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Vase 4, view1.I tried to combine the best parts of the three previous vases. This form is really much easier to throw than it looks. If you throw wobbly, off center cyllinders, you're halfway there. I definitely like the taller neck.
Delhi, India
Rickshaws, bicycles and pedestrians make their way down the main thoroughfare of Old Town Delhi in the heart of India’s capital city. A country of more than a billion people driven by its generosity and positive spirit, India is quickly becoming a hotbed for youth-led social change. With more than one million children living on the streets, the need for advocacy projects, literacy campaigns, and education programs is strong. Still, the notion of social action outside the government system is a new idea, leading to exciting, innovative ways of approaching systemic social problems with young people at the forefront of this burgeoning movement.
Kyle Taylor, Reprinted Digital Print, 2007© Kyle Taylor 2008
On the 14th December 2018 the 'Lady Mary' (2008, 3,612DWT) arrives in ballast at Teignmouth from Treport, France.
Riding a wagon pulled by cattle always makes an interesting but bumpy ride. From my website at www.focx.de
learning how to sit up on your own is hard work. just a few bumps, but she is so proud of herself. She throws her hands up in the air when we praise her and she flys backwards. Good thing there is always a big brother or a soft pillow to catch her.
One of the smaller bumpy-leafed hybrid. Depending on growth conditions it can be confused with Echeveria 'Rain Drops'.
Our state legislature approved a road budget for next year that only covers about 35% of the needs. In other words, for every 35 cents they plan on spending on the roads, 65 cents worth of work gets left undone.
I was going to use Wolcott Road as an example of our worn out roads but I just found out today that they plan on closing it on July 15 to replace this bridge. One problem with this project is that the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority, which operates Wolcott Mill Metropark (the mill is picture here) plans on closing this road in the future as they continue to develop the park. Wasted tax dollars at work!
Mammatus (also known as mammatocumulus, meaning "bumpy clouds") is a meteorological term applied to a cellular pattern of pouches hanging underneath the base of a cloud. The name "mammatus" is derived from the Latin mamma (breast), due to the resemblance between the shape of these clouds and human female breasts. Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mammatus_cloud
I finally caught a showing of Minnie's Fly Girls! The song selection was fantastic and the vocals were top notch. Here you can see the girls and Lee grimacing at Minnie's less-than-stellar touchdown.
Neanura muscorum
well today I didn't looking for eggs but for my tiny blue friends. Not as sharp as I wanted but not cropped
Water droplets on a rose. They make it look like quite a bumpy surface to me.
Shot for the ODC theme "Bumpy"
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Though the road from Arusha to Kibaya was bumpy, the scenery was breathtaking.
Credit: Nick Spector, 2012
Pamela and I once shared a very bumpy ride down a mountain in an old jeep. We held on to each other and anything else we could grasp in an effort not to bounce out of the vehicle as we made our way down the slopes of Mount Meru. We were headed into Arusha - a big city for a little girl from the mountain like Pamela. She was on her way to see the doctor. Her grandmother had smartly pinned her medical records to her shirt underneath her sweater so they wouldn't get lost. Hours later, it was discovered that Pamela was too shy to mention those records to the doctor. The doctor was so inapt. that he didn't even examine her well enough to discover the thick envelope of papers protruding from her shirt for himself. It made me kind of furious. Fortunately, the good people at Peace Matunda took Pamela under their wings and made sure she was seen by a more qualified doctor. That was in the summer of 2010.
I spent more than a month with Pamela and the other children from Peace Matunda School and Orphanage. I happened to be there during school holidays, so we were free to run and play and pass the time as we wished. (After chores were done, of course!)
I took long walks with Pamela. Sometimes I could buy her a coca-cola or a bun from the local shop. We once ate lunch together at a restaurant in Arusha. I watched her smile as she got her face painted one afternoon. I watched her shiver as she played in a tiny swimming pool another day. I listened to her sing and watched her dance as she played with the other children. She was a sweetheart - looking for nothing more than love and kindness. And she gave it back tenfold.
I visited her again in 2011 and 2012. She seemed so much stronger and healthier. She appeared more confident in everything she did. She was no long too shy to practice her English with anyone who would give her a chance.
I remember her huge hug when I returned the last time. She was welcoming me home. I felt the love.
It breaks my heart to say that Pamela passed away this weekend. I hope she know how many people in the world loved her and how much she will be missed.
I've been gathering photographs of her from my times in Tanzania. So far I've found more than 50. A good friend of Peace Matunda is creating a memory book in honor of Pamela. I hope that some of my photographs will remind people what a beautiful person she was.
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Safety strips on the ground and warning stripes in front of a strip mall.
Canyon Tree Frog - Hyla arenicolor (Dryophytes arenicolor)
I think I can even see the yellow on the thigh in one image.
References
- Holycross, A Field Guide to Amphibians and Reptiles in Arizona (Arizona Game and Fish, 2022), pp. 42-43
- Hanson, 50 Common Reptiles & Amphibians of the Southwest (Southwest Parks & Monuments ASsociation, 1997), p. 47
"Bumpy Road Ahead - This is how a portion of Thousand Oaks Boulevard looked before city crews began flattening out bumps and dips in major thoroughfare." View of Thousand Oaks Blvd., looking west, Dec. 9, 1968. News Chronicle Collection, 12-09-1968_1, CTO_666.
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