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Emerald Cut is the moniker given to a portion of Rock Springs Run between the head spring area present in the popular Kelly Park and the paddling launch of King's Landing, some mile and a half downstream. As one might imagine given the name, this one features a cut of colorful water, traveling through a course with a tropical canopy. The view from this shallow and narrow run is one of the finest glimpses of Florida jungle I've been able to witness, and that's a part of the Florida landscape that I hold so dear but haven't captured to the best of my abilities until today. If I were to pick out a handful of shots to show someone what the "real Florida" is like, I would certainly have to include one of Emerald Cut.
I'm seeing so many great bird photos posted by Flickr friends, I thought I'd add my one (and only) worthy bird shot. Taken at the Butterfly House on Mackinac Island in October.
A cut out I made with drawing paper then photographed against a window. whimsicallymade.blogspot.com/
It was a piggin' day here today. Cold wet and only 12 degrees.
At tea time the cloud cover broke and I donned coat and boots and headed out over the fields which have just been cut for Silage.
The light was enchanting so I pressed the little silver button on the camera !
I bought these for my wife. No real reason. But I hadn't bought her any for a while, and she deserves them. A loving mum to our daughter. A wonderful wife to me. Somehow, flowers are probably not enough, but they always say thanks when given. So this is thanks to Gillian, who I love with all my heart.
Navy Flake, Navy cut, Navy tobacco was at one time Virginia tobaccos, as Burley did not exist until later in tobacco history. In colonial times sailors twisted tobacco into a roll and "tied it tightly, often moistening the leaves with rum, molasses, or spice solutions." Stored in this way the flavors melded. To smoke it a slice was cut, known as a "twist" or "curly". Eventually all twisted tobacco, and then pressed tobacco, became known as "Navy" "because of the convenience for sailors and outdoorsmen who favored its compact size "and long-lasting, slow-burning qualities."[1] Navy Flake tobacco is pressed into bricks and sliced into broad flakes. [
Navy Flake, taille Navy, le tabac Navy était autrefois le tabac de Virginie, Burley n’existant plus que dans l’histoire du tabac. À l'époque coloniale, les marins tordaient le tabac en rouleau et le "nouaient étroitement, en humidifiant souvent les feuilles avec du rhum, de la mélasse ou des solutions d'épices". De cette manière, les saveurs se sont mélangées. Pour fumer une tranche a été coupée, connue sous le nom de "twist" ou "bouclé". Finalement, tous les tabacs tordus, puis pressés, devinrent "Marine" en raison de leur commodité pour les marins et les amateurs de plein air qui préféraient sa taille compacte "et ses qualités de longue durée de combustion lente". [1] Le tabac Navy Flake est pressé en briques et coupées en larges flocons [2].