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"Some pain you can distance yourself from, but a headache sits right where you live."
Quote - Mark Lawrence
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Every winter I forget summer. I forget the smells in the air. The feeling of warm air on my skin. Even the bugs. It all goes away and when summer comes back it feels fresh every time.
It's the first of June. Three months of summer still left to enjoy. After that I forget what this beautiful season is like. I hope that this photo can help me remember during the dark, long winter months.
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Spring is finally here! Amusement park season has started!
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If you find my work worth using, please humor me and read my About section!
Unfortunately many people take using photos they found online very lightly and disregard (or are unaware of) the fact that most of it is copyright protected and using it may have conditions or be completely disallowed. Before you use my photos, I ask that you read my About page so that we're both on the same page and avoid all the headaches that result from license violations and copyright infringements.
Apparently this female Ruddy Duck didn't want anything to do with this male Ruddy Duck. She chased him away more then once.
Cowslips are one of the best known spring flowers. The cup-shaped, yellow flowers grow in nodding clusters on tall stalks. The leaves are oval with relatively wrinkled edges similar to the Primrose, but narrowing more abruptly into the stalk.
They can be found in open woods, meadows, pastures and roadsides. They tend to favour rank grasses and scrub rather than amongst large numbers of spring-grazing sheep.Its cultural history suggests that it was once as common as the Buttercup however, it suffered a decline between 1930 and 1980, mainly due to the loss of the grasslands where it grows. It's dramatic decline in the 1950s was due to the relentless advance of modern farming, particularly the ploughing of old grassland and the extension of the use of chemical herbicides. Fortunately, it is now showing signs of recovery and has begun to return to unsprayed verges and village greens as well as colonising the banks of new roads. It has probably been assisted by the scattering of wild flower seed mixtures. Vast masses have reappeared in Hertfordshire where grazing pressures have eased. the county flower of Northamptonshire, Worcestershire and Surrey.
In the 'Language of Flowers' it symbolises comeliness and winning grace
Cowslip allegedly means cowpat! Our ancestors noted that they tended to flower where a cow had ‘slupped'.
As an early spring flower, it is closely associated with much English folklore and tradition, including being strewn on church paths for weddings and adorning garlands for May Day.
In addition to The Tempest, the ‘freckled cowslip' also appears in Shakespeare's Henry V as a sign of a well-managed pasture.
Its scent is not dissimilar to that of an apricot. Richard Mabey describes the scent as 'faintly fruity and dill-like.'
Tea made from the flowers is meant to be good for insomnia, headaches and nervous tension. The scented flowers also make delicious wines.
Some of the many enchanting vernacular names include freckled face, golden drops, bunch of keys, fairies' flower, lady's fingers, long legs and milk maidens. Welsh names include dagrau Mair, 'Mary's tears'. Paigle is another name used rather indiscriminately for any wild primula.
The nodding flowers suggests the bunch of keys which were the badge of St. Peter. One legend is that Peter was told that a duplicate key to Heaven had been made and therefore let his keys drop. The Cowslip broke from the ground where the keys fell.
They share their family's tendency to produce a profusion of variations including the variety known to gardeners as 'Devon Red' and orange-flowered forms.
In a cowslip’s bell I lie William Shakespeare, "The Tempest"
Heading into Toronto in yet another seemingly endless traffic jam. There's always a way to entertain yourself while stopped like taking photos of reflections in shiny tankers.
Blessed Thistle is a medicinal plant, is used in folk medicine for digestive problems such as gas, constipation, and stomach upset. This herb acts as an appetite stimulant and digestive aid. The entire plant is edible. The herb contains B-complex vitamins, calcium, iron and manganese. Today Blessed Thistle is used to treat digestive problems. It also cleanses the blood, improves circulation, and strengthens the heart. Blessed Thistle increases the appetite and stomach secretions, and works to heal liver and gallbladder diseases. It is also used for menopause and menstrual cramps, and can aid in increasing milk flow in nursing mothers. Blessed Thistle also works well in treating anorexia, indigestion, flatulence and colic. It can relieve headaches caused by a sluggish liver, lethargy and irritability and is used for reducing diarrhea. Blessed Thistle is known to alleviate inflammation and stop bleeding and cuts
In the summer of 2025 TÅGAB Rc2 001 was repainted in its original ÖBB colour scheme and renumbered ÖBB 1043.001. On 18 October 2025 the loomotive was used to haul a special of Nässjö Järnvägsmuseum Nässjö - Hallsberg - Falköping - Nässjö - Hallsberg "Vättern runt". in this time of the year the shadows are a real headache, but at Römossen, just south of Hallsberg I managed to find a photo spot where the ripe was still on the track, that had a cold night with temperatures of -1C.
spotted pardalote (Pardalotus punctatus), male
While its fashionable nickname is the diamondbird, it has also gained the title of the headache bird because of its repetitive and monotonous call, "Sleep-may-be, sleep-may-be".
One of the bazaars in Istanbul—my first experience in the city was memorable in so many ways! So much to see and smell and taste! At first, I wanted to go in and explore every booth, but I learned pretty quickly that it was impossible. The venders, almost all men, met you before you could make your way down the “mall”. Soon you would find yourself surrounded by these men, all encouraging you to enter their little nook and buy something. One said, “I have everything in my shop…except customers!” I thought he was clever, but then I heard it over and over as I walked along. Soon it was no longer appealing. I did buy some Turkish Delight candy and a small bowl from a quieter, less demanding salesman. I left there with 2 small gifts and the beginning of a headache! Still, it was fascinating and I wouldn’t want to have missed it for anything!
A variation on this image. Produced from a spherical panorama taken in the Presbytery at Ely Cathedral in Cambridgeshire, England.
Yesterday's photo of the early morning harbor in Hamburg had a crucial weakness.
These were the two pillars that stick out of the water near my bank. Unfortunately, it couldn't be avoided to somehow integrate them into the photo.
But both the excessive presence and the position in the picture gave me a headache when I was there. So I tried two different compromise solutions.
Yesterday's was the compromise, where I can show as many details as possible from the other side of the bank. While this compromise is limited to the area around the Elphilharmonie and the pillars are a not so close and therefore a little less disruptive (at least in my opinion).
By the way, there is a seagull sleeping on the smaller of the two. I only noticed that when I published the photo. That makes the pillars cool again
Mein gestriges Foto vom früh morgendlichen Hafen in Hamburg hatte eine entscheidene Schwachstelle.
Und zwar waren das die zwei Pfeiler, die in der Nähe meines Ufers aus dem Wasser ragen. Leider liess es sich nicht vermeiden, die irgendwie mit ins Foto zu integrieren.
Doch sowohl die zu hohe Präsenz als auch die Position im Bild haben mir schon vor Ort Kopfzerbrechen bereitet. Also habe ich zwei verschiedene Kompromisslösungen versucht.
Die gestrige war dabei der Kompromiss, bei der ich so viele Details wie möglich von der anderen Uferseite zeigen kann. Während sich dieser Kompromiss hier auf den Bereich rund um die Elphilharmonie beschränkt und dafür die Pfeiler nicht so dicht stehen und damit etwas weniger störend wirken (finde ich zumindest).
Auf dem kleineren der beiden schläft übrigens eine Möwe. Das ist mir gerade erst aufgefallen als ich das Foto veröffentlicht habe. Das macht die Pfeiler ja gleich wieder cool.
.more of this on my website at: www-shoot-to-catch.de