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Will you Draw The Line with Us?- Photos by Damien

Conway.

 

Citizens from Seattle, Bellingham and beyond came together for a

coordinated national day of action to Draw The Line against fossil

fuel foolishness. Inspired by the beautiful Salish Sea

that unites our bio-region, activists are organizing to protect what

they love, building the future they envision, and stop dead in the

tracks the climate cooking corporate criminals threatening our

children's future. Native allies successfully resisting tar sands oil

extraction and transport through their ancestral lands and Youth

fighting for generational justice provided participants with the moral

compass and courage to take our activism to the next level with deepened

commitment and conviction. Honored were the 14 Montana's

who escalated resistance action by engaging in non-violent civil

disobedience sitting on the coal train's railroad right-of-way, an

escalation of the fight since last year's week-long coal export action.

From the plains, to the ports, we the people are united. We are engaged

in a struggle of paradigms, on one side is Goldman Sachs, Warren Buffet

and fossil fuel companies like Arch Coal, Peabody Energy, and Trans

Canada who profit through disregard for life and all things sacred

through uncaring extraction, exploitation, and domination. On the other

side is We The People people non-violently, steadfastly,

defending in a beautiful expression of what we love a world worthy of

passing on to future generations. Bill McKibben and Seattle Mayor Mike

McGinn who also spoke reminded us that when the People Lead, the Leaders

Will Follow. Draw The Line by joining those who share

your values and becoming active members of the numerous groups who made

this event possible: 350Seattle, Rising Tide Seattle,

Backbone Campaign, and Plant For The Planet

Seattle. Allies also present and whose contributions made the

event possible: Sierra Club,

Friends of the Earth, Washington Fair Trade Coalition,

Puget Soundkeepers Alliance,

Occupy Bellingham,

Hereditary Chief Phil Lane Jr., member of the Yankton Sioux &

Chickasaw Nations, and the Four Worlds International Institute Chairman;

Sundance Chief Rueben George of the Tsleil-Waututh First Nation in B.C.

 

I rescued this violet carpenter bee from a water tank. After he began to recover, he took up this aggressive stance to show me he meant business.

grafito sobre papel reciclado

2009

Mostly mine...if there are letters someone else did them and I took a screenshot

My finished moss terrarium

 

blogged at www.drawpilgrim.com

Will you Draw The Line with Us?- Photos by Damien

Conway.

 

Citizens from Seattle, Bellingham and beyond came together for a

coordinated national day of action to Draw The Line against fossil

fuel foolishness. Inspired by the beautiful Salish Sea

that unites our bio-region, activists are organizing to protect what

they love, building the future they envision, and stop dead in the

tracks the climate cooking corporate criminals threatening our

children's future. Native allies successfully resisting tar sands oil

extraction and transport through their ancestral lands and Youth

fighting for generational justice provided participants with the moral

compass and courage to take our activism to the next level with deepened

commitment and conviction. Honored were the 14 Montana's

who escalated resistance action by engaging in non-violent civil

disobedience sitting on the coal train's railroad right-of-way, an

escalation of the fight since last year's week-long coal export action.

From the plains, to the ports, we the people are united. We are engaged

in a struggle of paradigms, on one side is Goldman Sachs, Warren Buffet

and fossil fuel companies like Arch Coal, Peabody Energy, and Trans

Canada who profit through disregard for life and all things sacred

through uncaring extraction, exploitation, and domination. On the other

side is We The People people non-violently, steadfastly,

defending in a beautiful expression of what we love a world worthy of

passing on to future generations. Bill McKibben and Seattle Mayor Mike

McGinn who also spoke reminded us that when the People Lead, the Leaders

Will Follow. Draw The Line by joining those who share

your values and becoming active members of the numerous groups who made

this event possible: 350Seattle, Rising Tide Seattle,

Backbone Campaign, and Plant For The Planet

Seattle. Allies also present and whose contributions made the

event possible: Sierra Club,

Friends of the Earth, Washington Fair Trade Coalition,

Puget Soundkeepers Alliance,

Occupy Bellingham,

Hereditary Chief Phil Lane Jr., member of the Yankton Sioux &

Chickasaw Nations, and the Four Worlds International Institute Chairman;

Sundance Chief Rueben George of the Tsleil-Waututh First Nation in B.C.

 

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Will you Draw The Line with Us?- Photos by Damien

Conway.

 

Citizens from Seattle, Bellingham and beyond came together for a coordinated national day of action to Draw The Line against fossil fuel foolishness. Inspired by the beautiful Salish Sea that unites our bio-region, activists are organizing to protect what they love, building the future they envision, and stop dead in the tracks the climate cooking corporate criminals threatening our children's future. Native allies successfully resisting tar sands oil extraction and transport through their ancestral lands and Youth fighting for generational justice provided participants with the moral compass and courage to take our activism to the next level with deepened commitment and conviction. Honored were the 14 Montana's who escalated resistance action by engaging in non-violent civil disobedience sitting on the coal train's railroad right-of-way, an escalation of the fight since last year's week-long coal export action.

From the plains, to the ports, we the people are united. We are engaged in a struggle of paradigms, on one side is Goldman Sachs, Warren Buffet and fossil fuel companies like Arch Coal, Peabody Energy, and Trans Canada who profit through disregard for life and all things sacred through uncaring extraction, exploitation, and domination. On the other side is We The People people non-violently, steadfastly, defending in a beautiful expression of what we love a world worthy of passing on to future generations. Bill McKibben and Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn who also spoke reminded us that when the People Lead, the Leaders Will Follow. Draw The Line by joining those who share your values and becoming active members of the numerous groups who made this event possible: 350Seattle, Rising Tide Seattle, Backbone Campaign, and Plant For The Planet Seattle. Allies also present and whose contributions made the event possible: Sierra Club,

Friends of the Earth, Washington Fair Trade Coalition, Puget Soundkeepers Alliance, Occupy Bellingham, Hereditary Chief Phil Lane Jr., member of the Yankton Sioux & Chickasaw Nations, and the Four Worlds International Institute Chairman; Sundance Chief Rueben George of the Tsleil-Waututh First Nation in B.C.

NP/BN/BNSF Grassy Point Draw, not sure how it got it's name given it's a swing bridge.

Not mine...a guy drew this and I watched it for about 10 minutes...wow!

Mostly mine...if there are letters someone else did them and I took a screenshot

North West London.

Ilustración hecha en Photoshop

In the summer of 2016, the BLM Burns District continued its partnership with the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History and the Oregon Archaeological Society and conducted archaeological excavations at the Rimrock Draw Rockshelter site in southeastern Oregon.

 

The site, discovered in 2009 by BLM Archaeologist Scott Thomas, has hosted archaeology field schools since 2011. In 2015, it became internationally known after archaeologists found a small stone tool under a layer of volcanic ash from a volcanic eruption about 15,800 years ago.

 

This tool suggests one of the oldest known human occupations in the western United States.

 

The 2016 excavations encountered significant rock and boulder debris, resulting from at least two occasions of portions of the rock wall calving or breaking off – probably around 8,000 and 10,000 years ago. These rocks limited access to the ground beneath them, and many were removed only after drilling and splitting reduced them to removeable sizes.

 

In coordination with the BLM’s Scott Thomas, Dr. Patrick O’Grady with the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History directed excavations for the fifth year in 2016, and Jordan Pratt, graduate student at Texas A&M University, served as the excavation’s site supervisor. Volunteers from the Oregon Archaeological Society, students from the University of Oregon, and archaeologists from the BLM conducted the excavations.

 

Photo by Greg Shine, BLM

To draw you must close your eyes and sing.

Pablo Picasso

Will you Draw The Line with Us?- Photos by Damien

Conway.

 

Citizens from Seattle, Bellingham and beyond came together for a coordinated national day of action to Draw The Line against fossil fuel foolishness. Inspired by the beautiful Salish Sea that unites our bio-region, activists are organizing to protect what they love, building the future they envision, and stop dead in the tracks the climate cooking corporate criminals threatening our children's future. Native allies successfully resisting tar sands oil extraction and transport through their ancestral lands and Youth fighting for generational justice provided participants with the moral compass and courage to take our activism to the next level with deepened commitment and conviction. Honored were the 14 Montana's who escalated resistance action by engaging in non-violent civil disobedience sitting on the coal train's railroad right-of-way, an escalation of the fight since last year's week-long coal export action.

From the plains, to the ports, we the people are united. We are engaged in a struggle of paradigms, on one side is Goldman Sachs, Warren Buffet and fossil fuel companies like Arch Coal, Peabody Energy, and Trans Canada who profit through disregard for life and all things sacred through uncaring extraction, exploitation, and domination. On the other side is We The People people non-violently, steadfastly, defending in a beautiful expression of what we love a world worthy of passing on to future generations. Bill McKibben and Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn who also spoke reminded us that when the People Lead, the Leaders Will Follow. Draw The Line by joining those who share your values and becoming active members of the numerous groups who made this event possible: 350Seattle, Rising Tide Seattle, Backbone Campaign, and Plant For The Planet Seattle. Allies also present and whose contributions made the event possible: Sierra Club,

Friends of the Earth, Washington Fair Trade Coalition, Puget Soundkeepers Alliance, Occupy Bellingham, Hereditary Chief Phil Lane Jr., member of the Yankton Sioux & Chickasaw Nations, and the Four Worlds International Institute Chairman; Sundance Chief Rueben George of the Tsleil-Waututh First Nation in B.C.

In the summer of 2016, the BLM Burns District continued its partnership with the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History and the Oregon Archaeological Society and conducted archaeological excavations at the Rimrock Draw Rockshelter site in southeastern Oregon.

 

The site, discovered in 2009 by BLM Archaeologist Scott Thomas, has hosted archaeology field schools since 2011. In 2015, it became internationally known after archaeologists found a small stone tool under a layer of volcanic ash from a volcanic eruption about 15,800 years ago.

 

This tool suggests one of the oldest known human occupations in the western United States.

 

The 2016 excavations encountered significant rock and boulder debris, resulting from at least two occasions of portions of the rock wall calving or breaking off – probably around 8,000 and 10,000 years ago. These rocks limited access to the ground beneath them, and many were removed only after drilling and splitting reduced them to removeable sizes.

 

In coordination with the BLM’s Scott Thomas, Dr. Patrick O’Grady with the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History directed excavations for the fifth year in 2016, and Jordan Pratt, graduate student at Texas A&M University, served as the excavation’s site supervisor. Volunteers from the Oregon Archaeological Society, students from the University of Oregon, and archaeologists from the BLM conducted the excavations.

 

Photo by Greg Shine, BLM

i got these awesome stickers at the dollar store....

so I took this picture long ago from my friend v. who happens to be an illustrator. I asked him to play around with some of my pictures, that's the result. here's the original one, shot in jpeg with a very lousy technique:

www.flickr.com/photos/c0wy/6016881564/in/photostream

 

all credits of this drawing go to him, you can follow up his work at

eat-itilustracoes.blogspot.com

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

Drawning. Me and my daughter/dog Flor (Flower).

 

In the summer of 2016, the BLM Burns District continued its partnership with the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History and the Oregon Archaeological Society and conducted archaeological excavations at the Rimrock Draw Rockshelter site in southeastern Oregon.

 

The site, discovered in 2009 by BLM Archaeologist Scott Thomas, has hosted archaeology field schools since 2011. In 2015, it became internationally known after archaeologists found a small stone tool under a layer of volcanic ash from a volcanic eruption about 15,800 years ago.

 

This tool suggests one of the oldest known human occupations in the western United States.

 

The 2016 excavations encountered significant rock and boulder debris, resulting from at least two occasions of portions of the rock wall calving or breaking off – probably around 8,000 and 10,000 years ago. These rocks limited access to the ground beneath them, and many were removed only after drilling and splitting reduced them to removeable sizes.

 

In coordination with the BLM’s Scott Thomas, Dr. Patrick O’Grady with the University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History directed excavations for the fifth year in 2016, and Jordan Pratt, graduate student at Texas A&M University, served as the excavation’s site supervisor. Volunteers from the Oregon Archaeological Society, students from the University of Oregon, and archaeologists from the BLM conducted the excavations.

 

Photo by Greg Shine, BLM

Broward Art Guild 2013 Quick Draw in Pompano Beach, Florida.

I want to start a series of night shots around the town I live in. This will be the first in that series, enjoy! -Grant-

 

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I'm going to draw a monster every day.

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