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La commune dont la distribution du courrier dépendait du bureau de poste de Courville-sur-Eure réclamait la création d'une agence locale à l'administration des postes depuis 1876. Le souhait fut réalisé en 1904 par la création de cet imposant bâtiment financé en bonne partie par la commune. Les témoins de l'époque affirmaient qu'il y avait concurrence pour la hauteur du campanile avec l'église située en face. En fait, cette hauteur était justifiée par la descente des poids de l'horloge pour qu'ils ne soient remontés qu'une fois par semaine.
d'après: www.fontainelaguyon.fr/fontaine/histo_poste_2.html
Pentax P30N
Pellicule Lomography Color 100
Traitement en kit Rollei Colorchem C41
Domaine de Beaumesnil. Autour du château construit entre 1633 et 1640, fut aménagé un ensemble de jardins dont seules subsistent les sculptures. Le parc fut réaménagé à partir de 1756 par la marquise de Graville, restauré vers 1801, puis doté, à partir de 1830, d'aménagements pittoresques respectant la composition d'ensemble (ces aménagements paysagers ont en partie été effacés par les restaurations des années 1950). source: www.pop.culture.gouv.fr/notice/merimee/PA00099323
Classé MH partiellement, inscrit MH partiellement, Château, sauf parties classées : inscription par arrêté du 8 mai 1926 - Façades et toitures ainsi que le grand escalier intérieur du château, cour d'honneur, douves, grande perspective du parc et la terrasse lui faisant suite, motte féodale: classement par arrêté du 20 décembre 1966 - Parc, perspectives, avant-cour, demi-lune, basses-cours, vergers et jardins clos avec leurs aménagements, murs, grilles et portails ; façades et toitures des pavillons d'entrée et des communs: inscription par arrêté du 5 février 1997
Grass depends on the wind for pollination, not insects, so the flowers are tiny and inconspicuous. Photo taken in Lakeside, AZ
A family of small-clawed otters at Adelaide Zoo, South Australia
~~~ Thank you all for viewing, kind comments, favs and awards - much appreciated! ~~~
Seigneurie dépendant de la châtellenie de Couvin. Propriété de la famille de Boussu pendant le moyen âge, dont les membres sont prévôts de la Châtellenie. Passe par vente en 1568 à Jean Marotte, maître de forges, puis par alliance à la famille Kiévrain, en 1625. Après la Révolution française, le Château appartiendra successivement aux Licot vers 1844, maîtres de forges de Nismes, aux Riocour en 1869 et aux Villermont en 1896. Entre le village et l'Eau Blanche, entouré d'un parc partiellement emmuraillé, ensemble en moellons de calcaire assisés, disposé de part et d'autre d'une cour carrée et cerné de douves aménagées en bassin probablement au XIXe siècle. Quatre grandes phases se révèlent à l'analyse : dans la deuxième moitié du XVIe siècle, construction du château au nord-est, dont restent la tour d'angle et le porche d'entrée. En1677, reconstruction de l'édifice en L. En 1748, établissement des dépendances à l'opposé, flanquées de la tour-colombier. Vers 1860 et les années suivantes, réaménagement du château, sur les plans de l'architecte Suys. A l'angle est, énorme tour circulaire avec ample toiture d'ardoises à coyau que termine une guette en charpenterie amortie par un petit bulbe. Construction de deux niveaux, sur cave voûtée en calotte. Deux canonnières rectangulaires à la base. Au rez de chaussée, même nombre de canonnières, dont l'une possède une double embouchure.
Explored February 9, 2023
Depending on the point of view, the Tempodrom, a concert hall and event location, looks like a crown or a circus tent, or – getting very close with 7 mm (=14 mm FF) – like a starship that has just landed or is ready for take-off. The intended connotaton is a circus tent because that is what the Tempodrom started as back in 1980.
Founded by former nurse Irene Moessinger (who used an 800,000 DM heritage to start the Tempodrom) as a West-Berlin subculture event location, the original Tempodrom was located on the west side of Potsdamer Platz. Due to noise complaints, it moved to the nearby Tiergarten Park five years later.
When the Tiergarten site was chosen as building ground for the new German Chancellery (after the German reunification in 1990), the Tempodrom moved to a temporary location near Ostbahnhof, before it found its final location as a solid building on the site of Anhalter Bahnhof in 2001. Anhalter Bahnhof, or what is left of it, is not far from Potsdamer Platz, the Tempodrom's original founding site, so one could say that the Tempodrom has finally come home.
Tuk Tuk's/Rickshaws are a very popular form of transport in Sri Lanka and many other parts of South East Asia. They come in a variety of different shapes and forms, depending on which country you visit.
L$2,500 includes rez and landscaping for a smooth transition to your land and this scene
Prims: 220 (approx, depending on land)
Size: X: 40. Y: 36 Z:17
Open hearts, open mind
A lot depends on what we say
Afraid to say things the wrong way
But I believe you, I can feel you now
Breathing slow, you seem to so still
Never before in my life have I felt
The way I did tonight when I knelt
Before you, there's a light in you
If beauty's skin deep
Then your skin is made of glass
Oh, mother Earth, please hear me
We may never learn from the past
If beauty's skin deep
Then your skin is made of glass
Oh, mother Earth, please hear me
We may never learn from the past
If beauty is skin deep
Then your skin is made of glass
Oh, mother Earth, please hear me
We may never learn from the past
This is the beginning of the end
This is the beginning of the end
This is the beginning of the end
This is the beginning
~ John Lubbock
For those who like to "guess what it is" I don't descibe what you see in this capture (you can have a look at the tags though -> attention: spoilers !)
... but this should be easy, I think ; ))
Wishing you a pleasant week ahead !
Depending how old this male Red-bellied Woodpecker is, it could be it's first snow. We haven't had snow here for two years. I didn't shovel it, as it's going to rain with the temps in the 40 to 50 range. My Backyard.
Island Of Madagascar
Off The East Coast Of Africa
Palmarium Reserve
I'm not sure of the name of this lemur high in the tree, so here are some facts about lemurs.
Lemurs belong to a group called prosimian primates, defined as all primates that are neither monkeys nor apes. Lemurs are considered the most endangered group of animals on the planet. These primates are only found in one small area of the Earth. Many species have small and decreasing numbers. There are a whopping 105 species of lemur, and they naturally come in a wide range of sizes.
Lemurs only live in one place in the world, Madagascar and the nearby Comoro Islands, which are off the coast of Mozambique in Africa. They occupy many different habitats: dry deciduous forests, spiny forests, rain forests, wetlands and mountains.
Lemurs are very social creatures and live in groups called troops. When lemurs are awake and active depends on their size. Most lemurs spend their awake time in trees. If they aren’t eating, lemurs like to groom each other or sunbathe.
Some lemurs are herbivores, which means they do not eat meat. They love fruit, but will also eat flowers, leaves, tree bark and sap. Other lemurs are omnivores and eat a variety of foods that include fruits, nectar, flowers and leaves with a side of insects, spiders and small vertebrates.
Baby lemurs are called pups. Many lemur species will cling to the mother’s belly for the first three to four weeks of life and then the pup will ride on her back until it is three or four months old. At three to six months the babies are weaned. Growing up can take one to three and a half years, depending on the species. This can be a short time when compared to how long lemurs live. Some lemurs can live up to 30 years. Virtually all are endangered due to logging, climate change, deforestation, and the illegal removal of lemurs from Madagascar to be sold as pets. - Internet
Well depending on the light, pinkish red.
Male Eurasian Bullfinch.
One of my favourite UK birds and always special to see, especially close up. Remember Chris Packham once giving a sliding scale of finch 'value' to the bird watcher. One Hawfinch being worth 10 Bullfinches - and a male Bullfinch being worth 100 Chaffinches (or something like that). I would say Bullfinches are worth more than that!
Taken in Norfolk.
Planaltina, DF, Brazil.
Depending on taxonomy, the genus Pachyramphus contains 16 or 17 species. The becards are characterized by their large heads with slight crest.
The species is known in Brazil as "caneleiro-preto".
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Suborder: Tyranni
Family: Tityridae
Genus: Pachyramphus Gould & G.R. Gray, 1839
Species: P. polychopterus (Vieillot, 1818)
Binomial name: Pachyramphus polychopterus
Albignac était, à l’origine, un prieuré d’hommes dépendant de l’abbaye de Saint-Michel de Cluse, en Piémont. L’éloignement de la maison mère, et les guerres, amenèrent la décadence du prieuré. Une bulle du pape Clément VI, signée en Avignon autour de 1394, rattache Albignac au monastère de Coyroux. Albignac devient alors prieuré cistercien de filles. De l’église romane, qui devait compter parmi les plus importantes de la Corrèze, ne subsiste plus que le clocher. La nef et le choeur actuels ont été reconstruits à une époque indéterminée. Le clocher devait primitivement se situer sur la travée précédant le choeur. Au nord et au sud de ce massif apparaissent, très mutilées, des colonnes engagées et des départs d’arcs correspondant certainement à des passages voûtés qui devaient assurer la communication entre les collatéraux de la nef et le choeur. Quelques chapiteaux décorés de feuillages et d’animaux fabuleux (hydrocentaures, femmes-oiseaux) subsistent encore. La travée sous le clocher est remarquable par sa hauteur : les chapiteaux sont à environ onze mètres au-dessus du sol. Ils soutiennent des arcs en plein cintre et sont portés par des colonnes engagées. La nef, le choeur et la sacristie ont été construits avec des matériaux de remploi de l’église primitive.
www.fondation-patrimoine.org/les-projets/eglise-saint-lou...
These Coneflowers were also enjoying a sunny disposition in our garden earlier this summer...
The Coneflower is a native North American perennial sporting daisylike flowers with raised centers. The flower, plant, and root of some types are used in herbal remedies.
Widely renowned as a medicinal plant, coneflowers are a long-flowering perennial for borders, wildflower meadows, and prairie gardens. Blooming midsummer to fall (autumn), the plants are relatively drought-tolerant and rarely bothered by pests. The flowers are a magnet for butterflies, and the seeds in the dried flower heads attract songbirds. Flower colours include rose, purple, pink, and white, plus a new orange variety. Plants grow 2 to 4 feet tall, depending on variety.
For further information please visit www.garden.org/plantguide/?q=show&id=2047
is it blue? Is it purple?
Depends on your own perception of colour, interpretation.
In the garden sunlight, they are definitely blue.
Anemone coronaria, poppy anemone popularly in English, is a species of flowering plant in the genus Anemone, native to the Mediterranean region.
In making these Macros, I discovered that some flowers have 'hairs, something I did not know nor expected!
Each time I think... that's it, there's only so much you can do with flowers... and yet again and again, I'll see something new.
Have a wonderful day, filled with love and thank you for your visit, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
Please do not COPY or use any of my images on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
The structures and the light, are a magnificent combination to create life in non-existent places and flourish a rudimentary atmosphere, which to the naked eye is wonderful and beautiful.
A boat trip to Staffa promised so much: minke whales, dolphins, basking sharks, orca, sea eagles and Fingal's Cave, the famous inspiration for Mendelssohn's Hebrides Overture. There was the faint hope of seeing a few puffin stragglers too.
But the weather was against us. Not hugely rough, but enough waves and swell to prevent our skipper putting us ashore to explore Fingal's Cave. We saw plenty seals, gannets and cormorants but little else. No dolphins, whales or orca. But there were beautiful views of the Mull coastline and deserted Treshnish Isles. Scotland has over 900 islands, though the exact number can vary slightly depending on how you define an island (some small tidal islets may or may not be counted). Of these 90-100 are inhabited
Located on the small Hebridean island of Staffa, Fingal's Cave is one of the country's most spectacular natural wonders. Formed entirely out of enormous hexagonal basalt columns, this sea cave is the backdrop of a fascinating legend.
When you visit Staffa, you can’t fail but be awestruck by nature’s creative forces. Impossibly dramatic and romantic, Staffa is best known for its basalt columns and spectacular sea caves. The most famous of these is Fingal’s Cave, also known in Gaelic as An Uamh Binn or the Cave of Music, immortalised by Mendelssohn in his Hebrides Overture. This name reflects the cave's exceptional acoustics and the sounds created by the crashing waves within.
Staffa is a volcanic island and the basalt columns formed when a single lava flow cooled around 60 million years ago. As the molten rock solidified, it also shrank, allowing gaps to form, which created the hexagonal-shaped columns seen today, similar to those found at the Giant’s Causeway in Northern Ireland.
In addition to the cave, the columns form a dramatic cliff face which appears as colonnades or, as the Vikings saw them, the poles or staves (stafr in Old Norse) used in their buildings, hence the name Staffa. The columns are canted over at an angle of four degrees and it was this tilting that happened after they were formed, which allowed the sea to exploit natural fissures in the rock, hollowing out the cave over the millennia. Other caves on the island formed in a different way, when a softer layer of ash under the basalt columns was eroded by the sea.
Funnily enough, it wasn't Fingal who lived in this cave but his rival Scottish nemesis, Benandonner! Fionn MacCumhaill’s was a hero in Irish mythology and although a big lad, not a true giant. Separated by the Irish sea, however, Fingal felt brave enough to hurl insults over the sea to his rival, the giant Benandonner...
When the fight escalated, Fionn built the causeway across the sea to confront Benandonner. But when Fionn saw how enormous Benandonner was, he fled back to Ireland, destroying the causeway behind him. The remnants became the Giant’s Causeway and Fingal’s Cave, which is said to have been named after Fionn’s Scottish alias, Fingal, meaning ‘white stranger’.
It was the famous botanist, Joseph Banks, who, in 1772, first brought the feature to popular attention. Since then, a steady stream of visitors, including a list of famous names from the arts, have made a sort of pilgrimage to this ‘cathedral of the sea’.
Among those great artists was a young Felix Mendelssohn, who visited the cave in 1829. Duly inspired, Mendelssohn wrote the concert overture Die Hebriden, also known simply as Fingal’s Cave, which he finished in 1832. Coincidentally, JMW Turner’s painting “Staffa” was also first exhibited in the spring of the same year. Today, Mendelssohn on Mull, a Scottish chamber music festival, continues to draw inspiration from Staffa. The event brings together young musicians for a week of musical exploration and concerts inspired by the wild beauty of Staffa, Mull and Iona.
Saturday Self Challenge
"Summertime or Wintertime Collage" (depending on your hemisphere.)
We don't usually use "archive" photos in SSC but this week will be an exception.
Gather your favorite photos that you took this summer (or winter) and create a "Summertime (or Wintertime) Collage." You can use any design, post-processing or framing that you like. You can even add text if you want.
It was difficult to pick just a handful of photos from the hundreds I’ve taken during our walks whilst we were in lockdown this spring/summer. Even though we did get away on holiday after the restrictions were eased, I know some people in the group haven’t been so lucky, this being the case I decided to only select photos for my collage which I’d taken within walking distance of our front door. Here are five of my favourite ones, I particularly like donkey, who was in a field just above the path we were walking on, he picked the perfect moment to stick his head up above the wall.
Top left we have an abandoned pinfold or animal pound. Top centre the trig point on Great Manshead Hill. Top right cumulus clouds gathering above the hamlets of Lumb and Cottonstones. Bottom left we of course have donkey, and lastly bottom right reflections on Ryburn Reservoir.
I hope you enjoy my selection whether they be new to you or maybe you’ve seen them all before.
Thank you for your visit and your comments, they are greatly appreciated.
70802 depends from Carlisle South off the Cumbrian Coast line and will pass through Carlisle station on Platform 1 before proceeding to Kingmore Yards with the last trip of empty oil wagons from Dalston. In the yards all 18 wagons will be combined into one train before departing to Grangemouth.
The title of the shot refers to Bog Junction which the Hog passes over in the area of Carlisle South.
How much love inside a friend? Depends how much you give 'em :-) Shel Silverstein
Amur maple, 'Red Wing', j c raulston arboretum, ncsu, Raleigh, north carolina
The Icicle 'Creek' (River depending on time of year) flows from the east side of the Cascade Crest which is the source of water in town, and many local orchards.
We're lucky, despite drought warnings, and reducing water consumption by 15%, that we have such a rich and fairly pure water source.
We depend on nature not only for our physical survival. We also need nature to show us the way home, the way out of the prison of our own minds. We got lost in doing, thinking, remembering, anticipating - lost in a maze of complexity and a world of problems. We have forgotten how to be - to be still, to be ourselves, to be where life is: Here and Now.
-- Eckhart Tolle
HAIR:
Moon. Hair // - Bleach
TOP:
...:::Beautiful Dirty Rich:::... Stay Cozy -Turtleneck Sweater-
BOTTOM:
Addams // Be Free Outfit //
POSE:
The Owl. Moved On
RAIN PROPS:
FOXCITY. Rain Bento Pose Set
UMBRELLA PROPS:
Best Weather Umbrella (G)
Depending on which checklist is followed, this is either a full species or a ssp. Regardless, winter warblers are always a pleasure to observe! Treasure Island. Orange Co.
Situé en haut d'une colline dans un petit hameau paisible qui dépend de la commune de Saint-Vincent-des-Prés, le prieuré-doyenné de Bézornay est une pièce importante dans la vie économique de l'abbaye de Cluny, comme les quelque dix-sept ou vingt-cinq doyennés de la grande abbaye (le chiffre a varié selon les époques) au XIIe siècle. Le domaine clunisien de Bézornay s'est constitué là surtout à partir de la fin du Xe siècle, par acquisition et regroupement de terres. Une partie notable du dispositif fortifié du prieuré-doyenné de Bézornay est conservé. La tour maîtresse, édifiée vers 1100, a été surélevée au siècle suivant, puis équipée d'un pont-levis et d'une bretèche au milieu du XIVe siècle. L'enceinte date du XIIIe siècle et le logis de la seconde moitié du XVe siècle.
This is a favorite tree of mine which I come to visit each winter after it has shed it`s leaves. Depending on what direction you look at it from has many different shapes and backgrounds and a stream that leads to it.
For this shot we had already walked past it to get a shot looking towards the Autumn hedge row and the White house that`s when we saw the approaching rain on it`s way to us and we sure did get wet too, the dog looked like a drowned rat , plenty more images to come indeed I have a ton of different images to show .
This is near Upper Beeding in Sussex alongside the River Adur.