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Have a great weekend!

 

© All rights reserved.

 

All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, or edited without my written explicit permission.

There are 30 species and over 20,000 cultivars of dahlias. Those cultivars are categorized based on size, flower pattern, and how they resemble other flowers (like waterlilies, anemones, and cactus blooms). The large decorative types and cactus types are among the most popular, and many varieties are used in cut flower gardens.

Red Fox

 

Algonquin Provincial Park: Central Ontario, Canada

 

Please follow me on Instagram as well @gregtaylorphotography

 

All images are the property of Greg Taylor Photography. Do not copy, reprint or reproduce without written consent from me.

 

Thanks so much to all who choose to look at and comment on my images. It's very much appreciated.

  

Calends is Latin, the word from which calendar is derived. In turn, Calendula means “throughout the months.”

Lets hope the coming months are so much better than what we are experiencing during the last few months.

Amsterdam - Spiegelgracht

 

Copyright - All images are copyright © protected. All Rights Reserved. Copying, altering, displaying or redistribution of any of these images without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited.

Seagulls are fondly remembered in Utah for helping Mormon settlers deal with a plague of crickets. The seagull is now the state bird of Utah and a monument in Salt Lake City commemorates the event, known as the ‘Miracle of the Gulls’. Seagulls are very clever. They learn, remember and even pass on behaviours, such as stamping their feet in a group to imitate rainfall and trick earthworms to come to the surface. Seagulls’ intelligence is clearly demonstrated by a range of different feeding behaviours, such as dropping hard-shelled molluscs onto rocks so that they break open so they can eat them, and following ploughs in fields where they know upturned grubs and other food sources will be plentiful.

The nights are drawing in now that autumn is here meaning that I rarely get the chance to go out with my camera during daylight hours!

I came to Stanley Ferry Marina because I wanted to try and capture some of the lovely reflections on the clear, still water.

This is the final image from that night (I took quite a few but most were rubbish!) and I think it's my favourite.

It's looking towards the road bridge that goes over the canal at Stanley.

I was standing in quite a precarious position, right on the edge of the water, so I had to be very careful not to drop my camera in or fall in myself!

I liked the colours - the green/yellow grass and the different shades of blue in the sky and the boats etc; they all seemed to contrast each other and work together.

La Riserva naturale orientata Capo Gallo è una riserva naturale regionale della Sicilia, istituita in data 21 giugno 2001. È inserita nel Piano Regionale dei Parchi e delle Riserve ed è gestita dall'Azienda Foreste Demaniali della Regione Siciliana, che ha compiuto numerosi interventi volti a ricreare le condizioni ambientali originarie del territorio e a renderlo fruibile al pubblico.

La riserva comprende una area di quasi 586 ettari ed è costituita essenzialmente dal Monte Gallo, un massiccio carbonatico, formatosi decine di milioni di anni or sono fra il periodo Mesozoico e l'Eocene medio. Il Monte Gallo termina in un promontorio, denominato Capo Gallo, sul quale è situato un faro che ne segnala la posizione. Il promontorio si trova nella zona nord-occidentale di Palermo e separa i due golfi di Mondello e Sferracavallo, che ospitano gli omonimi quartieri marinari della città.

da: it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riserva_naturale_orientata_Capo_Gallo

 

Il tratto di mare che unisce Capo Gallo con la vicina Isola delle Femmine è stato dichiarato riserva marina. Più precisamente l'Area naturale marina protetta Capo Gallo - Isola delle Femmine (tale è la corretta denominazione), istituita con decreto del Ministero dell'Ambiente del 24 luglio 2002, ha una superficie di 2.173 ettari e la sua gestione è affidata al consorzio creato tra i Comuni di Palermo e quello di Isola delle Femmine.

it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Area_naturale_marina_protetta_Capo_...

There are my three pics in The exhibition is about photographic art in Croatia and other Mediterranean countries in Hamburg.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/arab_union_of_photographers_europe/...

 

Sheep are herd animals. They stand against each other because that is the safest way. Their head down is just a relaxed attitude. Usually a few are alert. A tree provides a little bit of shelter and security, at least one spot from which danger cannot come. (Google)

Named from the similarity of their prominent proboscis that looks like the beak of a snipe. Adults can often be seen sitting on vegetation or on tree trunks waiting to catch and pounce on passing prey. Some species of snipe flies are hematophagous as adults and some are predatory of insects. Larvae develop as predators in the soil and wood detritus. Found in wet meadows, marshes and woodland margins. Can sometimes be know as the Down-Looker Fly as they have the habit of perching head-downward on tree trunks.

These males are very territorial and will court females by flicking there wings open and performing an aerial dance in front of them. The scientific name Odonata which is the order of the major group that Dragonflies and Damselflies belong to is actually derived from the Greek word 'oden', meaning 'tooth', which refers to the strong toothed jaws that all the Odonata posses.

Grazie a tutti per visite e commenti! Un affettuoso saluto !

© Geoff Smithson. All Rights Reserved.

 

All my displayed images are my exclusive property, and are protected under International Copyright laws. Those images may not be reproduced, copied, transmitted or, in any way manipulated, without my written permission and use license. Unauthorized use or reproduction for any reason is strictly prohibited.

 

If you wish to use any of my images, please contact me via Flickr mail.

(Sony rx10 M2 - carl zeiss® Vario-Sonnar® T* F2.8) with a 24-200m lens.HDR on

Amsterdam - Motorwal

 

Copyright - All images are copyright © protected. All Rights Reserved. Copying, altering, displaying or redistribution of any of these images without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited.

Grey squirrels, Sciurus carolinensis, are a type of rodent who mostly live on trees. Grey squirrels are native to North America but are found in Europe and Africa too. They are an important species as natural forest regenerators.

 

Grey squirrels belong to the class of mammals, as they give birth to offspring like other mammals.

 

The exact number of grey squirrels in the world is difficult to find as they are found in varied regions. The eastern grey squirrels have adapted well to urban regions too. In certain regions in Europe, eastern grey squirrels are considered an invasive species.

 

The grey squirrel or eastern grey squirrel is found in the eastern region of the United States from west of the Mississippi River in the south to Canada in the north. The eastern grey squirrel has been introduced to many western states, England, Scotland, and Ireland. Female eastern red squirrels are also introduced in western Canada, southwest British Columbia. In the United States, they are introduced in Oregon, Washington, and California. Later they were introduced in South Africa, Hawaii, Bermuda, Madeira island, the Canary Islands, the Azores, Italy, and Cape Verde.

Safari photos tend to be dominated by the lions, leopards, hyenas, elephants & hippos, mass migrations, all amazing animals. But Zebras, these wild striped horses are the quiet underdogs. This guy was hanging out with his herd, known as a dazzle, grazing as they do for 70% of the day, quietly but warily amongst the trees. I've seen them in zoos but seeing them on the wild plains of Sabi Sands Africa, potential prey, as everything is on the plains, made me see them differently. They are an amazing animal. Unique. Fascinating.

Fun fact #1 - they have black skin, and grow the white stripes (there is probably an official scientific word for that but I understand "grow")

Fun Fact #2 - a sad one, but fact of life , 50% won't survive to see maturity. As our guide told us once, nothing dies of old age on the plains. Life at its rawest.

On a happier note, they can bray like donkeys, that would be a fun thing to do :)

 

Happy Friday & happy braying out there. Go on try it, its fun :))

 

Comments are always welcome and favs most appreciated.

Comentarios y favs son siempre bienvenidos

 

© Fotografía de Ricardo Gomez Angel

Todos los derechos reservados. Todas las imágenes contenidas en este sitio web son propiedad de Ricardo Gomez Angel. Las imágenes no se pueden reproducir, copiar o utilizar de ninguna manera sin el permiso escrito.

Lots of Elephants are seen at Marabou Pan, Savuti marshes, Botswana.

I take pictures because I like it, not because I am good at it.

  

follow me on instagram

 

my pictures on sale

 

join my facebook group

 

The world is like a book and those, who do not travel, only read the first page.

 

If you only visit 2 continents in your lifetime, visit Africa, twice.

 

All rights reserved. © Thomas Retterath 2023

This image was captured when the little owlet appeared to be lonely or a little lost ! I wished I could have comforted him but I knew that would not work ! so cute and so much fun to see and watch !!

 

Wishing you a great and blessed afternoon !!!

The end of spring is blooming all the roses everywhere. Some are in full bloom, others are still in mature buds.

 

Thank you very much for your kind comments and visit, much appreciated!

There are over 90 species of sundew. The majority are found in Australia and South Africa, but they also grow in hot, humid areas of Georgia, Florida and other similar climates. The plants prefer acidic soils and are usually where there is a bog or marsh and often grow on top of sphagnum moss.

  

These are not the most liked birds in the world but they do have an amazing amount of colour in them in a certain light.

 

Taken at Lakeview Drive, Kissimmee.

Turtles are unable to regulate their body temperatures independently, so they are completely dependent on the temperature of their environment. For this reason, they need to sunbathe frequently to warm themselves and maintain their body temperatures.

 

The red-eared slider gets its name from the small, red stripe around its ears, or where its ears would be, and from its ability to slide quickly off rocks and logs into the water.

 

Red-eared sliders are native to the Southern United States and northern Mexico, but have become established in other places because of pet releases, and have become an invasive species in many areas where they outcompete native species.

 

The carapace of this species can reach more than 40 cm (16 in) in length, but the typical length ranges from 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in). The females of the species are usually larger than the males. They typically live between 20 and 30 years.

 

- Wikipedia

 

(Nikon, 500 mm, 1/200 @ f/8, ISO 400)

We are having a nice wet spring this year, and that translates to snow in the mountains. We went and shot Mt. Hood in the lower light, it had a little pink in the clouds and the sun highlighted the top of the mountain.

Mount Hood is located approximately 90 minutes outside of Portland on the border between Clackamas and Hood River counties. Mount Hood stands at 11,239 feet (3,425 meters). It is the highest point and mountain peak in the state of Oregon, and the second most climbed mountain in the world (second only to Japan’s holy Mt. Fujiyama).

We literally walked out of Timberline Lodge, at Mt Hood, up a small slope and got this great vantage point shot.

Usually, Roses are red

But this Rose is blue

And this unique one

Is only glowing for You

Although ...

This BLUE-tifulness

Is not genuine, I guess

(Caren)

 

[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]

 

Macro of a small translucint plastic rose (1 ½ x 1 ½ “) backlit with a blue light, taken 10 Oct 2020 and

uploaded for the group

Macro Mondays #Translucent

 

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ200

ƒ/2.8

4.5 mm

1/40 Sec

ISO 400

 

[Text and image copyright Caren (©all rights reserved)]

please respect my ©copyright : Do not use any image or text without my previous written authorization, NOT even in social networks. If you want to use a photograph, please contact me!

Bitte mein ©Copyright beachten! Meine Fotos und Texte sind ©copyright geschützt (alle Rechte vorbehalten) und dürfen ohne meine vorherige und schriftliche Zustimmung NICHT von Dritten verwendet werden, auch nicht in sozialen Netzwerken. Falls Interesse an einem Foto besteht, bitte ich um Kontaktaufnahme!]

Ticino

 

My best photos are here: www.lacerta-bilineata.com/ticino-best-photos-of-southern-...

 

More TICINO/TESSIN Wildlife Photos (all taken in my garden in Monteggio/Ti, Switzerland): it.lacerta-bilineata.com/ramarro-occidentale-lacerta-bili... (the website exists in ESPAÑOL, FRANÇAIS, ITALIANO, ENGLISH, DEUTSCH)

 

My latest ANIMAL VIDEO (warning, it's a bit shocking): www.youtube.com/watch?v=4T2-Xszz7FI

 

ABOUT THE PHOTO:

The photo above was taken this past May and shows parts of my garden and the surrounding hills just as the sun was setting after a heavy thunderstorm, which is when the light and the colors are at their most intense, most magical; it was one of those rare moments that usually only last for a few minutes (sometimes not even that), and you have to be quick to capture them.

 

The reason I like the photo quite a bit is that it shows a side of my country that is far less known to the people abroad than our snowy mountains and green meadows with friendly cows or the glitz of St. Moritz, Zermatt and Zurich: it shows you "my" tropical Switzerland 😊.

 

And the thing is, the spot in Ticino where I'm fortunate enough to own a vacation home - a tiny, 400-year old stone building only 70 meters from the Italian border - doesn't just look like it lies in the tropics: it actually sort of does, at least during the summer months.

 

With temperatures frequently in the mid 30s (Celsius) and a level of humidity that is high enough to make you break out in a sweat the second you leave the house, the micro-climate is not that dissimilar from what you might find in a rain forest.

 

The air can grow so heavy that people unaccustomed to it might feel like they have a hard time breathing (when friends of mine who originally are from Brazil visited me for a couple of days during a particularly hot period, even they struggled and told me they felt as if they were inhaling steam).

 

On the plus-side, this tropical micro-climate allows the people in our village to grow lemons, peaches, figs and kiwi fruits in addition to the more traditional apricots, grapes apples and cherries, and even palm trees like the one in this photo are a very common sight throughout the region.

 

Luckily our houses are traditionally built in a way to keep out the heat even during the hottest months, so the few remaining permanent residents of the village (around 40 people most of whom are over the age of sixty), find soothing cool as soon as they enter the thick stone walls of their homes.

 

The village itself is built on a rock that is surrounded by dense chestnut forest on all sides that stretches on until the horizon, only interrupted every now and then by a village, a vineyard or a small stream in a valley with a few fields.

 

So it's hardly a surprise that this tiny tropical paradise is a place where a great variety of beautiful insects, snakes and colorful lizards (that most people probably wouldn't immediately associate with typical Swiss fauna either) feel very much at home, and I feel incredibly blessed that I need only step outside and enter my garden to capture it with my camera 😊.

 

In case people are interested I might upload a photo that shows a bit more of our village one day, but for now I'll continue to stick with my beloved "creepy crawlies" (as some of my friends here jokingly refer to them) and continue to concentrate on nature, wildlife and landscape photos. 😉

 

I hope you like the photo and wish you all a wonderful weekend! Many greetings from Switzerland, and as always: let me know what you think in the comments 🙏 😊 ❤!

 

P.S. This is probably going to be my last upload in 2022, so HAPPY HOLIDAYS everyone!! 🎄💕🎉😃!!

Eurasian Jays are vociferous acorn eaters, although they do enjoy seeds and insects – and that is just what this bird is searching for in a garden in Holloway, Derbyshire. The Jay is very attractive: it’s a blend of pink and brown on its body, and its wings are mainly black with some white patches but with a striking blue-black striped feature which makes them easy to spot in the garden.

Switzerland, May 2021

 

My best photos are here: www.lacerta-bilineata.com/ticino-best-photos-of-southern-...

 

My latest ANIMAL VIDEO (warning, it's a bit shocking): www.youtube.com/watch?v=4T2-Xszz7FI

 

You find a selection of my 80 BEST PHOTOS (mostly not yet on Flickr) here: www.lacerta-bilineata.com/western-green-lizard-lacerta-bi... (the website exists in ESPAÑOL, FRANÇAIS, ITALIANO, ENGLISH, DEUTSCH)

 

ABOUT THE PHOTO:

So this photo is a bit of a novelty for me - at least here on Flickr, but it's also a journey back in time in a sense. I've always loved b/w and sepia photography; already as a very young teenager I would go out into the woods with an old Pentax Spotmatic (which I had nicked from my father) whenever it was a foggy day to shoot b/w compositions of sunbeams cutting through the ghostlike trees.

 

I used films with a sensitivity of at least 1600 (for those of you who remember what that means 😉 ), and the resulting photos had an incredibly fine grain which I loved; I blew them up to the size of posters and hung them on the walls of my teenage man-cave next to Hendrix, Jim Morrison and Slash.

 

But then I abandoned photography altogether for 20 years, and when I finally picked up a camera again, it was one of the digital kind. Now neither film nor grain played any role in my photographic endeavours - let alone b/w compositions: because the reason I fell in love with shooting pictures once more was the rare and incredibly colorful lizard species that had chosen my garden as its habitat.

 

It's this species - the Lacerta bilineata aka the western green lizard - that my photo website www.lacerta-bilineata.com/ and also my Flickr gallery are dedicated to, but I've since expanded that theme a bit so that it now comprises the whole Lacerta bilineata habitat, which is to say my garden and its immediate surroundings and all the flora and fauna I find in it.

 

I like that my gallery and the website have this clear theme, because in order to rise to the challenge of portraying all aspects of a very specific little eco system (which also happens to be my home of sorts), it forces me to constantly explore it from fresh angles, and I keep discovering fascinating new motives as my photographic journey continues.

 

Which brings me to the horse pasture you see in this photo. This playground for happy horsies lies just outside my garden, and it normally only interests me insofar as my green reptile friends claim parts of it as their territory, and I very much prefer it to be horseless (which it thankfully often is).

 

Not that the horses bother the reptiles - the lizards don't mind them one bit, and I've even seen them jump from the safety of the fly honeysuckle shrub which the pasture borders on right between the deadly looking hooves of the horses to forage for snails, without any sign of fear or even respect.

 

No, the reason I have a very conflicted relationship with those horses is that they are mighty cute and that there's usually also foals. The sight of those beautiful, happy animals jumping around and frolicking (it's a huge pasture and you can tell the horses really love it) is irresistible: and that inevitably attracts what in the entire universe is known as the most destructive anti-matter and ultimate undoing of any nature photographer: other humans.

 

Unlike with the horses, the lizards ARE indeed very much bothered by specimens of loud, unpredictable Homo sapiens sapiens - which makes those (and by extension also the horses) the cryptonite of this here reptile photographer. It's not the horses' fault, I know that, but that doesn't change a thing. I'm just telling you how it is (and some of you might have read about the traumatic events I had to endure to get a particular photo - if not, read at your own risk here: www.flickr.com/photos/191055893@N07/51405389883/in/datepo... - which clearly demonstrated that even when it's entirely horseless, that pasture is still a threat for artistic endeavours).

 

But back to the photo. So one morning during my vacation back in May I got up quite early. It had rained all night, and now the fog was creeping up from the valley below to our village just as the sky cleared up and the morning sun started to shine through the trees.

 

And just as I did when I was a teenager I grabbed my camera and ran out to photograph this beautiful mood of ghostlike trees and sunbeams cutting through the mist. There had already been such a day a week earlier (which is when I took this photo: www.flickr.com/photos/191055893@N07/51543603732/in/datepo... ), but this time, the horses were also there.

 

Because of our slightly strained relationship I only took this one photo of them (I now wish I had taken more: talk about missed opportunities), and otherwise concentrated on the landscape. It was only later when I went through all the photos on my computer that I realized that I actually really liked those horses, even despite the whole composition being such a cliché. And I realized another thing: when I drained the photo of all the color, I liked it even better - because there was almost a bit of grain in it, like in the photos from my youth.

 

Since then I have experimented quite a bit with b/w and sepia compositions (some of which I will upload here eventually I guess), but this photo here is the first one that helped me rediscover my old passion. I hope you like it even though it builds quite a stark contrast with the rest of my tiny - and very colorful - gallery. But in the spirit of showing you the whole Lacerta bilineata habitat (and also in the spirit of expanding my gallery a bit beyond lizards and insects), I think it's not such a bad fit.

 

As always, many greetings to all of you, have a wonderful day and don't hesitate to let me know what you think 😊

European Praying Mantis | Mantis religiosa | 08-2022 | Ticino | Switzerland

 

My best photos are here: www.lacerta-bilineata.com/ticino-best-photos-of-southern-...

 

More Ticino/Tessin Wildlife Photos (all taken in my garden in Monteggio/Ti, Switzerland): it.lacerta-bilineata.com/ramarro-occidentale-lacerta-bili...

 

My latest ANIMAL VIDEO (warning, it's a bit shocking): www.youtube.com/watch?v=4T2-Xszz7FI

 

ABOUT THE PHOTO:

I originally titled the image above 'Pray, Love, Eat (Your Husband)' as a joking reference to a bestselling novel and to the name of the insect depicted in the photo as well as to the species' well-documented gruesome mating behavior. I changed it now, because I wanted to be sure nobody would take the title as a recommendation (let me be very clear: if you are in fact NOT a female praying mantis, please refrain from eating your husband - regardless how tempted you may be - I'm sure he will thank you later 😉).

 

To provide a bit of context how I got the shot, as most of you will be well aware, this past summer was rather hot in many parts of the world, and Ticino in Switzerland (where I take all my photos), was no exception. It was in fact exceptionally hot for a long period without any rain in sight, and so I found myself getting up every morning before sunrise to water the garden.

 

On one such occasion in late August I noticed the frantic movement of a rather large insect that was trying to get away from the splashing water drops. I immediately put the hose down and went to investigate. I could hardly believe my luck: it was a (in Switzerland very rare) European mantis, a species I hadn't seen in a long time in my garden (certainly not since my dear mother's ill-fated attempt to transform part of the garden into a "flowery meadow" - a sad anecdote you can read all about here IF you have the stomach for it: www.flickr.com/photos/191055893@N07/52177556047/in/datepo... )

 

The mantis had sought shelter from the water between the blooming phlox and was now resting completely motionless among the flower petals, and so I dropped everything and ran for my camera. Once I was back at the scene I realized to my horror that it was still far too dark to get a usable photo; I was sure my "rare prize" would fly away at any instant, but all I could do now was anxiously wait for the sun to come up.

 

Minute after agonizing minute went by (and Mrs Mantis made suspicious "I-think-I'm-going-to-leave-now" movements several times that had me hold my breath in utter terror), but finally my camera was satisfied with the available light, and once I had shot about 800 photos, I started to relax a little.

 

In the end, I couldn't have been happier; it had long been my hope that my little oasis of botanic chaos would attract this rare species, and that I even got to photograph it was a dream come true. And apparently I needn't have worried about it flying away; it was a female, and as I later read mantis ladies are in most cases too heavy to fly.

 

And they seem to be territorial (or at least this one was); to my delight, I would find Mrs Mantis either in the phlox plants or on the nearby hibiscus every day for the remainder of my holiday (here's a photo on the hibiscus: www.lacerta-bilineata.com/western-green-lizard-lacerta-bi... ), and so I got to photograph her plenty (suspiciouly there was never any sign of a Mr Mantis though...).

 

Anyway, many greetings and have a lovely weekend ahead everyone - and as always, let me know what you think in the comments 😊

🎶🎶🎶

 

You do not do any favors on loving someone

Neither me, neither me

Who invented love was not me

It was not me, was not me

Nor me or anyone else

 

Love happens in life

You were off guard and by chance I was too

And as chances are important, darling

Of our lives, life also made a chance

 

my own translation from Nem eu - Dorival Caymmi

 

in Second Life

L’area si raggiunge facilmente in quanto è raggiungibile attraverso la strada asfaltata che conduce alla tomba di giganti di Is Concias e alla cascata di Sa Spendula de Axedu. Da questo punto è possibile spaziare lo sguardo verso una buona parte della costa sarda meridionale e dell’agglomerato urbano formato da Cagliari e dai centri del suo hinterland.

There are several balconies to watch the sunset from hammocks or/and wooden benches, a deck to see a stream/sunset and the possibility of reaching the crystalline waters through well-made trails, a part of the recovered Atlantic forest and original.

 

The wi-fi works really well.

A couple uses this location as a home base.

Amsterdam - Vondelpark - Eerste Constantijn Huygensstraat

 

Copyright - All images are copyright © protected. All Rights Reserved. Copying, altering, displaying or redistribution of any of these images without written permission from the artist is strictly prohibited.

【memo】

@Mainframe event (20th,Jan Start)

SLURL Soon

zeroichi backbox NZ-01 (Fat bonus Steelblack)

zeroichi backbox NZ-01 (White)

zeroichi backbox NZ-01 (Orange)

zeroichi backbox NZ-01 (Red)

 

@Access Event

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/ACCESS/130/127/2003

*zeroichi* NEOTOKYO2090 backdrop

👍* zero ichi * cyber item SHOP by kokaku cybercity

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/CLOUD%20LAND/31/44/1803

 

@Mainstore

R2 K/E/N Shinobi

▶R2 K/E/N Shinobi Bottom[Black]Maitreya

▶R2 K/E/N Shinobi Clotch[Black]Maitreya

▶R2 K/E/N Shinobi Belly[Black]Maitreya

▶R2 K/E/N Shinobi Boots[Black]Maitreya

▶R2 K/E/N Shinobi Top[Black]Maitreya

▶R2 K/E/N Shinobi Arm[Black]Maitreya

👍R2 Fashion Mainstore

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/R2%20Fashion/80/87/1211

 

[LANEVO] OGRES MASK

👍[LANEVO] Mainstore

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Hippoden/92/130/27

 

*barberyumyum*P12(FAT)

:::SOLE::: SA - Pauldron KOURA (Black)

-00-Syuriken-CompletePack

amazing sim really

 

slurl.com/secondlife/Amancio/209/137/21

 

on black: View On Black

  

texture Joes Sistah

pose: Del May

  

They are not weight lifting equipments. The middle "bar" is stabbed into your earlobe. So they're really little.

 

Macro Mondays 【The Periodic Table】

Silver 925 consists of 92.5% genuine silver(Ag). The other 7.5% will be alloy to help prevent tarnishing. Typically copper(Cu) is used, although zinc(Zn), platinum(Pt) or geranium(Ge) are also common.

 

Happy Macro Mondays

Comments are always welcome and favs most appreciated.

Comentarios y favs son siempre bienvenidos

 

© Fotografía de Ricardo Gomez Angel

Todos los derechos reservados. Todas las imágenes contenidas en este sitio web son propiedad de Ricardo Gomez Angel. Las imágenes no se pueden reproducir, copiar o utilizar de ninguna manera sin el permiso escrito.

we are mourning the loss of a very popular and vibrant grade 11 student at our school this week and it has been a hard go for his friends...a reminder that they really are not invincible... On explore @#73, May 6/09, up to 50 May7, #45 May 8/09, 41 on May 9

We are reaching the penultimate station now.

 

You can see an interpretation of the very dynamic station "Am Hart" with this wonderful wavy lamp. Made for surfers, who are not afraid of very cold water :-)

 

Metro Blues # 13

  

Hard to read, eh?haha

 

Paraskevidekatriaphobia is fear of Friday the 13th.

 

Anyway, let's all have a wonderful time...

Let's all THANK GOD IT'S FRIDAY!!!

 

are so much easier to give up than bad ones :-)

Somerset Maugham

 

HBW!! Protect the ones you love...wear a mask, vaccinate...take care :-)

 

prunus mume, pink flowering japanese apricot, 'Rose Bud', j raulston arboretum, ncsu, raleigh, north carolina

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