gecko in the ad, and this is an anole. You can tell by the feet/toes/fingers: geckos have rounded pads with a relatively unexplained adhesion ability to grip slippery surfaces, anoles have "regular" toes with nails to grip mechanically. And did you know most gecko species don't blink? But the ads on TV feature a blinking gecko. Getting the accent wrong is bad enough (everyone knows geckos sound like they're from Yorkshire, not the bloody East End!), but the blinking? Yeesh.

;)
 
Ah, you have added the side-pic. He/she seems to have a bit of light green / tan going on there amongst the light brown. Could be one of the green anoles that can change color to brown - they have smoother skin from the brown-only anoles around here. But anole populations differ, I'm sure, and this could just be a light-tan/brown anole...

Im fortunate to get every so often models like this to take pictures... here are some older ones from previous visits other lizards did on my yard.







 
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