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dea alata della vittoria

My oldest son Jason lives in Branford so he took us to the Branford town beach...:))

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Dear friends!

Thank you so much for your kind comments and visits!

With love

Geetha :)

 

The Fave clicks are how I check, who are actively following me, so please don't forget to hit the Fave button regularly.

And If I happen to unfollow you, just give me a few faves and most likely I will add you to my list again... :)

Bastian (mixed breed), 08.10.2021

 

Olympus OMD EM5 Digital Camera

Cruisin down Sound View Beach...Old Lyme :))

Chapman Beach...Westbrook, CT

[click-click zoom!] 🔍

 

Let me see you dance

I love to watch you dance.

Take you down another level,

And get you dancing with the Devil.

Take a shot of this, but I'm warning you,

I'm on that sh*t that you can't smell, baby,

So, put down your perfume.

 

Bring your love, baby, I could bring my shame.

Bring the drugs, baby, I could bring my pain.

Oh, I got my heart right here.

Oh, I got my scars right here.

Bring the cups, baby, I could bring the drank.

Bring your body, baby, I could bring you fame.

And that's my mo'f**kin' words too,

So let me mo'f**kin' love you.

 

🎶 L I S T E N 🎶

  

always enjoy a photo shot with you

Keke's amazing version here: www.flickr.com/photos/theoriginalkeke/49804317161/in/date...

click view large

thanks for comments faves invites always appreciated

 

Seaside Sanatorium in Waterford...getting late day sun!

Pose: Amitie Dressing Room

Taken @ Sunnys: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Sunny%20Photo%20Studio/50/...

 

Wearing:

Bodysuit: Darina - by MILOTA

Bracelets: Dakota bracelets - by Legal Insanity

Lip piercing: Annika - by LittleFish

Hair: Christwo - by Doux

 

(Marmorpalast am Heiligensee). Another day with bright sunshine and dark storm clouds, especially impressive in Potsdam's New Gardens along the lake. [SNY01320_lr_2000]

 

Thank you all for the clicks, comments & faves.

Chapman beach...Connecticut shore

 

Jaws!! ;))

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'Everyone thinks they have the best dog -- and none of them are wrong'

 

Man's bestie

 

Thank-you for all the overwhelming support and many friendships.

 

Happy Clicks,

~Christie

   

* Best experienced full screen

:::: BIGGER ....is better for your eyes and soul...!

 

:::: Latest!

 

:::: Have a coffee!

 

:: Stormy Perspective!, St-Barthelémy, Québec, Canada. (Archive)

Copyright © 2009 Gaëtan Bourque. All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.

      

♥【Pose:BREAK:70 Click (camera included)】

♥【Head: Lelutka Lilly】

♥【Body:EBody Reborn】

♥【Hair:DOUX: Taiane】

♥【FaceTattoo:Arana: Dark Rose Tattoo】

♥【Tattoo:DAPPA Mira】

Zürich, Switzerland

click to view large

 

Creative Digital Art Community Challenge - Impressionist Nature - Jun 15 to July 14

www.flickr.com/groups/challenges_community_group/discuss/...

Gannet - Morus Bassanus

 

Bempton Cliffs

 

Double click to view

 

The gannets are large white birds with yellowish heads; black-tipped wings; and long bills. Northern gannets are the largest seabirds in the North Atlantic, having a wingspan of up to 2 metres (6.6 ft). The other two species occur in the temperate seas around southern Africa, southern Australia and New Zealand.

 

Gannets hunt fish by diving into the sea from a height and pursuing their prey underwater. Gannets have a number of adaptations which enable them to do this:

no external nostrils, they are located inside the mouth instead;

air sacs in the face and chest under the skin which act like bubble wrapping, cushioning the impact with the water;

positioning of the eyes far enough forward on the face for binocular vision, allowing them to judge distances accurately.

 

Gannets can dive from a height of 30 metres (98 ft), achieving speeds of 100 kilometres per hour (62 mph) as they strike the water, enabling them to catch fish much deeper than most airborne birds.

 

The gannet's supposed capacity for eating large quantities of fish has led to gannet becoming a description of somebody with a voracious appetite.

 

Gannets are colonial breeders on islands and coasts, normally laying one chalky, blue egg. Gannets lack brood patches and they use their webbed feet to warm the eggs. It takes five years for gannets to reach maturity. First-year birds are completely black, and subsequent sub-adult plumages show increasing amounts of white.

 

The most important nesting ground for northern gannets is the United Kingdom with about two thirds of the world's population. These live mainly in Scotland, including the Shetland Isles. The rest of the world's population is divided between Canada, Ireland, Faroe Islands and Iceland, with small numbers in France (they are often seen in the Bay of Biscay), the Channel Islands, Norway and a single colony in Germany on Heligoland. The biggest northern gannet colony is on Scotland's Bass Rock; in 2014, this colony contained some 75,000 pairs. Sulasgeir off the coast of the Isle of Lewis, St. Kilda, Grassholm in Pembrokeshire, Bempton Cliffs in the East Riding of Yorkshire, Sceilig Bheag, Ireland and Bonaventure Island, Quebec are also important northern gannet breeding sites.

 

Young gannets were historically used as a food source, a tradition still practised in Ness, Scotland, where they are called guga. Like examples of continued traditional whale harvesting, the modern day hunting of gannet chicks results in great controversies as to whether it should continue to be afforded exemption from the ordinary protection afforded to sea birds in UK and EU law". The Ness hunt is currently limited to 2,000 chicks per year, and dates back at least to the Iron Age. The hunt is considered to be sustainable, as between 1902 and 2003 Gannet numbers in Scotland increased dramatically from 30,000 to 180,000.

 

Population:

 

UK breeding:

 

220,000 nests

 

[click-click zoom!] 🔍

Click on Image to Enlarge !!!

 

The composition of this image was achieved IN CAMERA using an Apple iPhone 4S. Post capture processing was indeed done, but only involving the treatment of light and colour. By "breaking the rules" of the iPhone's panoramic function, the image can be skewed, splintered or fragmented into a multi-planarity that could, perhaps be called a form of "Millennial Cubism".

 

Please see the Flickr group "PANO-Vision" to view a gallery of images created by 20 artists ( and counting ) who are deliberately working in this mode of image creation.

 

© Richard S Warner ( Visionheart ) - 2015. All Rights Reserved. This image is not for use in any form without explicit, express, written permission.

Patos mudos.

"Cairina moschata"

FashionNatic: Donna Set @Cosmopolitan

B(U)Y ME: Señorita female pose set @Cosmopolitan

 

for more information click in link in first comment for link to the blog.

Click image to view larger .

Gansos - Anser anser

Pata muda - Cairina moschata

Click image to view LARGER

Click to find the bench in each image :-)) HBM!

 

Lupinus polyphyllus (large-leaved lupine, big-leaved lupine, many-leaved lupine[1] or, primarily in cultivation, garden lupin) is a species of lupine (lupin) native to western North America from southern Alaska and British Columbia east to Quebec, and western Wyoming, and south to Utah and California. It commonly grows along streams and creeks, preferring moist habitats.

 

It is a perennial herbaceous plant with stout stems growing to 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) tall. The leaves are palmately compound with (5-) 9-17 leaflets 3–15 centimetres (1.2–5.9 in) long. The flowers are produced on a tall spike, each flower 1–1.5 centimetres (0.39–0.59 in) long, most commonly blue to purple in wild plants. Wikipedia

Shutter Release Button Evolution.

In this shot, the front camera is Zenit 12XP and the second one is the Lumix GX7.

Please click on the image to view large.

 

Flower buds of the hybrid Grevillea "Poorinda Blondie". "Poorinda" is an Aboriginal word meaning light.

 

None of the flowers have opened fully. The plant about 3m tall was covered in inflorescences of different ages. The shape of the flowers is typical of Grevilleas. However, the colour combination of orange and red in the flowers is unusual and gives the impression that they are brown when seen at a distance. Taken in full sunlight.

 

Thank you for visiting. I very much appreciate the faves and very kind comments which have been left.

Trois ans que je les cherche, chaque fois de mauvaises photos ; et là .... je tombe sur un troupeau.

Three years that I look for them, every time bad photos; and there .... I come across a flock.

 

Note: Please, look this photo in full screen (click L and F11)

S'il vous plaît, regardez cette photo en plein écran (click L et F11)

 

Please press "F" if you like this photo!

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