View allAll Photos Tagged Kermode
nrhp # 08001317- Also known as Citizens State Bank; Basin Industrial Bank; Kermode Bakery- In 1908 the Montezuma Valley National Bank initiated construction of a stone building. For over four decades (from 1915 through 1957), this building housed the town's only bank.
Shortly after its construction, the bank continued the masonry walls and sheet metal trim onto its adjacent lot creating another commercial building that became an investment property for the bank. This circa 1910 building housed a series of commercial enterprises including one of the town's first bakeries, a drug store and a grocer/butcher shop.
Additionally, the buildings are significant for their method of construction. Longtime, local stonemason Peter Baxstrom and his son Henry utilized sandstone quarried nearby for the two buildings. Very few stone buildings have been identified in Cortez and these are the only commercial buildings employing classical ornamentation - as seen in the dentiled cornices and the pedimented entryways with medallions. This classical ornamentation is sheet metal - a lighter, cheaper and fire-resistant building material that reached its peak of popularity in the last decade of the 19th and first decade of the 20th centuries.
Quoted from the History Colorado website.
Hilahila marches and interacts with the crowd at NYC gay pride 2009 and poses for pics with a leather backpack on, full of water :)
Mark kemode's launch of his book 'Hatchet Job' at Hyde Park Picture House on Monday 4th November 2013.
This time, the stalwart critic asked: "with the arrival of the internet, have the critics themselves fallen under the axe?"
Trenchant opinion, hilarious autobiographical anecdotes, passionate personal prejudices, entertaining diversions and scathing sardonic humour ensued.
Photography by Jessie Leong.
The bear is now installed, ready for viewing at 999 West Hastings (corner of Burrard) in Vancouver. It's a charity fund raiser at the end of the summer, so please visit www.spiritbearsinthecity.com and see all the bears in Vancouver and elsewhere in British Columbia
Hundreds of donated teddy bears were laid outside the Parliament Buildings in Victoria (British Columbia's capital) in memory of the grizzly & black bears killed for trophy in the Great Bear Rainforest. Two dozen people gathered in the pouring rain in hopes of convincing the Provincial Government to end trophy bear hunting.
More info: HSICanada.ca/protectbears
Hilahila marches and interacts with the crowd at NYC gay pride 2009 and poses for pics with a leather backpack on, full of water :)
Mark kemode's launch of his book 'Hatchet Job' at Hyde Park Picture House on Monday 4th November 2013.
This time, the stalwart critic asked: "with the arrival of the internet, have the critics themselves fallen under the axe?"
Trenchant opinion, hilarious autobiographical anecdotes, passionate personal prejudices, entertaining diversions and scathing sardonic humour ensued.
Photography by Jessie Leong.
Apparently 30% of the 'Black Bears' on Gribbell Island are white Kermode or Spirit Bears, the highest proportion anywhere.
The Capilano Blues basketball teams win their season openers against Quest University on Friday, Nov. 10, 2017.
British Columbia’s Gitga’at First Nation believe that the raven, creator of the rainforest, turned every 10th black bear white as a reminder of the last ice age. Geneticists understand that the white coat is the result of a double recessive gene in black bears. No one knows why the spirit bear (known locally as Moksgm’ol) only exists in a small part of Canada’s Great Bear Rain Forest. It’s just one of nature’s miracles.
Estimates of how many spirit bears exist vary. Some scientists believe there may be as many as 400. Some believe there may be as few as 200. This makes them more rare than a giant panda – and harder to find. My journey to find a spirit bear involved two plane flights, a ferry ride, a float plane ride, two zodiac trips, multiple nights on a boat, and a long hike through a rain forest. I’d willingly travel twice as far to get another glimpse of these majestic animals. Photographing this bear was, by far, the most profound thing I’ve done with my camera.
Mark kemode's launch of his book 'Hatchet Job' at Hyde Park Picture House on Monday 4th November 2013.
This time, the stalwart critic asked: "with the arrival of the internet, have the critics themselves fallen under the axe?"
Trenchant opinion, hilarious autobiographical anecdotes, passionate personal prejudices, entertaining diversions and scathing sardonic humour ensued.
Photography by Jessie Leong.
Hundreds of donated teddy bears were laid outside the Parliament Buildings in Victoria (British Columbia's capital) in memory of the grizzly & black bears killed for trophy in the Great Bear Rainforest. Two dozen people gathered in the pouring rain in hopes of convincing the Provincial Government to end trophy bear hunting.
More info: HSICanada.ca/protectbears
Hundreds of donated teddy bears were laid outside the Parliament Buildings in Victoria (British Columbia's capital) in memory of the grizzly & black bears killed for trophy in the Great Bear Rainforest. Two dozen people gathered in the pouring rain in hopes of convincing the Provincial Government to end trophy bear hunting.
More info: HSICanada.ca/protectbears
Hundreds of donated teddy bears were laid outside the Parliament Buildings in Victoria (British Columbia's capital) in memory of the grizzly & black bears killed for trophy in the Great Bear Rainforest. Two dozen people gathered in the pouring rain in hopes of convincing the Provincial Government to end trophy bear hunting.
More info: HSICanada.ca/protectbears
Mark kemode's launch of his book 'Hatchet Job' at Hyde Park Picture House on Monday 4th November 2013.
This time, the stalwart critic asked: "with the arrival of the internet, have the critics themselves fallen under the axe?"
Trenchant opinion, hilarious autobiographical anecdotes, passionate personal prejudices, entertaining diversions and scathing sardonic humour ensued.
Photography by Jessie Leong.
Photo by P.M.C. Kermode from c1905. This cross now stands in the 'cross shelter' at Maughold Church.
Mark kemode's launch of his book 'Hatchet Job' at Hyde Park Picture House on Monday 4th November 2013.
This time, the stalwart critic asked: "with the arrival of the internet, have the critics themselves fallen under the axe?"
Trenchant opinion, hilarious autobiographical anecdotes, passionate personal prejudices, entertaining diversions and scathing sardonic humour ensued.
Photography by Jessie Leong.