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Ezekiel 6:12 “The one who is far away will die by the plague, and the one who is near will fall by the sword, and the one who is being left behind and being spared will die by the famine, and I will complete My rage on them.”
EXPLORED ( Sep 19, 2011 #401 )
Karnaphuli Bridge.
Chittagong
Bangladesh.
© All rights reserved, please do not use this photo without my permission.
Saying good bye to Dusseldorf as the sun rises over the beautiful Rhein river, after having lived one of the most memorable weeks of my life.
Common crane. Graciously agreeing to spend a few moments on posing for a photo. The spouse is in charge, sitting on eggs.
The CANOPEE left Bremen on July 4 bound for Montoir, FR. She sailed down the Weser under engine power. Only when she reached the estuary of the Weser into the North Sea near Bremerhaven the sails were hoisted.
The CANOPEE is a RoRo ship that was specially developed for the transportation of the European Ariane 6 launcher. The special feature of this ship is a sail system that supplements the regular propulsion system. Sails with a height of 30 meters and a sail area of 363 m² each can be hoisted on four masts. The sails are designed to drastically reduce fuel consumption.
Sorry for my absence. This is due to a persistent cold, which left me with very little energy.
This is one of all that beauties in that region. I like them!
Thank you in advance for your interest and comments on my photos. That's much appreciated.
Please view at the full size of 1600. (double click, twice)
It's also more pleasure for you.
(I hope so)
Left to Right:
(i) Fan Gyhirych with
(ii) Fan Fraith as a subsidiary.
(iii) Fan Nedd.
(iv) Fan Dringarth with
(v) Fan Llia as a subsidiary.
(vi) Part of Fan Fawr.
Or in English:
(i) Braided Peak with
(ii) Spotted Peak as a subsidiary.
Nedd Peak, (was the river named after the peak or the peak after the river, might be corruption of Nyth which means Nest?)
(iii) Nest Peak?
[Dringarth] (again was the river or the peak named first?) Could be be
(iv) Bear Climb Peak or Garden Climb Peak?
[Llia] (same problem, peak named after river or vice-versa?) Llia might be a corruption of lap or lick.
(v) Lap Peak?
(vi) Great Peak, (part shown).
There was a Two hour Window in the Weather, so out I went for a Morning walk, to see what I could Find.
The Protestant Church of St. Katharinen, which dates back to the 13th century, with its 115 meter high tower cannot be overlooked when you are traveling in the Hafencity in Hamburg.
It is considered the oldest upright building in Hamburg that is still in use.
Due to its proximity to the harbor, it is considered the sailors' church. That is why she also bears the name of Saint Catherine of Alexandria, the patron saint of sailors and merchants.
Since Hamburg was one of Europe's centers for trade and shipping at the time, this makes perfect sense.
Further to the left in the background you can see the church of St. Nikolai, which was destroyed in the Second World War and of which only the tower remains today as a memorial.
Die aus dem 13. Jarhundert stammende evangelische Kirche St. Katharinen ist mit ihrem 115 Metern hohen Turm t nicht zu übersehen, wenn Ihr in der Hafencity in Hamburg unterwegs seid.
Sie gilt als das älteste aufrecht stehende Gebäude von Hamburg, welches noch immer in Funkton ist.
Auf Grund ihrer Nähe zum Hafen gilt sie als die Kirche der Seeleute. Darum träge sie auch den Namen der Heiligen Katharina von Alexandrien dem Schutzpatron der Schiffer und Kaufleute.
Da Hamburg zur damaligen Zeit eines der europäischen Zentren für Handel und Schiffahrt war, macht das absolut Sinn.
Weiter links im Hintergrund seht Ihr noch die Kirche St. Nikolai, die allerdings im 2. Weltkrieg zerstört wurde und von der heute nur noch der Turm als Mahnmal erhalten ist.
more of this on my website at: www.shoot-to-catch.de
The only thing left that testifies to lives once lived, to laughter and love, tears and regrets. To families growing up and away or hard times or maybe good times so that a bigger and newer place is attained. A solid reminder that someone once dwelled here and built this enduring memorial. And yes, I had to restrain Anita from fighting her way through the brush to get a closer look! LOL Not sure if we were still in Virginia or had crossed over into West Virginia at this point.
←left
Hair : booN Lab.069 hair
Kimono : *:..Silvery K..:*KimonoMesh(TUBAKI)FatPack
→right
Hair :
Kimono : ::GB::Mens kimono 2017 / kuro @Japonica
sensu :c*C*c::: Folding fan-[Rare]Nanten-Dark @Japonica
Decoration
1)Marushin_Oiran_Room (LI7)
2)Marushin_Byobu_Dragon(LI1)
4)Marushin_Oiran_Mousen (LI1)
7)Marushin_Oiran_zabuton (LI2)
8)Marushin_Oiran_tabakobon (LI2)
9)Marushin_Oiran_andon_M (LI1)
1~9 All@Japonica
[[RH]] -Kuruwa- ZABUTON (chrysanthemum)
[[RH]] -Kuruwa- ZABUTON (crane)
撮影手伝ってもらいましたヽ(゚∀゚)ノ
同じ構図になるともったいない気がしたので違うポーズで撮影しました。ともさんのは↓にあります。着物みえるかな??
Thank you!tomo!
Red Deer - Cervus elaphus
Double click image....
The red deer (Cervus elaphus) is one of the largest deer species. The red deer inhabits most of Europe, the Caucasus Mountains region, Asia Minor, Iran, parts of western Asia, and central Asia. It also inhabits the Atlas Mountains region between Morocco and Tunisia in northwestern Africa, being the only species of deer to inhabit Africa. Red deer have been introduced to other areas, including Australia, New Zealand, United States, Canada, Peru, Uruguay, Chile and Argentina. In many parts of the world, the meat (venison) from red deer is used as a food source.
The red deer is the fourth-largest deer species behind moose, elk and sambar deer. It is a ruminant, eating its food in two stages and having an even number of toes on each hoof, like camels, goats and cattle. European red deer have a relatively long tail compared to their Asian and North American relatives. Subtle differences in appearance are noted between the various subspecies of red deer, primarily in size and antlers, with the smallest being the Corsican red deer found on the islands of Corsica and Sardinia and the largest being the Caspian red deer (or maral) of Asia Minor and the Caucasus Region to the west of the Caspian Sea. The deer of central and western Europe vary greatly in size, with some of the largest deer found in the Carpathian Mountains in Central Europe.Western European red deer, historically, grew to large size given ample food supply (including people's crops), and descendants of introduced populations living in New Zealand and Argentina have grown quite large in both body and antler size. Large red deer stags, like the Caspian red deer or those of the Carpathian Mountains, may rival the wapiti in size. Female red deer are much smaller than their male counterparts.
The European red deer is found in southwestern Asia (Asia Minor and Caucasus regions), North Africa and Europe. The red deer is the largest non-domesticated land mammal still existing in Ireland. The Barbary stag (which resembles the western European red deer) is the only member of the deer family represented in Africa, with the population centred in the northwestern region of the continent in the Atlas Mountains. As of the mid-1990s, Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria were the only African countries known to have red deer.
In the Netherlands, a large herd (ca. 3000 animals counted in late 2012) lives in the Oostvaarders Plassen, a nature reserve. Ireland has its own unique subspecies. In France the population is thriving, having multiplied fivefold in the last half-century, increasing from 30,000 in 1970 to approximately 160,000 in 2014. The deer has particularly expanded its footprint into forests at higher altitudes than before. In the UK, indigenous populations occur in Scotland, the Lake District, and the South West of England (principally on Exmoor). Not all of these are of entirely pure bloodlines, as some of these populations have been supplemented with deliberate releases of deer from parks, such as Warnham or Woburn Abbey, in an attempt to increase antler sizes and body weights. The University of Edinburgh found that, in Scotland, there has been extensive hybridisation with the closely related sika deer.
Several other populations have originated either with "carted" deer kept for stag hunts being left out at the end of the hunt, escapes from deer farms, or deliberate releases. Carted deer were kept by stag hunts with no wild red deer in the locality and were normally recaptured after the hunt and used again; although the hunts are called "stag hunts", the Norwich Staghounds only hunted hinds (female red deer), and in 1950, at least eight hinds (some of which may have been pregnant) were known to be at large near Kimberley and West Harling; they formed the basis of a new population based in Thetford Forest in Norfolk. Further substantial red deer herds originated from escapes or deliberate releases in the New Forest, the Peak District, Suffolk, Lancashire, Brecon Beacons, and North Yorkshire, as well as many other smaller populations scattered throughout England and Wales, and they are all generally increasing in numbers and range. A census of deer populations in 2007 and again in 2011 coordinated by the British Deer Society records the red deer as having continued to expand their range in England and Wales since 2000, with expansion most notable in the Midlands and East Anglia.