View allAll Photos Tagged Good_Companion
Well, here comes the "Summer" for me.. after all this strange situation I gonna take some holidays, so I wanted to post something that I allways love to do on RL, Sun, Sea, Salt and Surf! of course always in a good companion like today I show you on my pics. I wanted to thanks at my friends for the patience making this picture and I want to give special thanks to Alan Brady for all this awesome stuff that you can find in his men's mainstore called flow.
For more details, you can visit my blog (no landmarks) please, feel free to contact me and I will facilitate them! #staysafe
XOXO♥
Anuska
Collab with Gara Beck
CREDITS:
DURAHAIR -B125(ALL COLORS PACK) @ALPHA
::GB:: Casual fur coat SET / FATPACK @ACCESS
[M E M E N T O] - SOS4. JEANS [BLACK] @MANCAVE
LELUTKA NOA Head EVOX 3.1 @MAINSTORE
LEGACY ATHLETIC BODY
❱❱❱ For more details (Taxis/Credits) please visit MALAMANHADO FASHION BLOG . Thanks!!!
NO
PRIVATE GROUPS
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Si en algún momento te ves identificado apareciendo en alguna de mis fotos y no quieres por los motivos que sean que tu imagen este publicada en la red , por favor comunícamelo por email y quitare inmediatamente la foto de mi galería Mi unica finalidad es plasmar o a veces transformar la realidad que nos rodea con el máximo respeto posible Correo electrónico:albertohendrix56@yahoo.es JENDRIX EN LA WEB flickriver-lb-1710691658.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com/phot... Jendrix56 in Instagram JENDRIX IN FACEBOOK in Spotify...Jendrix Garcia JENDRIX EN LA WEB www.flickriver.com/photos/24523071@N02/tags/jendrix56/ Jendrix56 in Instagram ----------Jendrix56
Pepe <3
Freu mich immer über Feedback zu meinen Bildern!
I appreciate your feedback and comments! If you wish to contact me for any reason feel free to send me a Flickr mail or message me on any other social media and I'll reply as soon as I can.
I thought this might be a good companion shot to yesterday's upload of a Western Meadowlark launching from this stalk. One or two seconds prior, and all was calm. Then, like a rocket...
Photographed in Grasslands National Park, Saskatchewan (Canada). Don't use this image on websites, blogs, or other media without explicit permission ©2013 James R. Page - all rights reserved.
" A great day out a with a good companion and wonderful birds.
Cheers Maurice hope to meet up again soon "
Thank you most kindly for stopping by to view my work.
If you find you have a few words to say about what I have done they will be much appreciated.
My best regards to you.... Martin
This is a good companion piece to yesterday's horses, as it was taken just across the road. Bruce Dixon's Diamond T Ranch was one of Parks Canada's most significant acquisitions in the creation of Grasslands National Park. Assembled by Bruce's father, Hugh "Doc" Dixon, in 1928, the ranch was comprised of 43 sections (a section is 640 acres) and contains critical habitat for Black-tailed Prairie Dogs, Greater Sage Grouse, and other threatened or endangered species in Canada. After holding out for many years, Dixon's failing health finally convinced him - in 2011 - that it was time to sell. A key factor in his decision was the promise by Parks Canada that it would make continuing efforts to honour and interpret the role ranching has played in the history of Saskatchewan.
This great old ranch sign still stands at the entrance to the Dixon ranch yard.
Of course, before the ranching era, this area was home for thousands of years to nomadic Indigenous tribes, including Plains Cree, Assiniboine (or Nakota), and Blackfoot. Their legacy can be seen in more than 10,000 archeological sites throughout the park. It is almost impossible - once you know what to look for - to hike any high prairie ridge here without seeing ancient tipi rings.
I love the wildlife and the landforms, the seasons, the solitude, the big prairie skies and the sense of vastness, but am also aware that I'm a newcomer here. It's important to recognize those that came before. We are all dust in the wind.
Bruce Dixon died in Medicine Hat, Alberta, on October 8, 2021, at the age of 85.
Photographed in Grasslands National Park, Saskatchewan (Canada). Don't use this image on websites, blogs, or other media without explicit permission ©2020 James R. Page - all rights reserved.
sorry to all who don`t like the combination of music and photo... i like it... :=)))
especially the old jazz standards are often good companions on lonely photo walks... :=)))
While sharpening my pencils, a piece of blown glass appeared to be a good companion for a few shots.
Our daughter became the owner of a donkey, named Donny, from a close friend. He has a great disposition and will make a good companion for the horses. Angie and Carol are already attached to him, as you can see. ☺️
#AbFav_PHOTOSTORY
Another one of my 'FLOWER-STUDIES'.
PART I
Dandelions are once again sprouting up all over, prompting the city, lawn-care specialists and amateur gardeners alike to again declare war on the broad leaf weed.
A dandelion is really many tiny flowers bunched together.
Each little flower becomes a seed...
We don't like them in our gardens.
AND YET: The dandelion plant is a beneficial weed, with a wide range of uses, and is even a good companion plant for gardening.
Its taproot will bring up nutrients for shallower-rooting plants, and add minerals and nitrogen to soil.
It is also known to attract pollinating insects and release ethylene gas which helps fruit to ripen.
Taraxacum seeds are an important food source for certain birds.
Great in a salad etc...
Take care, be safe!
Enjoy and make the BEST of every day! Thank you, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
dandelion, petals, Taraxacum, flowers, sepals, "conceptual Art", yellow, black-background, colour, square , studio Hasselblad Zeiss "magda indigo"
" Have you ever wanted someone you can call a friend, Depend on them no matter what, A good companion is always there through thick and thin. My dragon is the only friend that will be with me to the end, And when that day comes he will lift me far away "
Hope all enjoy the work
Amsy ♡
This was my first typewriter. I got her 6 years ago and something about her reminded me of my mom, so I named her Cinda.
#AbFav_PHOTOSTORY
Another one of my 'FLOWER-STUDIES'.
PART II
The second stage!
A personal favourite.
You will find beauty in everything, just look!!!
The back of a Dandelion seed head (clock).
Children LOVE them!
We don't like them in our gardens... AND YET: The dandelion plant is a beneficial weed, with a wide range of uses, and is even a good companion plant for gardening.
Its taproot will bring up nutrients for shallower-rooting plants, and add minerals and nitrogen to soil.
It is also known to attract pollinating insects and release ethylene gas which helps fruit to ripen.
Taraxacum seeds are an important food source for certain birds.
Taraxacum, the common name is dandelion (from French dent-de-lion, meaning "lion's tooth"), after flowering is finished, the dandelion flower head dries out for a day or two.
The dried petals and stamens drop off, the bracts reflex (curve backwards), and the parachute ball opens into a full sphere. Finally, the seed-bearing parachutes expand and lift out of it.
The parachute drops off the achene when it strikes an obstacle.
After the seed is released, the parachutes loose their feathered structure and take on a fuzzy, cotton-like appearance, often called "dandelion snow".Another thing I love about being a photographer, you start looking at things in a 'different' way?
About 'BEAUTY'.. artists sculpt, architects build, painters paint, photographers make images... the 'makers' and 'keepers' of beauty of moment?
Take care, be safe!
Enjoy and make the BEST of every day! Thanks, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
dandelion, seeds, clocks, Taraxacum, flowers, sepals, "conceptual Art", white, black-background, colour, square , studio, Hasselblad, Zeiss, "magda indigo"
It is very difficult to cope with this feeling, not knowing where you belong and not being able to internalize the place you live in is one of the heaviest burdens, it is not good for mental health, it is very difficult to struggle alone, but the nature and animals that surround me are always good companions for me.
If you want to see the statue up close, you can visit it from here. Who knows, maybe it will awaken completely different feelings in you.
Soap
[WoS] Missing Mile - Residential & Hangout - This is your life!
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Soap/121/161/29
R.E.M. - Everybody Hurts
Our regular juvenile Black-crowned Night Heron checks behind him before he ventures out to the water.
Pose- .::One Moon::. Cowboy Horse
Taken @ Walsh County
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Campton/158/119/22
www.youtube.com/watch?v=AigXBl3hdcg
Lyrics:
The sun is sinking in the west
The cattle go down to the stream
The redwing settles in the nest
It's time for a cowboy to dream
Purple light in the canyons
That's where I long to be
With my three good companions
Just my rifle, pony and me
Gonna hang (gonna hang) my sombrero (my sombrero)
On the limb (on the limb) of a tree (of a tree)
Coming home (coming home) sweetheart darling (sweetheart darling)
Just my rifle, pony and me
Just my rifle, my pony and me
(Whippoorwill in the willow
Sings a sweet melody
Riding to Amarillo)
Just my rifle, pony and me
No more cows (no more cows) to be roping (to be roping)
No more strays will I see
Round the bend (round the bend) she'll be waiting (she'll be waiting)
For my rifle, pony and me
For my rifle, my pony and me
The cockatoo is a smart and talkative bird with a brilliant crest of plumage on its head. Loyal, caring, and playful, the cockatoo's high energy and noisy behavior are a reflection of its rich emotional interior life. These birds have a rather friendly temperament and sometimes make good companions for humans as pets.
So, here we are in Natchitoches, Louisiana, being taken for a ride around the town. I forgot the young lady's name, and that of the horse, but the dog was named, "Lilly." All three were good companions.
Sometimes you pick the horse but in rare and exceptional instances, the horse picks you. 8 years ago, I drove out to west Texas to buy my first horse and when I walked up to the 1 year old stallion pasture, I was greeted by over 20 stallions ranging in a variety of colors and temperaments. I didn't know much about horses at this point but I knew I wanted a horse that would be a good companion and train easily. Well, this cinnamon boy walks straight up to me, lowers his head, and gently presses his face against my torso. I of course melt into a puddle while I stroke his face, and when I was done I walked away. The sea of stallions were moving around us and the owners while we walked but the same horse continued to follow close behind. When I stopped, he stopped. When I walked, he walked. That's when I decided he's the one. He picked me. I kindly said to him "I guess I'm your huckleberry..." and it stuck-- I named him Huck. He was a quick learner in ground work, and didn't buck once under saddle while he was being trained with rider weight. He has been the perfect first horse for this city girl and I love him so.
Huck - Red Roan - 9 years old
The breeder's site: www.mahorses.com
Lady Owlmopish and Crake Brothers 6
The answer was actually very simple. What the world needed was love, peace, and, of course, hope. If these three could be brought together, the future for the world and its inhabitants could be transformed in a completely different way, and life could become more beautiful and sustainable.
Humanity had to completely eliminate all its negative, death-inducing practices; brilliant minds should not invent better weapons and manufacture them in factories. Peace would come naturally when people loved each other and became good companions to all living things and nature. Technology should always be there, but it should be used not for killing and destruction, but for the purpose of creating a future with hope.
Having found all the answers she had been seeking, Lady Owlmopish bid farewell to her new friends. Now, she would return and try to share all she had learned with humanity.
Tiny rose part of a birthday bouquet for my birthday recently and now past it's best.... although as they fade I think the roses often look even more beautiful. 'Good Companion' portable typewriter (vintage). Manufactured in 1930.
Memory of a good companion lost last week, never did like his pic being taken, gone but not forgotten
And of course all the chickens, bunnies, raccoons and other birds. This is a sample of the fare you can expect in the next couple of weeks as I attempt to recover. Seems I got diagnosed with Covid19 so have to stay home. I've been Grounded! Day 4 today but I understand the testing time is between days 5 and 10. I hesitated to say anything but I wanted the ones of you who follow me faithfully to know... just in case. At any rate, if I have to stay still at least I have good companions! I watched this bad boy eat two of my fish before I fell asleep. When I woke up again, he had hunted his way all around the pond and was just hanging out on the dock! LOL Have a marvelous day everyone!
#abfav_APRIL
I could ALSO have titled it: The Beautiful, The Ugly, The Soft and the Bald? LOL.
It is that time of year again that these yellow stars take over the grass.
I am doing another one of my 'FLOWER-STUDIES'.
This time on the humble Dandelion. Taraxacum, the common name is dandelion (from French dent-de-lion, meaning "lion's tooth").
After flowering is finished, the dandelion flower head dries out for a day or two...
The dried petals and stamens drop off, the bracts reflex (curve backwards), and the parachute ball opens into a full sphere.
Finally, the seed-bearing parachutes expand and lift out of it.
The parachute drops off the achene when it strikes an obstacle.
After the seed is released, the parachutes lose their feathered structure and take on a fuzzy, cotton-like appearance, often called "dandelion snow".
All of this happens in the time-span of 2 days!
Another thing I love about being a photographer, you start looking in a 'different' way?
We don't like them in our gardens. AND YET: The dandelion plant is a beneficial weed, with a wide range of uses, and is even a good companion plant for gardening.
Its taproot will bring up nutrients for shallower-rooting plants, and add minerals and nitrogen to soil.
It is also known to attract pollinating insects and release ethylene gas which helps fruit ripen.
Taraxacum seeds are an important food source for certain birds.
Enjoy and make the BEST of every day! Thank you, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
Ricoh GR is very good companion for hinking ;-)
I went Mt. Ryugatake in Suzuka mountains accompany with Ricoh GR. The image quality is really equivalent to DSLR!
This week's theme is: Blue (color or emotion). I combined color and emotion because sometimes life takes you away on blue balloons. But, don't worry, you don't stay long. A friend's smile brings you back down to Earth safely!
*Stunt double was used and wren kept her feet securely on the ground.
Electric Light Orchestra - Mr. Blue Sky is a good companion song for this pic. Since, I do not wish to go back to Flickr Jail again, you will have to look the link up. It's worth it...a good song that will make you smile :)
NYC ...
hadn't originally planned to post this, but I think it is a good companion to the previous post
... just want to thank you all for your visits and comments. I enjoy reading about your thoughts. Life has been very busy, and I haven't been able to respond to these or comment much on your photos myself, but I do try to take a look at all the wonderful photos you post.
Dandelions are once again sprouting up all over, prompting the city, lawn-care specialists and amateur gardeners alike to again declare war on the broad leaf weed.
A dandelion is really many tiny flowers bunched together.
Each little flower becomes a seed...
We don't like them in our gardens.
AND YET: The dandelion plant is a beneficial weed, with a wide range of uses, and is even a good companion plant for gardening.
Its taproot will bring up nutrients for shallower-rooting plants, and add minerals and nitrogen to soil.
It is also known to attract pollinating insects and release ethylene gas which helps fruit to ripen.
Taraxacum seeds are an important food source for certain birds.
Great in a salad etc...
Enjoy and make the BEST of every day! Thank you, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
dandelion, petals, Taraxacum, flowers, sepals, "conceptual Art", yellow, black-background, colour, square, studio, Hasselblad, Zeiss "Magda indigo"
My photo assistant goes with me almost all of the time. Over the years he has learned not to knock over toys, or other items I may set up.
However, that doesn't stop him from walking into the frame once in a while.
He is a good companion.
In extreme conditions, humans respect and value their animals in a completely different way, once, as the fire, they represent the basic source of subsistence. Animals provide food, transportation, warm protection and good companion... In the era of internet and industrialization, this relationship changed completely, as much as the mutual respect and value...
Maybe we'll never talk. Not so, nakarkaete. I'm a superstitious peasant, remember? No, you're not just a peasant. You know what you want. And you're very sincere. I admire you. Are you me? Come on, how can that be? I know only chickens Yes horses. You've been a very good companion. And you were a good friend. You taught me how to treat people.
Poets have always written about war, and now I find myself doing the same. It is not something I expected to be doing, yet nor can I ignore what is going on in the world either.
You will find some of my humble examples in my gallery here on Flickr.
Poets can say what we are all thinking where some people might be afraid to voice their opinions. Or they can just voice their despair. Some poets in the past had direct experience of being on the frontline, being injured or returning home for recovery only to be called up again.
Or they have watched and waited in a state of tension and anxiety until their loved ones are returned, as news from the war slowly trickled through. Until recently, news was not instant, loaded up on social media. There was a much longer wait of agonising internal anxiety, when a fatal telegram might then arrive with any hope dashed by its sparse words.
I have taken my inspiration for the poems I write from the poets of both of the World Wars, chiefly because I know them so well from studying them for my English Literature A level when I was younger.
And now, I find myself returning to them again, and it is an acute sadness to find that nothing has really changed. Their words are just as applicable to today as they were when they originally wrote them, and this is one of the reasons why I wanted to read them out loud. Classic poetry still has meaning for us, it still resonates.
I have also chosen this poem by Dylan Thomas as I felt it would be a good companion piece to my own work called the ‘Song of Sorrow’, in my gallery.
www.flickr.com/photos/193518971@N02/53378180974/in/datepo...
Such scars from war, either physically or mentally are yet again dominating our history on this earth, and it is a desperate fact that many artworks will no doubt be written and created in the years to come, as a way of trying to make sense of humanity.
If you would like to see more of my work then have a look at my website at:
You will find 190+ of my poems HERE. fno.org/poetry/index.html
This huge clock in the Musée d'Orsay — formerly the Gare d'Orsay, a Beaux-Arts railway station built between 1898 and 1900 — seemed a good companion to a poem I finished writing this morning here in Paris.
Day in — Day out
The tide comes creeping in
Turgid
In no hurry
At all
Day after day
Rising
Then falling
Advancing
Then retreating
Repeating the pattern
Without skipping a single day
Time and tide
They say
Wait for no man
The grandfather clock
Ticking away
The sea rolling in
Day in
Day out
© Jamie McKenzie, all rights reserved
You will find more of my poems and songs here
and in The Storm in Its Passing and Flights of Fancy.
My songs are at