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So I finished my living pokedex awhile ago and decided I needed a bigger challenge. When I started this I had recently gotten the Mew from the pokemon ranch (took 7 hours of downloading save files and cloning pokemon to fill up the ranch) into my diamond version, and cloned that mew a bunch of times and transferred it up through ORAS. How many Mew did I clone? Easily 500 if not more. What is really good for trade-bait? Mew. The Mews are technically legitimate...I just kept cloning them. So in the sense that I didn't just gen them into my game, they're legit.
Moving along, this is my checklist of shiny pokemon for my living dex as of December 8th.
Green: Pokemon received in trades.
Red: caught by me or I relieved it from a legitimate event
Yellow: I have an extra of the pre-evolution and haven't gotten around to evolving it - was not counted in completion numbers
Pink: Shiny-locked pokemon that were hacked in for the purpose of completing the living dex since there is no legitimate way of obtaining them otherwise.
I'd say I'm doing pretty good since I stated October 10th. roughly 3 months, and I'm a little more than half way done!
#Cybercrime Protection Checklist (CCPC) PSA - Visit the #iPredator #OnlineSafety & #Cyberpsychology website to direct download, at no cost, the educational CCPC by Michael Nuccitelli, Psy.D. NYC #BeBest - Link: www.ipredator.co/cybercrime-protection-checklist
Black-legged Kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla), St Bees Head, Cumbria
Ebird checklist:
ebird.org/checklist/S259463729
Small oceanic gull. Adults have solid black wingtips that look like they were dipped in ink. Also note translucent flight feathers, entirely yellow bill, and black legs. Nonbreeding birds have a dark ear patch and smudgy gray on the back of the neck. Immatures are boldly patterned with a black collar and “M” pattern on wings. Rather buoyant in flight, sometimes soaring in high arcs in windy conditions. Breeds at high latitudes across the Northern Hemisphere, primarily in large colonies on cliffs and other structures overhanging water. Spends the winter on the open ocean, sometimes seen from shore. Rare inland. Can gather in flocks during migration and winter, especially where food is abundant.
Source: Ebird
ITEM #NSP01187 THESE ARE THE CHECKLIST CARDS (COLOR CARD A) FOR THE TICK TEST CARD SET. BOTH CARDS ARE PERSONALLY AUTOGRAPHED BY BEN EDLUND AND HAVE A GOLD FOIL-STAMPED TICK INSECT SYMBOL ON THE LOWER LEFT. YOU GET BOTH COLOR VARIANTS RED AND YELLOW TICK
Butterflys - Check
Shamrocks - Check
Bells of Ireland in vase - Check
Lavender Linens - Check
Crisp Stripes - Check
Irish Linen - Check
Eggs - Check
Los Angeles Firefighters quickly tackled a swift moving non-injury blaze that burned through the roof of a business in Northridge, California on July 27, 2009. © Photo by Juan Guerra
Credit to 1dayreview.com
Must Credit to: 'https://1dayreview.com/' the original site and not Flickr.
Copy Link Address: 1dayreview.com
Hospital bag checklist: What to pack for labor and delivery
By Kate Marple
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Medically reviewed by Rae Cherng, M.D., FACOG, ob-gyn
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August 13, 2021
Getting closer to the big day? Here's what to pack in your hospital bag for a more comfortable labor, delivery, and recovery. Our handy lists include all the essentials for your baby, your partner, and you. We've also included hospital bag packing tips from moms – and sound advice on what you shouldn't bring with you.
Photo credit: BabyCenter
IN THIS ARTICLE
- Hospital bag checklist for moms
- Hospital bag checklist for partners
- Hospital bag checklist for your baby
- What not to pack in your hospital bag
- Moms' tips for what to pack in a hospital bag
Having your hospital bag ready in advance can help you feel more secure and ready for whatever happens in your last weeks of pregnancy. Pack your hospital bag by the time you're about 36 weeks pregnant, since you could go into labor at any time in the weeks before your due date. Keep your "go-bag" near the door – or even in the car. Of course, you'll have to add some items at the last minute (like your brush, phone, and insurance card), but you can pack some of the essentials in advance.
Hospital bag checklist for moms
Essential items and documents:
- A picture ID (driver's license or other ID), your insurance card, and the name and phone number of your baby's doctor.
The medical diagnosis of ADHD is based practically completely on history acquired from the client, moms and dads, instructors and other individuals who understand the kid well. There is no blood test, imaging research study or digital test that can be trusted to precisely make the medical...
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This was found in a Water St. alley in Vancouver's Gastown district. Artist unknown.
How many have *you* checked off?
Adult male Prothonotary Wabler, foraging for insects along mossy banks of stream. Rare but annual vagrant to CT. CAS Larsen Sanctuary, Fairfield, Connecticut, USA.
22 April 2015. © Frank Mantlik 2015
It is hard to tell some species apart, I have a checklist, my blog and a draft report from our guides. I know this was seen during the day.
So, that's why I am going with Ophrys reinholdii. Found beside a path leading down a steep meadow, deep in long grass, so easily missed.
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O. reinholdii was first described by Fleischmann from Attica, Greece in 1907 and was named in honour of an eminent 19th century Athens doctor.
It is surely one of the Mediterraneans most beautiful orchids and belongs to the small O. reinholdii group of Ophrys containing just nine members. The other eight species all have characteristically bold markings and include amongst their number the equally distinctive O. cretica, O. ariadne, and the suspiciously similar O. straussii . This latter taxon is a somewhat controversial one and the relationship between it and O. reinholdii would benefit from further study.
O. reinholdii has a scattered distribution from Macedonia, south and east as far as Anatolia and to Bulgaria in the north. It is very local and only regarded as in any way common on the Aegean island of Rhodes. Although a distinctive flower it can easily be mistaken for the aforementioned O. straussii and also the newly described O. reinhardiorum , both of which share a considerable overlap of range.
O. reinholdii is a tall orchid growing to 60cms, with up to 10 flowers per spike and which favours lightly acidic conditions. Although it will tolerate full sun, it shows a marked preference for coniferous woodland clearings and the sides of tracks where the canopy has opened out. This partiality does however make it a difficult subject for the photographer, both because of available light and finding clean plants that are not masked by thick layers of pine pollen. The illustrations are from northern Chios and Rhodes, dating from the second week of April.
www.orchidsofbritainandeurope.co.uk/Ophrys%20reinholdii.html