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Images of cute vintage girls inside bottle caps. I added glass glitter to the sealant to add some sparkle. There are magnets on the back of the caps.
Ryan Fox receives his Bachelor of Arts degree during the Salve Regina University Sixty-ninth Annual Commencement in Newport.
The black-capped chickadee (Poecile atricapillus) is a small, nonmigratory, North American songbird that lives in deciduous and mixed forests. It is a passerine bird in the tit family Paridae. It is the state bird of both Maine and Massachusetts in the United States, and the provincial bird of New Brunswick in Canada. It is well known for its capacity to lower its body temperature during cold winter nights as well as its good spatial memory to relocate the caches where it stores food, and its boldness near humans (sometimes feeding from the hand). It is almost universally considered 'cute' due to its oversized round head, tiny body, and apparent curiosity about everything, including humans.
Zimbabwe.
Victoria Falls.
In our hotel garden.
The Common Bulbul (Pycnonotus barbatus) is a member of the bulbul family of passerine birds. It is a ubiquitous resident breeder throughout Africa. Other names include Black-eyed Bulbul and Common Garden Bulbul.
The bulbuls are a widespread family of songbirds, found much over Africa and Asia.
The Common Bulbul has a number of subspecies; some authorities consider P. b. dodsoni (Dodson’s Bulbul), P. b. somaliensis (Somali Bulbul) and P. b. tricolor (Dark-capped Bulbul) as separate species from the nominate P. b. barbatus.
Custom embroidered baseball caps, various bag styles, towels. Wholesale factory direct. We are not your local embroidery shop! We are factory direct manufacturing. We produce every piece 100% from start to finish. Low MOQ's to 100,000 pieces per month.
Light Painting au Cap Ferret. Repeindre un bateau sans effacer le phare, j'adore! Sans que ca se vois tant que ça, un gros travail sur cette photos avec plus de 2 minutes de pose.
This is my buddy, Rob, who recently passed away (November 22, 2024) The kids at the school called in Cap'n Rob. I posted some pictures of him before, but they were all from concerts we had attended. He is actin' the fool in most of the shots. I am glad I came across this one. I knew I had taken it, but I simply could not remember when. He was my building engineer when I was principal at a local school. I took this of him in my office. It's one of the few pictures I have of him where is acting normal. A few weeks ago we had a memorial of life celebration among mutual friends. I gave the eulogy. It is below. Reach out to the ones you care about. Tomorrow is not guaranteed.
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I stand here today to remember and honor my dear friend and former colleague, Robert Marvin Helton—though to me, he was simply Rob. Rob was the building manager at the school where I served as principal, but more importantly, he was my friend. At first glance, we seemed like an unlikely pair, different in many ways—except for one major connection: our love of music, especially live music.
I can’t even begin to count how many shows we saw together, how many memories we made, and how much fun we had. And through those experiences, I came to know the real Rob. Beneath his rough exterior was a kind, if fractured, soul. He had been through tough times, but he was a survivor. With the support of friends, he overcame many of the struggles life threw his way.
Unfortunately, his health declined in recent years, forcing him into retirement. I regret not seeing him as much as I would have liked, something that deeply saddens me now. Still, we kept in touch, and I had the chance to speak with him just before his quadruple bypass surgery. He had been in the hospital before, determined to make changes, and he did—but sometimes, the damage is already done. His heart wasn’t strong enough to recover, and after nearly two weeks in intensive care, he left us on November 22nd.
Losing Rob hurts. I’ll miss his voice, his laugh, and the way he could turn any situation into something funny. Even now, my toughest moments come when I hear a song or remember a concert we attended together. One of my favorite memories is from a Machine Head concert, where I was standing in line to meet the band. Rob, looking every bit the overworked roadie he appeared to be, just started helping the crew move equipment. He strolled right into the venue, no ticket or pass needed, and by the time I got inside, he was already waiting for me by the stage. I told him he owed me for the ticket he never used—but, of course, he just bought the drinks instead.
That was Rob. He had a way of making every experience a little wilder, a little funnier, and a whole lot more memorable. He loved to mess with me, landing kidney punches when I least expected them, just so he could watch me retaliate. He also loved to tell people I was the "coolest boss and principal in the world." I wasn’t. But that was just Rob, always hyping up the people he cared about.
Rob and I shared so many great times—like the nights at Gas Monkey Live, where we somehow got upgraded to VIP more than once. We even met Richard Rawlings at a Dwight Yoakam show. Those places are gone now, just like Rob, but the memories remain.
To those who knew him longer than I did, I can only imagine how deeply his absence is felt. But in the time I had with him, we had fun.
Rob, you insufferable pain in the arse—I’m going to miss you horribly. Rest easy, my friend.
Black-capped Chickadees nest in holes in dead trees, usually not over 3 m up. The nest cavity is lined with soft, dry moss, on which is placed a thick layer of matted small mammal fur: rarely, plant down is used, presumably when fur is not available. Laying begins about mid-May, 5 to 9 eggs, usually 7 or 8; white, spotted with bright cinnamon brown.
Bottle caps from the Falstaff Brewing Company, with a rebus puzzle on it. From the 1970s or 1980s, I think. Found in a jar in my grandparents' house.
MSH 2/12: Okay, the picture doesn't show it, but they were in a jar originally!
For a Fair CAP, Cap the subsidies
Tuesday 12th Mach 2013
Greens/EFA MEPs rallied outside European Parliament this morning and met with NGOs to support their calls for genuine CAP reform.
The vote for the reform of the Common Agricultural Policy will take place tomorrow from noon, Wednesday 13th March.
The vote in the Agricultural committee in January unravelled the European Commission's somewhat Green leaning proposal on CAP reform and resulted in an even less ambitious text.
Our MEPs are are now working to change the trend of the vote in committee.
A real Green and Fair CAP reform must focus on two points:
1. REAL GREENING : No to the "less money, no greening approach"
2. FAIRNESS: There is enough money for a greener and solidarity focused CAP
Find out more about these and the rest of the proposed reforms
www.greens-efa.eu/cap-reform-9316.html
The Greens/EFA MEPs carried banners calling for:
Agricultural Revolution: Go for crop rotation
For a fair CAP: Cap the subsidies
www.recyclart.org/2014/03/bottle-caps-portrait/
Chicago artist Mary Ellen Croteau collected recycled plastic bottle caps to tile, layer and juxtapose each cap in order to create a self-portrait mosaic titled "CLOSE". An amazing work !
From the artist:
Plastic bottle caps – like bags, a plastic product that can’t be/ isn’t recycled. I conceived of an “endless column” of these caps, after Constantin Brancussi’s iconic modernist sculpture. One became two, and two became many. While making these columns, I noticed the smaller caps tended to nest inside one another, and the color combinations reminded me of Chuck Close’s painted portraits. So I got sidetracked and started on a large self-portrait made entirely of bottle caps. The piece measures 8 feet by 7 feet. No paint is used, except to delineate a few shadows where white board was showing through. In a few cases, the caps are trimmed in order to fit a tight space.
More information: Mary Ellen Croteau website website !