View allAll Photos Tagged Cook
Um campo de feno
É difícil imaginar vacas no vale de Yosemite. Mas no final de 1800, cavalos e mulas transportavam turistas para o Vale, enquanto o gado e ovelhas forneciam leite e carne aos hotéis.
Os primeiros pioneiros plantaram colheitas neste prado. Eles também permitiram que seus animais pastassem aqui.
Essas práticas compactaram o solo e danificaram plantas dos prados.
Após as pastagens terem sido eliminadas do vale de Yosemite no final da década de 1920, a vegetação nativa retornou.
Olhando através deste prado hoje, você pode ver gamos se alimentando nos gramados ou coiotes e ratos dos prados.
the first morning, getting unpacked and settled in our cottage, getting ready to go out to the water.
Cook Out (2,997 square feet)
4300 South Laburnum Avenue, Laburnum Park Shopping Center, Richmond, VA
Opened in January 2014; originally 1989-built Jefferson National Bank, later Wachovia (1998-fall 2008), MoneyMax Title Loans (2009-2012)
- raw (Block, iqf)
- cook
- blanch
- heads on
- head less
- peeled deveined tail on/Off
- peeled undeveined
- skewer
0402-2-16
Colonel Edward Cook was one of the founding fathers of Rostraver Township, one of Westmoreland County's first official communities. Col. Cook owned what was then called the Rehoboth Valley, today it is known as the Cook Farm, where the original house still stands.
When Fayette County formed, part of the property then became Fayette County.
These fine folks cooked all the pancakes for breakfast at the Groundhog Day celebrations in Balzac... And they insisted on me taking a photograph of them...
Formal Naming of the Hank & Billye Sauber Aron
Young Scholars Summer Research Institute
and Launch of Book Honoring Dr Samuel Dubois Cook
Nasher Art Museum
Duke University
April 12, 2018
Formal Naming of the Hank & Billye Sauber Aron
Young Scholars Summer Research Institute
and Launch of Book Honoring Dr Samuel Dubois Cook
Nasher Art Museum
Duke University
April 12, 2018
Description: Group of hikers posing on the summit of Mount San Antonio in the snow, May 16, 1920. Names labeled, L to R, top: Wilson, Edgar W. Cook, Thompson, Bell, Weeks, Mann, Horne, Chalmers, Ingram, Poppelwell. L to R, bottom: McManus, Weeks, Sam Marks. Same group is pictured in Chalmers 015. [Duplicate of of Chalmers 082.]
Photographer: Edgar W. Cook
Donor: Edgar W. Cook
Original: B&W print in holdings of Angeles Chapter Archives
Image ID (file name): Cook 148
NO KNOWN COPYRIGHT RESTRICTIONS:
By asserting "no known copyright restrictions," the SIERRA CLUB ANGELES CHAPTER HISTORY COMMITTEE is sharing the benefit of our research without providing an expressed or implied warranty to others who would like to use or reproduce the photograph. This means that we are unaware of any current copyright restrictions on the works so designated, either because the term of copyright may have expired without being renewed, because no evidence has been found that copyright restrictions apply, because the original creator has granted us permission to post the image on the Internet, or because we own the copyright but are not exercising that control. The HISTORY COMMITTEE cannot guarantee that private or commercial use of the images shared herein will not violate the rights of unidentified copyright holders and we cannot be responsible for any liability resulting from the use of these images.
If you make use of a photo from this source, you are reminded to conduct an independent analysis of applicable law before proceeding with a particular new use.
Tom Raskin as Truffaldino.Deryk Hamon as Cook. From EPOC's production (for, by and with children) at the Royal College of Music and Unicorn Theatre 2008. Mark Tinkler (Dir); Annabel Lee (Des); Jonathan Gale (MD); Adam Carree (LX); Tom Stoppard (Eng Trans). Photo by Sebastian Valentine
Derby winning jockey Mario Gutierrez rides Cook Inlet in race 4 on the Derby Day card. They finished last.
Um campo de feno
É difícil imaginar vacas no vale de Yosemite. Mas no final de 1800, cavalos e mulas transportavam turistas para o Vale, enquanto o gado e ovelhas forneciam leite e carne aos hotéis.
Os primeiros pioneiros plantaram colheitas neste prado. Eles também permitiram que seus animais pastassem aqui.
Essas práticas compactaram o solo e danificaram plantas dos prados.
Após as pastagens terem sido eliminadas do vale de Yosemite no final da década de 1920, a vegetação nativa retornou.
Olhando através deste prado hoje, você pode ver gamos se alimentando nos gramados ou coiotes e ratos dos prados.