View allAll Photos Tagged Fringe
White-fringed weevils are an informal species group within a much larger genus Naupactus and their native range is southern South America.
Invasive here in Australia, now pests of agricultural crops.
Adults feed on the foliage of hundreds of plant species. Larvae feed on roots and their damage is more serious, especially on crops or young pines in plantations and nurseries.
10 - 12 mm body length
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"Do the small things of life with a relaxed awareness.
When you are eating, eat totally -
chew totally, taste totally, smell totally.
Touch your bread, feel the texture.
Smell the bread, smell the flavor.
Chew it, let it dissolve into your being."
- Osho
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Thanks to all for 9,000.000+ views and kind comments ... ! Enjoy your Sunday...!
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
Edinburgh Fringe Festival, Scotland 2019
Picture No: 2019-08-15-5134_P2_FRAMED_S
Edited in Canon DPP 4, framed in Photoshop 6.0
Cropped. No photomontage. No Photoshop.
Loropetalum chinense is commonly known as loropetalum,[1] Chinese fringe flower and strap flower...it's fragrant!!
NB: not captive, seen on an exterior wall.
White-fringed weevils are native to southern South America.
I learned that they are invasive here in Australia, now pests of agricultural crops.
Adults feed on the foliage of hundreds of plant species. Larvae feed on roots and their damage is more serious, especially on crops or young pines in plantations and nurseries.
10 mm body length.
© All rights reserved.
ONE FRINGE PLACE
SPIEGELTENT
CIRQUE DU FRINGE : CLAWS OUT
Via: rochesterfringe.com/tickets-and-shows/cirque-du-fringe-cl...
Facebook foamer drama is entertaining some days, and others, just downright cringe worthy. Today, when some screen grabs off of the live stream camera that captures rail action at the Durand Depot caught someone setting lights at the Depot, a few people asked if it was me. It was not, for once I was innocent. But, I was out there a few days ago lighting up a returning GLC OSTN. there was no uproar, no "trespassers ruin it for everyone" comments, no drama. Regardless as to whether or not the facebook foamer army disagrees with me being out there or not, I find it very hard to be a trespasser on your employers' property, especially when your superiors all know you do it. It may not be as important as health insurance, but it certainly is a nice fringe benefit.
(Oryx beisa callotis) 022A9470 Tsawo West - Kenya
This beautiful subspecies of Biesa was one of my main targets for this travel. it's a shy species but finally we crossed a little herd quiet and confident.
Photographed at my home, Yakima County, Washington. A few tulip buds survived a several day period of unseasonable cold weather to bloom. Frost damage killed a few buds. IMG_7813
© 2016 Garry Velletri. All rights reserved. This image may not be reproduced, copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without my permission.
At Frou Frou event!
LM; maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Pink%20Heaven/178/137/30
15 colors available
From Tomorrow 10th June 8AM SLT
Chinese fringe flowers are considered to be low-maintenance, hardy shrubs. These relatives of the witch-hazel are adaptable to a wide range of light, soil, and moisture conditions.
This is another abstract of ice and frost along the edge of a run off at the beach a week ago. The ice was in shade which gives its blue color. I love the feathery fringes we saw that day.
The Barn Swallows were plentiful as they found all kinds of nooks and crannies to build their nests inside the National Fort we camped at. The one bird couple wanted to build their nests in the awning above the public washroom which was a nuisance to people who were visiting the site. So park staff would tear down the bits and pieces stuck to the wood before it actually became a nest. But the swallows kept going back to that one spot and starting all over again. The staff had to be diligent because once the birds had completed a nest, the staff were not allowed to interfere and tear it down. Although the swallows were a bit of a nuisance in this case, they actually came with fringe benefits for us campers. Did you know that swallows can catch about 60 insects an hour or about 850 a day! With the number of swallows we saw swooping by all day, we were not bothered by any insects at our campsite.