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Toms shoes, men's size 7, supposedly
I bought these about three years ago, when i saw a lot of people wearing them. I liked the simple looks, and a lot of the ones I saw were falling apart, all the better, I like looking at and wearing decrepit shoes.
I was told by a friend who has the same small feet as me, that they were sized small. He bought women's size 9 in a department store and said they were snug I tried his, and found them a little loose for my tastes. . Although I usually these days get a size 6 or so to be snug on my size 7 or so feet, the smallest men's they had were 7, so that's what I ordered.
When I got them, they were really very tight, like a size 5. I thought maybe they sent me a women's size 7. Internet blogs said they should be really tight, they'd soon stretch, and they did. They now are very comfortably snug, not tight.
They also haven't worn as fast as I thought they would. But then I'm not using them for jogging, as one friend does, or for street soccer or skateboarding, which I understand they are popular for.
Actually recently I've been wearing the black ones more, for some reason. I also bought some Walmart look-alike, much less expensive.
As you can see here, the soles are worn, but not worn out. How anyone could wear holes in the soles before the canvas uppers were in tatters, I don't understand, but there are pictures, even here on Flickr, of just that. If you've worn holes through the soles, tell me how.
Original Caption: Unspoiled Marshlands on Sandy Hook Nature Preserve, Less Than 15 Miles from New York, Across the Bay 05/1973
U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 412-DA-5437
Photographer: Tress, Arthur, 1940-
Subjects:
Jersey City (Hudson county, New Jersey, United States) inhabited place
Environmental Protection Agency
Project DOCUMERICA
Persistent URL: catalog.archives.gov/id/547924
Repository: Still Picture Records Section, Special Media Archives Services Division (NWCS-S), National Archives at College Park, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD, 20740-6001.
For information about ordering reproductions of photographs held by the Still Picture Unit, visit: www.archives.gov/research/order/still-pictures.html
Reproductions may be ordered via an independent vendor. NARA maintains a list of vendors at www.archives.gov/research/order/vendors-photos-maps-dc.html
Access Restrictions: Unrestricted
Use Restrictions: Unrestricted
Proving without doubt the location GMT 6340 also carries an East Lancs body but to a more boxy and less pleasing design than that carried by the Pd’s.
HEN 540F Greater Manchester Transport 6340 Formerly Bury Corporation 140
Daimler Fleetline CRC6LX
East Lancs H45/31F
Built 1968
Warkworth Castle is a ruined medieval castle in Warkworth in the English county of Northumberland. The village and castle occupy a loop of the River Coquet, less than a mile from England's north-east coast. When the castle was founded is uncertain: traditionally its construction has been ascribed to Prince Henry of Scotland, Earl of Northumbria, in the mid-12th century, but it may have been built by King Henry II of England when he took control of England's northern counties. Warkworth Castle was first documented in a charter of 1157–1164 when Henry II granted it to Roger fitz Richard. The timber castle was considered "feeble", and was left undefended when the Scots invaded in 1173.
Roger's son Robert inherited and improved the castle. Robert was a favourite of King John, and hosted him at Warkworth Castle in 1213. The castle remained in the family line, with periods of guardianship when heirs were too young to control their estates. King Edward I stayed overnight in 1292 and John de Clavering, descendant of Roger fitz Richard, made the Crown his inheritor. With the outbreak of the Anglo-Scottish Wars, Edward II invested in castles, including Warkworth, where he funded the strengthening of the garrison in 1319. Twice in 1327 the Scots besieged the castle without success.
John de Clavering died in 1332 and his widow in 1345, at which point The 2nd Baron Percy of Alnwick took control of Warkworth Castle, having been promised Clavering's property by Edward III. Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland, added the imposing keep overlooking the village of Warkworth in the late 14th century. The fourth earl remodelled the buildings in the bailey and began the construction of a collegiate church within the castle, but work on the latter was abandoned after his death. Although The 10th Earl of Northumberland supported Parliament during the English Civil War, the castle was damaged during the conflict. The last Percy earl died in 1670. In the mid-18th century the castle found its way into the hands of Hugh Smithson, who married the indirect Percy heiress. He adopted the surname "Percy" and founded the dynasty of the Dukes of Northumberland, through whom possession of the castle descended.
In the late 19th century, the dukes refurbished Warkworth Castle and Anthony Salvin was commissioned to restore the keep. The 8th Duke of Northumberland gave custody of the castle to the Office of Works in 1922. Since 1984 English Heritage has cared for the site, which is a Grade I listed building and a Scheduled Ancient Monument.
Although the settlement of Warkworth in Northumberland dates back to at least the 8th century, the first castle was not built until after the Norman Conquest. The town and its castle occupied a loop of the River Coquet. The castle was built at the south end of the town, guarding the narrow neck of the loop. A fortified bridge also defended the approach to the town. The surrounding lowland countryside was favourable for agriculture. When the castle was founded and by whom is uncertain, though traditionally Prince Henry of Scotland, Earl of Northumberland, has been thought responsible. With civil war in South West England, King Stephen of England needed to ensure northern England was secure. To this end, the Treaty of Durham in 1139 between Scotland and England ensured peace. Under the treaty Henry of Scotland became Earl of Northumbria in exchange for ceding control of the castles at Bamburgh and Newcastle to the English. Without them Henry would have needed a new seat from which to exercise his authority, and a new castle at Warkworth may have met the requirement. However, charters show that Henry still controlled Bamburgh Castle after the treaty, and as Warkworth was a modest castle by contemporary standards it may have been founded by someone else. Henry died in 1152 and his son, Malcolm (crowned King of Scotland in 1153), inherited his lands. In 1157 Malcolm travelled to Peveril Castle in Derbyshire, where he paid homage to the new King of England, Henry II. Malcolm surrendered England's northern counties to Henry, including the castles of Bamburgh, Carlisle, and Newcastle, and probably Appleby, Brough, Wark, and Warkworth, though it is possible that Henry II founded Warkworth Castle in 1157 to secure his lands in Northumberland; other contemporary castles in the area were built for this purpose, for instance the one at Harbottle.
The first mention of Warkworth Castle occurs in a charter of 1157–1164 from Henry II granting the castle and surrounding manor to Roger fitz Richard,[4] a member of a noble Norman family. It has been suggested that this charter may have used the term castle to describe a high-status residence on the site, possibly dating from the Anglo-Saxon period, meaning Roger may have built the castle. He owned lands across a wide area, and Warkworth may have been of little significance in the context of his other holdings. When the Scots invaded Northumberland in 1173, although Roger fitz Richard was in the county Warkworth Castle was not defended by its garrison. Its defences at the time were described as "feeble". In 1174 Duncan II, Earl of Fife, raided Warkworth. The contemporary record does not mention the castle, and instead notes that Warkworth's inhabitants sought refuge in the church. When Roger fitz Richard died in 1178 his son and heir, Robert fitz Roger, was still a child. A guardian looked after the family estates until Robert came of age in 1191. He paid the Crown 300 marks in 1199 for confirmation of his ownership of Warkworth, including the castle. Substantial building work at Warkworth Castle is attributed to Robert. A favourite of King John, Robert hosted him at Warkworth Castle in 1213.
Warkworth Castle continued to descend through the family line when Robert fitz Roger was succeeded by his son John in 1214, who was succeeded by his son Roger in 1240. Roger died in 1249 when his son Robert was one year old, and a guardian was appointed to care for the family's estates: William de Valence, half-brother of King Henry III. The castle, characterised by this time by the chronicler Matthew Paris as "noble",[10] remained under the guardianship of Valence until 1268, when it reverted to Robert fitz John. King Edward I of England stayed at Warkworth Castle for a night in 1292. The English king was asked to mediate in a dispute over the Scottish throne and laid his own claim, leading to the Anglo-Scottish Wars. After the Scottish victory at the Battle of Stirling Bridge in 1297, Robert and his son, John de Clavering, were captured. They were subsequently released and in 1310 John assumed control of the family estates. A year later, John made arrangements so that on his death the king would receive all of his property. Between roughly 1310 and 1330 the English struggled to deal with Scottish raids in northern England. Such was the importance of large castles during the Scottish Wars that the Crown subsidised their maintenance and even construction. In 1319, King Edward II paid for a garrison for the castle of four men-at-arms and eight hobilars to enhance the existing force of twelve men-at-arms. Ralph Neville was the keeper of Warkworth Castle in 1322. As he was married to John's daughter, Euphemia, Ralph may have hoped to inherit the Clavering estates, but that did not happen. Twice in 1327 Scottish forces besieged the castle without success.
Around this time, the Percy family was becoming Northumberland's most powerful dynasty. Henry de Percy, 2nd Baron Percy, was in the service of Edward III and was paid 500 marks a year in perpetuity in return for leading a company of men-at-arms. In exchange for the annual fee, in 1328 Percy was promised the rights to the Clavering estates. Parliament declared such contracts illegal in 1331, but after initially relinquishing his claim Percy was granted special permission to inherit. John de Clavering died in 1332 and his widow in 1345, at which point the family's estates became the property of the Percys. While the Percys owned Alnwick Castle, which was considered more prestigious, Warkworth was the family's preferred home. Under the Percys a park was created nearby for hunting, and within the castle two residential blocks were created, described by historian John Goodall as "of unparalleled quality and sophistication in Northumberland". The second baron died at Warkworth in 1352.
In 1377 the fourth Baron Percy, also named Henry, was made the first Earl of Northumberland (becoming the first family from northern England to be granted an earldom) in recognition of his extensive power in the march areas along the Anglo-Scottish border. With a network of contacts and dependencies, the Percys were the pre-eminent family in northern England in the 14th century "for they have the hertes of the people by north and ever had", in the words of contemporaneous chronicler John Hardyng. Henry Percy commissioned the building of the distinctive keep shortly after he was made Earl of Northumberland. Percy may have enhanced his main castle to compete with John of Gaunt, who rebuilt the nearby Dunstanburgh Castle, or with the House of Neville, a family becoming increasingly powerful in northern England and who undertook a programme of building at the castles of Brancepeth, Raby, Bamburgh, Middleham, and Sheriff Hutton. Architectural similarities between Warkworth's keep, Bolton Castle, and the domestic buildings at Bamburgh Castle suggest that John Lewyn was the master mason responsible for building Warkworth's keep. Earl Henry helped dethrone Richard II and replace him with Henry IV. The earl and his eldest son Henry "Hotspur" Percy fell out with the new king, and eventually rebelled. After Hotspur was killed at the Battle of Shrewsbury in 1403, his father fled to Warkworth. The earl eventually went to York to submit to the king. He was arrested and the king attempted to install his own men at the castles of Alnwick, Langley Castle, Prudhoe, and Warkworth. The earl's 14-year-old son claimed that he was loyal to the king but was not empowered to formally surrender the castle, and it remained under control of the Percys. Henry was pardoned in 1404.
Earl Henry rebelled again in 1405, this time joining the unsuccessful revolt of Richard Scrope, Archbishop of York. While Henry was fleeing north after the failed rebellion, his castles offered some resistance before submitting to royal forces. Warkworth itself was well-provisioned and the garrison initially refused to surrender. However, according to a letter written by Henry IV from Warkworth after its fall, after just seven shots from his cannon the defenders capitulated. The castle was forfeited to the Crown, and was used by one of the King's sons, John, Duke of Bedford, who was appointed to rule the area. It remained in the ownership of the Crown until Henry V restored it to the Percy family in 1416, and at the same time made the son of "Hotspur" Henry, another Henry Percy, second Earl of Northumberland. It is known that the second earl resided at Warkworth and undertook building work there, but it is now unclear for which parts he was responsible.
The Percys supported the House of Lancaster during the Wars of the Roses, and the second earl and his successor – Henry Percy, 3rd Earl of Northumberland – were killed at the battles of St Albans in 1455 and Towton in 1461 respectively.[25] The new king, Edward IV, issued an attainder against the family and their property was confiscated. On 1 August 1464, as a result of suppressing Lancastrian rebellions in the north for the previous three years, the title of Earl of Northumberland was given to The 1st Marquess of Montagu, a Yorkist, and with it, the castle. During his tenure, he constructed a twenty-five-foot tall rectangular tower, built for defence, "with [arrow] slits in the three outer walls;" this is known as 'Montagu's Tower' to this day. His brother, The 16th Earl of Warwick, used Warkworth as a base from which the Lancastrian-held castles of Northumberland – Alnwick, Bamburgh, and Dunstanburgh – were attacked and their sieges co-ordinated. In 1470 Edward IV returned the Percys' estates to the eldest son of the third earl, who was also called Henry Percy. A year later Henry was granted the earldom of Northumberland. Some time after 1472 Henry remodelled the building of the bailey. He also planned to build a collegiate church within the castle, but the work was abandoned after his death. When the fourth earl was murdered in 1489, his son, Henry Algernon, inherited and maintained the castle. In the early 16th century Henry Percy, 6th Earl of Northumberland, was responsible for clearing the collegiate church founded by his grandfather, but left incomplete by the fifth earl. Thomas Percy, brother of the sixth earl, was executed for his role in the Pilgrimage of Grace in 1536. When Henry Percy died the next year without any sons, the family's property passed to the Crown.
In 1543 Sir William Parr, as warden of the Scottish marches decided to live at Warkworth and carried out repairs. Although royal officers still used the castle, by 1550 it had fallen into disrepair. In 1557 the Percy estates were restored to the descendants of Thomas, and the nephew of the sixth earl, another Thomas Percy, was given the earldom. He began a programme of repairs at the castle, and in the process dismantled "the hall and other houses of office".
The Rising of the North in 1569 saw Catholic nobles in northern England rebel against the Protestant Queen Elizabeth I. The Catholic Thomas Percy joined the rebellion and supporters congregated at the castles of Alnwick and Warkworth. Sir John Forster, Warden of the March, ordered those inside to leave and the castles were surrendered to his control. During the conflict that followed, Warkworth remained under royal control. Forster pillaged the castle, stripping it of its timbers and furnishings. The keep at least did not share in this fate, but in April 1572 Henry Carey, 1st Baron Hunsdon, bemoaned the treatment meted out to the Percy castles, writing to the queen's chief minister, "It is a great pity to see how Alnwick Castle and Warkworth are spoiled by him ... I am creditably informed that he means utterly to deface them both." An attainder was issued against Thomas Percy so that when he came into English custody he was executed without trial on 22 August. As a result, Percy's son was passed over, but under the terms of the attainder his brother was allowed to inherit. In 1574, Elizabeth granted Henry Percy permission to inherit the family's property and assume the title of 8th Earl of Northumberland.
The castle formed the backdrop for several scenes in William Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 1 and Part 2. Another Henry Percy inherited the family estates in 1585 and assumed the title of 9th Earl of Northumberland. After the failed Gunpowder Plot of 1605, the earl was imprisoned for his connection with Thomas Percy, one of the plotters. Shortly before he was sentenced (he was fined £30,000 and held in the Tower of London), the earl leased Warkworth Castle to Sir Ralph Gray, who owned Chillingham Castle in Northumberland. Gray neglected the earl's building and allowed it to fall further into disrepair. The lead from the buildings in the bailey was sold in 1607 to alleviate the earl's financial problems. When James I visited in 1617 en route to Scotland, his entourage was angered by the sorry state of the castle. With the unification of England and Scotland under a single ruler, the earls of Northumberland had no need for two great castles near the Anglo-Scottish border; they maintained Alnwick at the expense of Warkworth. In the first quarter of the 17th century, the keep was used to hold manor courts and for the laying out of oats.
The details surrounding Warkworth Castle's role in the English Civil War are unclear, but the conflict resulted in further damage to the structure. Initially held by Royalist forces, the castle was still important enough that when the Scots invaded in 1644 they forced its surrender. Algernon Percy, 10th Earl of Northumberland, supported Parliament, which may have prevented the Scots from doing much damage to the castle.[34] Parliamentarian forces took over the castle in 1648; when they withdrew they removed the castle's doors and iron so that it could not be reused by the enemy. They may also have partially demolished some of the castle, and may be responsible for its present state. Algernon Percy unsuccessfully applied for compensation in 1649 for the damage.
The 11th Earl of Northumberland, the last Percy earl, died in 1670. Two years later his widow allowed the keep's materials to be reused to build Chirton Hall. A total of 272 cart-loads were taken from the keep. Lord Northumberland's property passed to The 7th Duke of Somerset through marriage. In 1698, the owners decided not to renovate Warkworth Castle after the estimate to add battlements, floors and new windows came in at £1,600. Lady Elizabeth Seymour inherited the property from her father in 1750. Her husband, Hugh Smithson, changed his name to Hugh Percy, and the castle then descended through the Dukes of Northumberland, a dynasty he founded.
During the 18th century the castle was allowed to languish. The south-west tower was falling apart and around 1752 part of the curtain wall east of the gatehouse was demolished (it was rebuilt towards the end of the century). The town and its historic ruins were by now attracting interest as a tourist destination, largely due to Bishop Thomas Percy's poem, The Hermit of Warkworth. In the mid 19th century, The 3rd Duke of Northumberland undertook some preservation work. His successor, The 4th Duke of Northumberland, contracted Anthony Salvin to restore the keep. The work undertaken between 1853 and 1858 was not as extensive as Salvin had planned, and was limited to partially refacing the exterior and adding new floors and roofs to two chambers, which became known as the Duke's Chambers, on the second floor. The Duke occasionally used the chambers for picnics when he visited from Alnwick Castle. The 4th Duke funded excavations at the castle in the 1850s which uncovered the remains of the collegiate church within the bailey.
In 1922, The 8th Duke of Northumberland granted custodianship of the castle to the Office of Works which had been made accountable for the guardianship of ancient monuments. The Duke's Chambers remained under the direct control of the Percys. The Office of Works undertook excavations in the moat in 1924 and removed the custodian from the gatehouse. English Heritage, who now manage and maintain the site, succeeded as the castle's custodians in 1984, and three years later the Duke's Chambers were given over to their care. The castle is a Scheduled Ancient Monument, a "nationally important" historic building and archaeological site which has been given protection against unauthorised change. It is also a Grade I listed building (first listed in 1985) and recognised as an internationally important structure. The castle continues to be officially owned by the Percy family, currently being owned by the 12th Duke of Northumberland.
Less frequented than the other main waterfall attractions on the Plateau, Tad Champi waterfall offers a quiet and peaceful retreat into nature, suitable for quiet meditation. A small path go down directly down to the edge of the stream where you can relax on either long wooden benches or on its natural round boulders.
The Wild Things, aka my Utah grandkids, are here for the weekend so I'll be off for a few days. They're a little less wild than the last visit and we're having lots of fun. Let the games begin!!
This life-size depiction of Christ at the column is one of the earliest works by Jan Lievens, described in 1641 by the Leiden chronicler Jan Orlers as a ‘wunderkind’. Rembrandt and Lievens were close friends in the years 1624/25-31 and they competed with one another in their striving for stylistic and technical innovation. The picture was executed around 1625 at a time when Lievens´ work served as a model for the less experienced Rembrandt.
Currently on show: The Kremer Collection.
(Liboré, le 13 janvier 2013)
D'autres images et portraits du Niger ici : www.flickr.com/gp/degust/56u0kX
Less than a half mile from the prior shot but now in another state Providence and Worcester local PR3 is near MP 0.65 on the East Providence Running Track having just left their home base of Valley Falls (RI) yard. At left is the big brick former Crown Manufacturing Company Mill dating from 1911 designed by the Providence based but nationally known firm of C. R. Makepeace & Company mill architects. The building was involved in textile manufacturing right up until about year 2000 and is now home to Comtran Cable...but alas they are not a rail shipper and the old sidings rust away derelict in the weeds.
After cutting through this tiny corner of Massachusetts, in about 3/10 of a mile they'll be back in Pawtucket, RI where they will deliver one load and pull one empty at Teknor Apex alongside the Industrial Highway.
Bracketing the one car is GP38-3 2011 (built as a straight GP40 for the PC in 1969) on the south end and GP38-2 2006 (built new for the PW in Feb. 1980) on the north.
Attleboro, Massachusetts
Wednesday May 6, 2020
Looking for a picture to take when leaving work after being there for a tiring 14 hours was a bit hard, but as I was walking to the bus I saw these icicles hanging off a blue metal post and though they looked a bit blah with a construction site behind it, however, a macro shot of them look semi-interesting to me...
By the way, because I used a flash (this was about 11 at night and really dark where I was walking), the boring construction scene in the background got washed out...no work was done on the shot at all except for my watermark...it's straight out of the camera...my little Canon point and shoot no less!! (Did I mention how much I love my little Canon yet?)
Oh hey!! Thanks for having this make Explore!
Highest position: 330 on Monday, January 12, 2009
"Laveurs" de linge, au bord des ghats inondés, à Varanasi, il y a un an... Excellente journée photo, sauvée par Anne qui me prête un appareil photo après que j'aie emporté par erreur une batterie vide.
iso100
f/11
30s
24mm
PC-E Nikkor / D800
Hoya Polar CI-R
LR with Nik silver / red filter
One of the great things about the design of the entrance to the Mori Art Museum is the movement that is demonstrated and inferred. The stairs, by definition, imply a sense of travel but the windows allow air to flow through and activate the banners within the space. This combination of circulation and movement creates a dynamic environment that is hard to capture as a still. Several groups of people moved through the shot but none were slow enough to capture although they left slight shadows and for that I am grateful.
This is a great place to photograph at night and the view angles are endless.
thanks for reading.....jhe
I made the same dress on Littlefee size, after Pukifee size and now I made the same dress for pukipuki size. xaxa
I believe these are sporangia of slime mold Arcyria denudate. A. incarnata is similar, but the capillitium is less sturdilly attached and examples look less cylindrical.
Photographed using a Nikkor 85mm f/2.8 tilt shift lens and a Sony flash.
This is a view of Mies van der Rohe's TD Centre in Toronto. By the time it was completed in 1969 Mies van der Rohe's tower dominated the entire downtown core. It stood in stark contrast to the buildings around it and was an illustration of his famous dictum: "Less is More".
TD Centre was still under construction when Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey" was released. To my child's eye it reminded me of the black slab in that film.
During the 1960's the Toronto Board of Education included an aerial shot of downtown with every class photo. It allowed students to track their progress through the elementary school system against the construction of skyscrapers in the downtown core. It was an example of the how this town once embraced the modernist sensibility.
Louis Usabal Y Hernandez Madge Lessing (1866-1932) was very successful as a stage actress at the end of the 19th century. Her film career began in Germany in 1913.Her first movie was "Wo ist Colett?" , it followed the movie "Die blaue Maus".When Madge Lessing went to England she concentrated to the theater again.
Wintergarten Theater, Berlin (1880-1944).
After 56 years of shows and a final performance on 21 June 1944 the Wintergarten is destroyed in a bombing raid. The most spectacular variety theatre Germany has ever known lies in ruins.
Living less than five minutes from the sea I have become more than used to the fresh air smell of the sea ... it just "wakens" you up!!
I guess this lady and her dog are somewhat like me ~ she stood out there on the rocks for a good five minutes!!
Flickr Lounge ~ Weekly Theme (Week 15) ~ Can't Live Without ...
Stay Safe and Healthy Everyone!
Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all!
Mural seen at 131 West 2nd Street in Flint, Michigan. Please tag if you know the artist.
Drone photo by James aka @urbanmuralhunter on that other photo site.
Edit by Teee
Taken at the foot of Coniston Old Man in the Lake District in Sept 2014. There was actually a lot of colour in the sky and I got some pretty spectacular sunset shots. But, after post-processing a whole bunch of them and doing what I could to bring out the vibrant blues and greens and orange tones I just felt that sometimes "less is more". So I desaturated this one to bring out the earthiness and give it a more "painted" feel.
Vi esta película por primera vez durante un verano muy caluroso. La vi no porque me entusiasmara la historia (había leído el libro y no me había parecido nada del otro mundo...) sino porque estaba Robert Downey Jr. Su trabajo como Julian es demoledor. El es lo mejor que tiene "Less than zero". Y por él la posteo. Por él y por Pablo Lombardo, un amigo que admiraba mucho a Robert. Nunca llegamos a hablar con él de esta película pero seguro que coincidiría conmigo.
Sé que él se sentía muy cercano a Robert por muy loco que esto parezca: habían nacido el mismo día del mismo mes del mismo año. Incluso había llegado a comparar sus respectivas cartas natales. Y cuando nos lo contó, nos quedamos muy impresionados. Siempre vamos a recordar ese detalle. Siempre lo vamos a recordar a él. Siempre.
:::::::
Esta película es para vos, Pablo.
Menos que cero (Less than Zero)
Marek Kanievska
1987
My photobuddy Mary and I photographed this barn today. It's such a cool looking barn with two abandoned vehicles in front of it!! Thanks to Road_Less_Traveled for the location of this lovely barn.
www.qwerty.com Call to Action - 1800200123a Youtube and Flicker and Thumbnail
Youtube and Flicker and Thumbnail
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keyphrase, keyphrase given, keyphrase supplied, keyphrase extraction
“Leftovers in their less visible form
are called memories.
Stored in the refrigerator of the mind
and the cupboard of the heart.”
~ Thomas Fuller ~
“We've got this gift of love,
but love is like a precious plant.
You can't just accept it
and leave it in the cupboard
or just think it's going to get on by itself.
You've got to keep watering it.
You've got to really look after it
and nurture it.”
~ John Lennon ~
During our special week, we loved using the antique dishes for most of our meals. One of the things I had hoped to do before we left, was organize the kitchen cupboard, but didn't think I would get to it. Imagine my heartfelt surprise when, on the last morning, I discovered my sister arranging all the blue and white plates and glasses! (when we had arrived, the glasses were just on a counter!) . . . am just loving these memories!
A poor quality photo and video of a seal struggling with a fish in the fresh water part of the River Clyde, way beyond Glasgow Green. It's a few hundered yards from the Cuningar Loop and only about half a mile from Celtic Park.