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Underwater Odyssey snorkeling sea tour in Pattaya Thailand 22 January 2025

One of the best for observing the tropical underwater world, guided snorkeling tour from Pattaya City to Samae Sarn National Park. In the first half of the day there will be a speed boat trip with snorkeling near a group of uninhabited islands, where Nemo fish and sea turtles live. And secondary, after a delicious lunch - time to relax at Hat Nang Ram, the beach in Sattahip. Snorkeling equipment, meal and transfer are provided.

Details and reservation online: thai-online.tours

Instant reservation: +66-838-383-539

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E-mail info@thai-online.org

Read in Russian language: thai-online.org/

Around the world excursions and guided tours: www.7stars-tours.com. Use the link to search best deals and online reservations with the lowest prices!

 

ALL THINGS TO DO IN PATTAYA

 

All the best, newest, popular and not expensive excursions in Pattaya - on our THAI-ONLINE website. Can read and download the price with all of our proposals.

Reserve excursions in Pattaya online +668-3838-3539

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For image content and use information, contact Louisiana Sea Grant at rkron@lsu.edu.

Prospect Cottage in Dungeness, East Sussex, a different prospective, hope you approve Paddy!

Derek Jarman's Cottage: Derek Jarman was an English film director, stage designer, artist, and writer.

Jarman's work broke new ground in creating and expanding the fledgling form of 'the pop video' in England, and as a forthright and prominent gay rights activist. Several volumes of his diaries have been published.

 

Jarman also directed the 1989 tour by the UK duo Pet Shop Boys. By pop concert standards this was a highly theatrical event with costume and specially shot films accompanying the individual songs. Jarman was the stage director of Sylvano Bussotti's opera L'Ispirazione, first staged in Florence in 1998.

 

He is also remembered for his famous shingle cottage-garden, created in the latter years of his life, in the shadow of the Dungeness power station. The house was built in tarred timber. Raised wooden text on the side of the cottage is the first stanza and the last five lines of the last stanza of John Donne's poem, The Sun Rising. The cottage's beach garden was made using local materials and has been the subject of several books. At this time, Jarman also began painting again (see the book: Evil Queen: The Last Paintings, 1994).

 

Jarman was the author of several books including his autobiography Dancing Ledge, a collection of poetry A Finger in the Fishes Mouth, two volumes of diaries Modern Nature and Smiling In Slow Motion and two treatises on his work in film and art The Last of England (also published as Kicking the Pricks) and Chroma. Other notable published works include film scripts (Up in the Air, Blue, War Requiem, Caravaggio, Queer Edward II and Wittgenstein: The Terry Eagleton Script/The Derek Jarman Film), a study of his garden at Dungeness Derek Jarman's Garden, and At Your Own Risk, a defiant celebration of gay sexuality.

  

Industrial gratings combine great strength with light structure giving good non-slip properties. Ideal for use on platforms, galleries, gangways, storage floors etc and are available in plain or galvanised steel.

 

To view our range of Wrought Iron Components please visit:

www.fhbrundle.co.uk/groups/24FG__Industrial_Gratings

State Museum for Art and Design

Property Amenity

 

Le Meridien Grand Hotel Nuremberg

Bahnhofstrasse 1-3

Nuremberg, 90402

Germany

 

www.starwoodhotels.com/lemeridien/property/overview/index...

 

info.nuernberg@lemeridien.com

 

911-23220

 

Yoga For Migraines Yoga For Migraines – Lots of people deal with migraines globe extensively. The major root causes of migraine headaches are lack of water intake, negative diet regimen, tension, bad flow as well as others. Lots of people decide to exercise Yoga exercise For Migraine headaches due to the several advantages yoga exercise […]

 

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Lingerie handmade by me.

 

Send me a flickr mail if interested.

c.1915 Port Adelaide loco SAR F168 decorated for Australia Day Port Adelaide train (Murray Billett Collection mb-b11-02)

For the first time since 2019, Commonwealth returned to our traditional venue, First Church in Boston, for graduation this June. Family and friends enjoyed poignant and wonderfully weird remarks from senior speakers Ilaria Seidel ’22 and Thomas Fomin ’22, as well as a transcendent performance from soprano Dina Pfeffer ’22 and oboist Nia Suresh ’22, before spilling into the courtyard for joy-filled photos.

For more information on my photography, please visit me here:

About Me: Clayton Perry

 

Thanks for the comments and "faves" :)

our bike for 2. Shot with Kodak Brownie Hawkeye Box camera

For more information about this picture and the rest of the Kitesurfing series visit here:

 

www.storehouse.co/stories/r6yo-magical-sails

For Vassilis Laliotis. This photograph was first exhibited in 2000 at my first solo exhibition.

For some reason this donkey reminds me of Simon Cowell ;)

Chillenden is best known for the white clapboard post mill, which is about half a mile above the village.

 

I came here via Goodnestone, and on the map it looked like an easy journey of a couple of miles. As it turned out the network of narrow lanes made it more difficult, but I knew where the mill was, so made my way there, then down into the village which is stretched along a sunken lane, the church being opposite the village pub.

 

All Saints is a small church, similar to Harty and Stodmarsh, with a sturdy wooden fram holding the small tower and spire up.

 

Some nice victorian tiles and ancient glass in the window, but just fragments.

 

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Chillenden comes from the Old English ‘denu’ meaning a ‘valley’ combined with a personal name; therefore, ‘Ciolla’s valley’. The Domesday Book records Chillenden as Cilledene.

  

Chillenden parish church is a Grade: II listed building, dedicated to All Saints. The Normans built the church in the 12th century with additions in the 14th and 15th centuries. In 1800, Edward Hasted described the Chillenden church as ‘antient, it is a mean building, very small, having a square tower at the west end, in which there is only one bell. It consists of a body, and one chancel. In the windows are remains of very handsome painted glass. There is a handsome zig-zag moulding, and circular arch over the north door. There is likewise a circular arch, but plainer than the other, over the south door’. The architect Sir George Gilbert Scott sensitively restored the church in 1871.

 

www.kentpast.co.uk/chillenden.html

 

----------------------------------------==

 

CHILLENDEN,

WRITTEN in the survey of Domesday, Cilledene, lies the next parish westward from Knolton, taking its name from its cold and low situation. The manors of Knolton and Woodnesborough claim over part of this parish, as does the manor of Adisham over another part of it. A borsholder is appointed for this parish by the justices, at their petty sessions for this division of the lath of St. Augustine.

 

THE PARISH of Chillenden lies dry and healthy, but it is not very pleasantly situated, though surrounded by other parishes which are remarkably so; it is very small, containing only one hundred and sixty acres, and the whole rents in it amount to little more than 250l. per annum. There are three farms in it, one belonging to Mr. Hammond, and the other two to Sir Brook Bridges, bart. It lies low in a bottom, the high road from Canterbury to Deal leads through the village called Chillenden-street, which consists of twenty two houses; on the south side stands the church. The soil is chalky and poor, and the lands, which are arable, are open and uninclosed. A fair is held here on WhitMonday, for pedlary, &c.

 

THIS PLACE, at the time of taking the survey of Domesday, was part of the possessions of Odo, bishop of Baieux, under the general title of whose lands it is entered in it as follows:

 

Osbern (son of Letard) holds of the bishop Cilledene. It was taxed at one suling and one yoke and ten acres. The arable land is . . . . In demesne there is nothing now, but nine villeins have there two carucates and an half. In the time of king Edward the Consessor it was worth sixty shillings, and afterwards thirty shillings, now forty shillings. Godwin held it of king Edward, and five other Thanes. Thomas Osbern put three of their lands into one manor.

 

Four years after the taking of this survey, this estate, on the bishop's disgrace and the consiscation of his estates, came into the hands of the crown.

 

After which it came into the possession of a family, who took their surname from it, and there is mention made in deeds, which are as antient as the reign of king Henry III. of John de Chillenden, Edward and William de Chillenden, who had an interest in this place; after this name was become extinct here, the Bakers, of Caldham, in Capel, near Folkestone, possessed it, in whom this manor continued till king Henry VI.'s reign, when it passed by sale to Hunt, whose descendants remained entitled to it for two or three descents, when one of them alienated it to Gason, of Apulton, in Ickham. (fn. 1) They bore for their arms, Azure, a fess cotized, ermine, between three goats heads, couped, argent; which coat was granted anno 39 king Henry VIII. (fn. 1) in which name it continued for some time, and till it was at length sold to Hammond, of St. Alban's, in Nonington, in whose descendants it has continued down to William Hammond, esq. of St. Alban's, who is the present owner of this manor.

 

This estate pays a quit rent to Adisham manor, of which it is held. It has no manerial rights, and it is much doubted, if it had ever any claim, beyond the reputation of a manor.

 

There are no parochial charities. The poor constantly relieved are about sixteen, casually six.

 

THIS PARISH is within the ECCLESIASTICAL JURISDICTION of the diocese of Canterbury, and deanry of Bridge.

 

The church, which is dedicated to All Saints, seems antient, it is a mean building, very small, having a square tower at the west end, in which there is only one bell. It consists of a body, and one chancel. In the windows are remains of very handsome painted glass. There is a handsome zig-zag moulding, and circular arch over the north door. There is likewise a circular arch, but plainer than the other, over the south door. It has nothing further worth mention in it.

 

¶This church was part of the possessions of the priory of Ledes, being given to it by William de Northwic, about the latter end of king Henry II.'s reign; (fn. 2) but the prior and convent never obtained the appropriation of it, but contented themselves with a pension of eight shillings yearly from it; in which state it continued till the dissolution of the priory in the 31st year of king Henry VIII's reign, when the advowson, together with the above pension, came with the rest of the possession of the priory, into the hands of the crown, in which the patronage of this church continues at this time. But the annual pension of eight shillings was soon afterwards settled by the king in his 33d year, among other premises, on his new-founded dean and chapter of Rochester, part of whose possessions it still continues.

 

This rectory is valued in the king's books at five pounds. It is now a discharged living, and is of about the clear yearly value of twenty six pounds. In 1588 it was valued at forty pounds, communicants seventyseven. In 1640 it was valued at the same, communicants seventy.

 

There are three acres of glebe. The present incumbent has built a tolerable good parsonage-house on the scite of the antient one. There is no land within this parish exempt from the payment of tithe.

 

www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-kent/vol10/pp95-98

Over a hearty meal and a few beers, plans were made for our next-day hike up the Zion Narrows.

 

Canon EOS 30D

Canon 16-35mm @ 27mm

f5.0 1/2sec

ISO400

B&W conversion done in Nik Software Silver Efex Pro

The University of Missouri - St. Louis men's and women's tennis teams helped out, as well.

For John.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/johnfinnanimages

 

Gone too soon... he deserved to be around for much longer than he was.

 

Miss you mate :-(

No Substitute for life football tournament 2023

 

Paisley Ferguslie park

 

david cameron paisley photographer

defiantpose@talktalk.net

For a while, wait please.

I leave from here for a few days.

  

大仙公園, 堺市, 大阪

Daisen park, Osaka, Japan

Accommodations for asylum seekers from UK | Photos by Olivier Mugwiza

2nd floor front bedroom from NE corner

for print quality send email to:

heli.fuchs@gmx.at

 

At VC with Arun Pathak, an incredibly talented Guitarist that I had the good fortune of having as bandmate and partner in crime. 'VC' was short for 'Versatile Creations' a studio where we created screenprinted Tees. I drew and hand-cut all the stencil designs.

Organizing for America, the national network of Obama supporters, is revving up support for healthcare reform with a bus tour that started in Phoenix. The "Health Insurance Reform Now" bus will make 11 stops between August 26, 2009 and when members of Congress return to Washington, hitting up Albuquerque, N.M., Denver, Raleigh, N.C., and Pittsburgh.

 

In this photo the Health Care Reform Now Bus moves onto the city streets of Phoenix to continue its long journey across the U.S., next stop, Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Perusing through the tags here on flickr for "Strand Bookstore," I see a few people who were brave enough to whip out their cameras inside of one of the world's largest used bookstores (though I still find John L. King in Detroit to be more exciting and overwhelming due to its chaos).

 

I did have my camera when I went inside even after turning in my backpack (apparently people with cameras is an every day occurance at The Strand) but this is the only photo that I took of shoppers.

 

And this photo was taken outside near the Broadway entrance to the store.

 

The Strand in Greenwich Village right off the NYU campus (how I sometimes wish I had actually gone there) was one of my three must dos in New York Ctiy this time (along with seeing "Rent" and drinking tea at Teany) and I'm really glad I went.

 

I ended up buying four books: Henry Miller's "Tropic Of Capricorn," Anais Nin's "Collages," Milan Kundera's "The Unbearable Lightness of Being," and Christopher Hitchen's "Blood, Class, and Empire." All were used and cost me less than $25.00 after tax (and I think the Miller book was most of that as it was a full $9.95).

 

With my rate of reading in recent times, I think that should last me until the next time I'm in New York and get lost in the Strand Bookstore's more obscure sections (fiction was crowded and right on the ground floor).

 

I only got to spend about 30 minutes inside since I waited until the last second and had to get my train back to the hotel to catch a cab to the airport.

 

Hopefully all of these people had more time to explore. Maybe even take photos.

For most who live in towns larger than mine (that would be anyone living anyplace with a population over 9000), downtown may seem like a non-event. I prefer to think of it as quaint. Here, Aradan graciously hangs from some bridge railings across the river from the famous Coke sign. It is famous. Really.

for sale at a Walmart in Hillsborough, NC, USA.

Nothing lasts forever. Everything fades away, but nothing is eternal. Do I believe that? Does it matter? I do know that, for all the times that I've got nothing to say, nothing can put an end to my silence. I understand that nothingness is comforting in a way, that for all the busy-ness going on around me, there will always be a time that I can step back and be absent from myself. Just like when I'm asleep. I know that, for some small part of the night, when I'm lost away into some dream or nightmare, unaware and unremembered hours pass by unnoticed until dawn. Where does the time go? Does it matter?

 

I don't want to sound like I'm unconcerned about the passage of time, but I don't want to give the impression that I'm constantly aware of it, either. Would that image be accurate or not? There's no denying that I find it hard to settle down, to tune out and separate myself from the ever-passing moment. There's something strange about writing your thoughts from a place of disconnected observation, the naked awareness of self watching self, as if waiting for change will somehow make it come to pass. But we all need a nature, and that is mine. Always has been. Sometimes, when I'm looking for a better conclusion to my personal story, I find myself creating situations that I "do something". I start a conversation, visit a place, make a friendship. That what's it like when you feel more like a character than an author, when perhaps you shouldn't be feeling like either.

 

There's no easy end to any thought, as I discover the more that I write. I used to believe that every story you tell is some sort of lead-in to fantasy, an escape from a reality that's apparently too hard to handle. Writing has become more like a chain than a train of thought, a series of iron links that wrap around me and the person I'm trying to reach. Readers are so unidentifiable, they rarely speak for themselves. Maybe we've been inventing a world where everyone is fishing but no one is taking the bait. What does that say about us as air breathers? Maybe, in the end, we're all just gasping for water.

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for the All About Me Challenge- Pink Reptile Designs: Superstitious kit

the-lilypad.com/store/Superstitious.html

Splatter Brushes No2

the-lilypad.com/store/Splatter-Brushes-no.2.html

& Word Up Word Arts.

the-lilypad.com/store/Word-Up.html

Background paper from Lynne Marie's M3 Add On: Ombre papers.

the-lilypad.com/store/Ombre-papers-M3.html

Amy Wolff: Itsy Bitsy Alphas Vol 5.

the-lilypad.com/store/itsy-bitsy-alphas-vol.-5.html

The idea for the clovers came from a vector stock image from Pavars, the stems are a bit wonky as I drew with the mouse, the clovers are from : Pink Reptile Designs's Superstitious (as above) Lynne Marie: Dream Valorie Wibbens: Lucky & leaf is from Pink Reptile Designs & Studio basic collab Sing Like Nobody is Listening-

Journaling reads: Hi! I' Cutie!!! I'm a gorgeous (even if I say so LOL) lucky pet, I live in London now, with my adopted mum Cynthia who loves me very much and has me on the desk by her Mac, she even talks to me!!!(yes! I know, these old ladies are a bit strange sometimes!!!) so even though I can't answer back, I am happy to be loved and have company! I think my ancestors are from some place in the world, I know my adopted mum saw one of my uncles & aunties in the net & fell in love with me immediately, so she asked my birth mum, Mirjam, (who is one of the greatest, most talented ladies in the whole wide world!!!!) if she could make me. Time went and my mum Cynth had forgotten all about it... ...until one day the bell rung and there I was, inside a package with a card!!! She got very emotional (yes, another thing these old ladies do!!!! and even shed a tear or two, as my mum really really love my birth mum Mirjam and admires her a lot, I know it meant a lot more than just a little cutie toy for her. Since then, She has been so very happy and so I have a great adopted home!!!! I know she also likes the fact that my colors coordinate well with the colors of her bedroom as she is a bit obsessive with that kind of thing! I am very proud of my new home as I know only very very special things like me get to stay in the desk!!! About a month or so ago I got a new adopted brother!!! His name is Bart the Frog, but I will leave it for him to tell his own story... is ALL ABOUT ME right now!!!!!! I hope you like me and enjoy my story as much as my mum Cynth does... she had been waiting for a chance to tell about me, so she was really happy when she saw the opportunity to let me tell it!!!!! Hope you have a great weekend, I need to go now as my mum is calling me, she needs to eat something Bye bye!!!!!!

TFL!!!

 

For Advent you get 2 Kanc photos a day, 2 Hobblebush leaf and 1 1990 family pic :>))) This was my 1st ride since living in NH for the last 26 years! Everyone else's pics are so much better than mine; search flickr for great shots :>)

"If you like nature and the mountains, the Kancamagus Highway (aka: "The Kanc," or misspelled as Kangamangus Highway and Kangamagus Highway) is a must see! The Kancamagus Highway, constructed in 1959 is traveled by over a million people each year. The Kancamagus Highway cuts a 34 mile east-west channel through the 800,000-acre White Mountain National Forest from Lincoln NH to Conway NH. When the dense trees change their leaves from their summer greens to breathtaking shades of yellow and red in the Fall, they are illuminated against the colorful mountains, making this a dramatic and enjoyable leaf-peeping route. Motorcyclists relish the twists and turns as the highway climbs to almost 3,000 feet at the peak of Mount Kancamagus. The easily accessible trailheads and parking areas are often sought by hikers. The smooth and rocky swimming holes, carved by erosion, lure families craving relief from the summer heat." www.nhtourguide.com/tripreports/kancamagus_highway_new_ha...

This time around we (my 2 & 4 yr old granddaughters and me) stayed in the car and I often shot through my windshield stopped in the quiet (a miracle!) road while they slept but there are trails, stops and pull-offs that others make it a vacation must!!

Zalika Mounkaila (51) carrying a bucket of water back to the village.

  

Find out more about the West African food crisis

 

Photo: Aubrey Wade /Oxfam

A vendor waits for customers at a fair on the outskirts of Changchun, Jilin province January 27, 2011. China's annual economic growth is expected to ease to about 9 percent in the first quarter while consumer inflation is projected at 5 percent, according to a government think tank report published in the official Chinese Securities Journal on Thursday

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