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Top / USB side of the pre-production sample of injection molded PFx Brick enclosure.

Secret Squirrel and jockey David Bass are being snapped by the race photographers with a Nikon and a Sony respectively. Note the Nikon Z9 (plus 100-400mm) hanging from one photogs shoulder.

 

Chestnut Gelding age 4 (Foaled May 2nd, 2019),

Breeding: Stimulation (IRE) - Trigger Point (Double Trigger (IRE),

Owner Mrs M D W Morrison and trainer H Morrison.

 

_MX43011ix

 

All Rights Reserved © 2023 Frederick Roll

Please do not use this image without prior permission

This is one of the most imposing structures at the site of the capital of the ancient Wari (Huari) empire, which lasted from about 600 to 1000 AD.

 

I did not get a clear picture from our guide as to what archaeologists think its function was. He did say that it's believed access to the area was restricted to an elite.

 

If I were to say the function was religious and/or political, chances are I'd be correct. It's doubtful this was used as a livestock enclosure.

 

As always, two of the questions in my mind are how much of what we're seeing is a reconstruction and how accurate a reconstruction it is.

 

Near Ayacucho, Peru.

30x40 mt enclosure paddock for your Teegle horses. Hight lod and 100% original mesh. Copy. Available in XS, S, M, XM, L and XL, too. 2 animated sits in the fence. Decorated with ivy branches, flowers, a singing sparrow and a wagon wheel. Scripted gate. Give the access to the group, your friends or only for you.

Cover of Handmade Book -

Acrylic, Poloroid Transfer, copper, found objects

This is another part of the ongoing Viking Village project, a place to keep animals safe. Lot of greenery and fences.

Belgium. Planckendael Animal Park

www.planckendael.be/en/

 

Planckendael is a zoo, located on the grounds of Planckendael castle in the village district of Muizen, in Mechelen, Belgium. In 1956 the Royal Zoological Society of Antwerp (KMDA) bought the Planckendael estate in order to acquire a larger space for animals than what they owned: the city zoo in Antwerp. Planckendael hosts exotic animals like rhinos, bison and various antelope species, but also several local species.

Reference: APAAME_20160922_REB-0507.jpg

Photographer: Rebecca Elizabeth Banks

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works

Pete's Fish & Chips in Mesa is sending out complements from its newly renovated dumpster enclosure. They are helping everyone have a great day.

Reference: APAAME_20160922_RHB-0368.jpg

Photographer: Robert Howard Bewley

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works

A snug fitting arm control dress with a delightful hood that leaves enough opening to see out through while allowing you to be gagged beneath.

LegoMe and LegoEm take photos at the Skunk Enclosure at the Zoo

DSC_0117

Even the standard zoom (4.0/24-70) yields very decent close-ups.

I was a bit on the edge about this outfit but now that it is here, I love it. It has so many cute details like a functioning belt, super cute panties and suspenders and an embroidered hankerchief. I might have to combine it with an edgier Syb though to counterbalance the classic look!

Reference: APAAME_20160922_REB-0307.jpg

Photographer: Rebecca Elizabeth Banks

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works

Reference: APAAME_20160922_RHB-0268.jpg

Photographer: Robert Howard Bewley

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works

Esmeralda County, Nevada, 2024

 

Zenza Bronica S2A, Nikkor 75mm, Fuji Acros II

Lego Me and LegoEm outside the Chimps Enclosure at Colchester Zoo

This is currently Petra's outdoor experience. He is sitting like this and he spends hours sitting like this. After his first bad experience out in the enclosure I guess it will take time for him to be brave enough to completely come out again. Actually, the fact that he stayed out long enough for me to take several photographs of him is a step of progress. A few days ago he would withdraw at the first sight of me.

 

Another new step with this enclosure is with the Ghost Cat. In the entire year and a half I've had her she's never really shown any interest in going outside. However, she has been showing some interest in the cat flap while the other cats were using it. It was her turn to sleep with me last night, so after I went to bed, I opened up the door so she could go out if she wanted. She immediately went out. She seemed to know how the flaps work. After about 10 minutes I called her in and she came in but went right back out. I watched her from the window for about an hour. She seemed to be having a fine time out there in the moonlight by herself. She ran, she climbed the shelves, she sniffed everything. Once, she got scared and she ran back inside the house on her own. Soon after she went back out again though. After awhile I went to sleep and she seemed to have a fine night outside.

 

I'm thinking I will let her out when the weather is nice at night. She needs the exercise as she is quite a heavy girl and she loved it! Unfortunately, the weather lately is awful. We have been having heavy rains almost daily. Today the rain started about 3 hours ago and it has been raining heavily all that time. My cats have all come in on their own.

Exploring the lush green parts of the backyard.

 

132/365

 

(grainy because i shot with high iso, only way it wouldn't be too blurry..)

Between the South Facing shows and the facelift, there's not a lot of the park to see at the moment

Panoramic view showing an enclosure ditch amongst the settlement remains on Rotherley Down, Cranbourne Chase (Scheduled Monument list entry number: 1020963, historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1020963).

 

This is a series of ‘well-preserved’ earthworks, excavated and restored by Lieutenant General Augustus Henry Lane Fox Pitt Rivers. The settlement includes remains of later Iron Age and Romano-British date. An inscribed stone plinth is at the centre of the site and was erected by the General to record his discoveries. This is included in the scheduling.

 

Custom enclosure for my DIY light painting tool's control panel. Designed in inkscape and cut by RazorLAB from 3mm plywood. I made the fingers too tight at the top, which led to a few chips coming off when I tried to force it on. I ended up filing them down with a nail file to make it possible to put on and take off the lid. Overall quite happy with how it turned out for a first try!

At O'Devaney Gardens, Dublin.

The finished enclosure. It's hardly ideal, but it gets the cats out of the house for part of the day so inside the house is much easier to manage. I've already removed one of the 7 litter trays, and there is not so much cleaning as before. I have to join to the house somehow, that way I can really get some peace again. I won't have to transport them in and out except when I leave the house. I will still have to keep them inside when I'm not home which is a sad reality. But at least one project is done. I keep changing my mind about what to do next...as everything is a good idea and needs to be done asap.

 

That house you can see in the background has been illegally built on my back fence line...and that window up high is the window that the neighbour watches me all the time from. She's the lady who says I do my gardening just to make the side neighbours dogs bark and she along with the dog owners poisoned my cats in MY yard because when they walk in MY yard, the neighbours dogs bark. Thus the enclosure...poor things, it's only temporary I hope. I hope I can cat proof the whole yard eventually and the enclosure will be opened up and there will be lots of things to climb on and sleep in....and shelter too from the weather...that's my vision.

 

The curtains are temporary, to give some shade at certain times of the day as it gets full sun. So it was finished last Saturday, the 1st of February, 2014.

Reference: APAAME_20160922_REB-0065.jpg

Photographer: Rebecca Elizabeth Banks

Credit: Aerial Photographic Archive for Archaeology in the Middle East

Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommerical-No Derivative Works

The jumper comes back every day to eat the fruit flies and sleep in the branches. Jumping spiders are quite smart.

Permanent installation at Bozeman's Story Mill Park; in spite of its apparent simplicity, it's in fact very interactive. Among other things, its appearance changes radically with the direction and intensity of the light.

 

Created by CLB Architects

 

The Enclosure is part of the Gallatin Crossing Art & Sculpture Park, the mission of which is:

To place public art that enhances the cultural experience for Bozeman area residents and visitors to the Gallatin Valley.

 

The "Park" consists of major art installations scattered throughout Bozeman.

One of my favorite places on the island.

The lifting cloud and brief sunny interval highlighted this patch of greenery in the middle of the brown slopes of the Howgill Fells. A walled enclosure with a large barn it was obviously fertilised to provide improved grazing for the sheep or cattle. Quite how it fitted in with the farm cycle I wouldn't know but there are a couple of similar green walled enclosures around the corner in the Rawthey Valley on the slopes of Wild Boar Fell.

Camera: Rollei A26

Lens: 40mm f2.5 Triotar

Film: Ultrafine Extreme 100 hand packed into a 126 cartridge

Developer: Xtol

Scanner: Epson V600

Photoshop: Curves, Healing Brush (spotting)

Cropping: None

Horus Netjerykhet enclosure. Heb-sed court. Detail of the 1st and 2nd caryatids unfinished of Horus Netjerykhet, wearing the robe Heb-sed

 

• III Dinastía. Reinado de Djeser. Horus Netjerikhet

• Ubicación: Saqqara. Complejo funerario del Horus Netjerykhet (Djeser). Patio del Heb-sed.

• Material:

• Dimensiones:

• Conservación:

 

>> Cecil M. Firth and J. E. Quibell with Plans by J. P. Lauer, "The Step Pyramid", Vol I, II. (1935-1936), p. 114-115. Pl. 66.

 

The unfinished caryatids found near the platform in the court. Though they are only roughed out we see the short Heb-sed coat already market off. The statues were to represent the King, perhaps also a god at the same time. The cube left on the head must have been intended to carry an architrave or some such architectural unit. In what sort of a building the statues were to be placed there are no means of deciding; possibly an open colonnade surrounding the platform and kiosk.

 

BIBLIOGRAFÍA:

 

- Cecil M. Firth and J. E. Quibell with Plans by J. P. Lauer, "The Step Pyramid", Vol I, II. (1935-1936)

- Jean-Philippe Lauer, "Études complémentaires sur les monuments du roi Zoser á Saqqarah" (1er fascicule), 1948.

- Jean-Philippe Lauer. “Les pyramides à degrés (III Dynastie)”. Tome I. 1962.

 

ENLACES:

 

REFERENCIAS:

 

Texto: Juan Rodríguez Lázaro.

De la foto original de: Jesús Ascaso. Tomada el 15 de abril de 2008

 

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