View allAll Photos Tagged Haier
Another photo taken on outing with "The Breakfast Club".
Seen at Zane's grandmothers' old home place in Sulphur Springs, Texas.
For other shots, please visit
Debbie - www.flickr.com/photos/21465576@N00/2397747939/
and
No os preocupéis, en su momento llevé a cabo el correspondiente estudio de impacto ambiental… y na de na. Lo que pueda pasar en un día de lluvia intensa si las bajantes chutan mal, eso ya es otra historia.
Duomo de Monreale (Sicilia) Hay colocadas unas pasarelas que permiten pasear por las cubiertas del edificio.
Every time I drive by this farm I stop and say hello to this beautiful mare. She is always eating her hay in the same spot, and I think she is happy to see me.
I took this photo from inside my car while I was driving backroads. It has been a very hot and humid week, not my favorites days to be outside. You like country music like me?
Here is a song🎵 for you:
Thanks for your visit and taking the time to comment
Hay que proseguir el ensayo.
No importa que debamos improvisar;
que no haya director
y que la pieza que ensayamos no se estrene nunca.
---------------------------------
Man muss weitermachen mit den Proben.
Es macht nichts aus, dass wir improvisieren müssen,
dass es keinen Regisseur gibt,
und dass das Stück, das wir proben, niemals
aufgeführt wird.
Roberto Juarroz
End of the annual wheat harvest and the leftover straw is baled in rolls for winter silage.
This may appear totally rural but is only 2 miles from Derby city centre.
Hay lugares, que si paras,
te gustarán a rabiar.
Mas una vez visto, te dices:
quién aguanta aquí en invierno
cuando la nieve te cubre
y no te puedes mover,
e incluso para el sustento
allá, allá te las vas a ver.
Cuando vas a la montaña
todo lo que en ella ves
da gusto mirarlo y mirarlo
y hasta disfrutarlo también.
Mas vivir allí un año
qué difícil se nos hace
a todos los del cemento,
que hasta para dar un paso
justo en el suelo te ves.
Rural North Dakota. It's that time of year for harvesting and baling, turning over earth and getting ready for winter.
Es otoño, y las hojas secas de las hayas alfombran el suelo creando una mullida alfombra, por la que es muy agradable caminar, sintiendo el olor fresco de la humedad que siempre hay en estos bosques, o viendo los vivos colores y el juego de luces y sombras que hacen los rayos del sol cuando lo iluminan.
Muchas gracias por la visita.
Grevy's is the largest of Africa's zebra species, and the most mule-like in appearance. Here a herd of Grevy's feeds in the evening before sunset. Because it lives mostly in desert areas, Grevy's zebra is endangered from lack of food after a long drought. Zebras in Samburu National Reserve have access to water from the Ewaso Ng'iro River, but food is scarce and daily haying efforts are helping to keep animals -- not just zebras but also oryxes -- fed. ©2022 John M. Hudson | jmhudson1.com
Doesn’t that barn door look like an open mouth waiting to devour those bales of hay? Yes it’s time to bail the hay in Connecticut.
Face to face with a Detroit Zoo giraffe
When I saw the blue sheen on this critter's tongue sticking out on the left side of its mouth here, it prompted me to do a quick Google search. What I found was that giraffes' tongues are typically black, dark blue, or purple. And because their tongues are usually 18 to 20 inches long and are used to reach high into trees to fetch leaves, some experts think that the dark color serves a good purpose. "Since giraffes spend up to 12 hours each day eating, the tongue's dark color might protect it from exposure to the Sun's harmful rays, thereby preventing sunburn!" says a Web site called Wonderopolis.org.
Betcha didn't know that. I didn't. :-)
HBW