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Day 328 [11-24-2016]
A long drive and a good meal. Today I had to wake up early, despite my late night last night, and drive little over three hours to Vermont to visit my aunt, uncle, and cousin. It is so great to be up here again and the meal today was amazing but I am so darn tired. It isn't even night yet. I will have to take a nap. Goodnight world.
I can't wait to see what the next day brings!
20240325_0874_RX1-09 Across Cook Strait
On board Air New Zealand A320D ZK-OXI on flight NZ377 to Christchurch. Some nice clouds and light, although a bit bumpy.
#15672
A Cook they hadde with hem for the nones
To boille the chiknes with the marybones,
And poudre-marchant tart, and galyngale.
Wel koude he knowe a draughte of London ale.
He koude rooste, and sethe, and broille, and frye,
Maken mortreux, and wel bake a pye.
But greet harm was it, as it thoughte me,
That on his shyne a mormal hadde he.
For blankmanger, that made he with the beste.
Had a cook out for the people that worked with us at the compound!!Fred Benda in first two pictures. Photo contributed by Fred Benda
In addition to a costume contest and dunk tank, Desert Southwest held a cookout to help raise money for charity Oct. 31, 2018. (Staff photo)
S A Cook, Company A, 2nd Wisconsin Cavelry. From the Neenah Historical Society photograph collection of area Civil War veterans.
Canon 5DMkII | Canon 17-400mm F/4 lens | ISO 100 | 20mm | F/11 | 59sec | Lee Big Stopper & Lee 0.6 ND soft grad
Cook and Book is a new concept of bookstore, where you can buy all sort of books in different decorated spaces, drink a coffee o a beer and have a lunch or dinner. Cook and Book is located in Wolubilis, the new cultural center of Woluve Saint-Lambert, in Brussels (Belgium). March 2008
Making landfall on Palmerston, an atoll that lies about 200 miles northwest of Aitutaki. It is one of the strangest communities on the planet and dates only from 1863 when South Seas trader William Marsters arrived to set up a coconut plantation. He brought with him his Cook Islands wife and her two sisters and eventually he married all three, fathering many children. The population today on Palmerston is about 50 and all of them are descendants of Marsters and bear his name. The community lacks both an airstrip and a proper harbour, so life on the atoll is extremely tenuous and wholly dependent on subsidies from the Cook Islands and New Zealand governments. The welcome the community gave the 80 passengers on our expedition cruise ship was wonderfully warm and welcoming. Young children would ‘adopt’ a tourist with a show of over-affection, hanging on to an arm or a leg as if their lives depended on it. Physical contact with the outside world is relatively rare here and we saw a couple of cases of obvious autism. Very few places like this are left - it reminded me of Pitcairn - and one leaves wondering how much longer it can survive.
James Cook (1728–1779) was from Marton, near Middlesbrough, but is associated with Whitby in that he served his apprenticeship in nearby Staithes.
Gracie was just as excited about getting on top of this big rock this year! Here she is almost exactly a year earlier, on the same one: www.flickr.com/photos/royalpalmtree/7870245826/
Cook Forest State Park in Cooksburg Pennsylvania. August 2013
As you can see I cannot draw, specially not with the medication I'm on.
Assignment 6 for the Cooked Group was: Shoot (or draw/write by left hand) the most favourite dream from your childhood.
My dream: hhile I was a small child I fell in love with an enormous black dog at the hotel I was staying with my parents. I was constantly under the table where the dog lay sleeping and nobody could drag me away. At night I kept dreaming about the dog and how I wanted one for myself. This was a recurrent dream and very vivid.
Frame:*SURLY* straggler Painted by COOK PAINT WORKS
Headset:*VELO ORANGE* grand cru headset 1 1/8"
Rim:*PACENTI* brevet
Tire:*TERAVAIL* cannonball
Handle:*SURLY* terminal bar
Stem:*NITTO* UI-21 EX stem
Grip:*ERGON* GP1
Brake lever:*DIA-COMPE* mx-2 brake lever BL special
Shifter:*RIVENDELL* S-2 thumb shifter
Saddle:*BROOKS* B17
Seatpost:*NITTO* 65 seatpost
Crank:*BLUE LUG* XMC triple crank set
Rack:*NITTO* M-18 × *WALD* 137 basket
Pedal:*MKS* XC-III bear trap pedal
Palmerston is an atoll that lies about 200 miles northwest of Aitutaki. It is one of the strangest communities on the planet and dates only from 1863 when South Seas trader William Marsters arrived to set up a coconut plantation. He brought with him his Cook Islands wife and her two sisters and eventually he married all three, fathering many children. The population today on Palmerston is about 50 and all of them are descendants of Marsters and bear his name. The community lacks both an airstrip and a proper harbour, so life on the atoll is extremely tenuous and wholly dependent on subsidies from the Cook Islands and New Zealand governments. The welcome the community gave the 80 passengers on our expedition cruise ship was wonderfully warm and welcoming. Young children would ‘adopt’ a tourist with a show of over-affection, hanging on to an arm or a leg as if their lives depended on it. Physical contact with the outside world is relatively rare here and we saw a couple of cases of obvious autism. Very few places like this are left - it reminded me of Pitcairn - and one leaves wondering how much longer it can survive.