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Mason was a gift for my wife's birthday in 2004. My good friend Ron helped us pick him out of a litter of twelve other pups. He was picked because of the streak going down his nose. Mason loved the snow, playing in it and eating it. He would carry huge logs we cut for firewood around the backyard, so they would go from a neat pile to being scattered all over the yard. Being ninety pounds he thought he was a lap dog. We had to quickly break him of that. Every chance he got he would go swimming in lakes or rivers no matter how cold the water was. Sometimes he would get out shivering, you would just have to scratch your head. Honestly he wasn't the smartest of dogs, but what he lacked in smarts Mason made it up with love. He was always fun to be around, even being around his stinky farts. Oh man, some of them were bad. I can go on and on about Mason. It's going to be weird camping without you. You're going to be missed buddy!
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Image of one of our Mason Bees
Link to Mason Bee set (by my son)
We are working with Dave Hunter of Woodinville, Washington who is a Mason Bee entrepreneur and a very knowledgeable person on this topic.
Genus:Osmia
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Masons of Cheddington Van Hool Astron T916 YJ09 CUU is seen in Brighton on 29th September, 2016. It was new to BM Coaches.
Accommodation: Mason Hall
Type: Single en-suite / apartment
Catered: Self-catered / Meal plan
The kitchen / dining areas are shared by the residents of the flat. Mason flats are made up of five or six bedrooms.
For further information, as well as virtual tours of our accommodation please visit our Accommodation page.
This is a great image, probably taken from an Anime. The 2 Mason Street images are right next to each other on the same building.
GULF OF ADEN (Aug. 24, 2013) Visit, board, search and seizure team members from the guided-missile destroyer USS Mason (DDG 87) and a group of Chinese sailors listen to final instructions before participating in a combined small-arms exercise aboard the People’s Liberation Army (Navy) destroyer Harbin (DDG 112). Mason is deployed in support of maritime security operations and theater security cooperation efforts in the U.S. 5th Fleet area of responsibility. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Rob Aylward/Released)
Australia 2025
shot for: Silver Tiger Media
Promotor: Hardline Media
venue: Croxton Bandroom, Melbourne Australia.
supporting Burning Witches
Late July 1974.
My mates, Robert Mason, Bob Wilson and Me.
This was the day Mum, Dad, Karen, Kevin and I flew to the UK, aboard a BOAC Super VC10 flying to Darwin, Singapore, KL, Abu Dhabi and eventually London (Heathrow).
It was really good of Robert and Bob to come up to the airport to see me off.
I used to sit next to Robert in grade three in Henry Palasczuk's English class. Henry was really strict. He'd sorted the class into rows according to ability. If you didn't do well on your weekly spelling test, you'd have to go down a row. Eventually, if you didn't do well while you were in the lowest row, you ended up getting moved to lower level English class next door.
Robert and I used to do science experiments in our spare time, mixing up whatever chemicals we could find, or wiring up old radios to see what we could do.
Robert and I discovered our love of Science together.
When my mum and Dad needed some time alone together in the early seventies, Roberts parents (Brenda and Marshall) kindly let me stay with them for a while.
Bob was a ten pound pom like me, but he arrived in 1972. His family were from Nelson (near Manchester) in Lancashire. I actually visited Nelson in 1997 when Liz and I went back to the UK. Where their family moved to in Rosella Street Inala was much nicer than Nelson, although the view of some of the green hills around Nelson was quite pretty.
Bob and I used to ride our bikes down the bush and smoke cigarettes that Bob used to magically procure. He and his brother Graham were brilliant at soccer, and I think Graham actually went on to play it profesionally.
Bob was the main reason that I decided to go to Oxley State High School instead of Inala High or Richlands. That decision changed my life.
The schools in Inala were rough. As a result, most kids under achieved. I went to primary school at Serviceton South in Inala. I found it very difficult since I was younger than most kids in my class, and smarter than most of them. So in their jealousy they made life tough for me.
So Oxley High was a big step up for me.
I ended up being School Captian of Oxley High, and am very grateful that I did well academically, eventually being able to get into Uni.
It was at Oxley High that I eventually ended up getting mixed up in the church, which in a way was a good thing, because it's how I got to meet my lovely wife, Liz.
So Bob, I owe you a hell of a lot, mate. You changed my life, and neither of us realized it at the time.
I am so glad I met both Robert and Bob, and I very much regret not keeping in touch with either of them.
De pie: Stella Raffo Reyes; María Teresa, Carlos, Ángel Gustavo y César Augusto Reyes Mason.
Sentados: Glasfira Micaela Mason Candia, Neftalí Reyes Basoalto, Abdías Reyes Parada y Delia del Carril.
Abajo: Víctor Abdías Reyes Hernández con Sergio Mason Reyes; Carlos Hernán Reyes Hernández con Gustavo Abdías Reyes Fernández y Alejandro Reyes Hernández; Héctor Abdías Mason Reyes y Mario Bernaschina Reyes.
Aporte de Sergio Mason Reyes.
A female mason wasp, Euodynerus foraminatus, inspects a hole in our bee condo as a potential nesting tunnel. Leavenworth, Kansas, USA, August 4, 2022.
Mason County Sheriff's Office
Mason County, Washington
Chevrolet Trailblazer
Taken on May 6, 2011 at the Washington State Peace Officer Memorial Ceremony at the Capitol Campus in Olympia, Washington.
Note: General Motors stopped producing Trailblazers in 2008.
Current and former regular day students at Mason College were eligible to join the Mason College Union. Early meetings seem to have had a primarily social function. Lectures and papers were given and debates were organised. Organised cultural events included readings, plays and musical evenings in which college staff also took part.
UB/GUILD/A/1/1
Lehigh Valley Coal Company 126. A travelling steam locomotive stars this weekend at the LM&M Railroad in Mason, Ohio. This engine travels across the country by truck. This was the first run of the morning en route to pick up it's first passengers. The rain poured down hard at times but that didn't deter folks from boarding.
This is a Vulcan 0-6-0T steam locomotive built in May, 1931. It was purchased by Gramling Locomotive Works in 1993 and restored to it's current operating condition.
I had to do at least one in B&W.
Views of the spire of the ruined church of St Andrew off Deansway in Worcester
This is above a college in Worcester.
This is all that is left of the medieval church of St Andrew in Worcester. It was demolished in 1949 after decline, disuse and decay. All that remains is this 15th century tower with its vaulted ceiling and fine series of 32 carved stone bosses.
The spire was created by local mason Nathaniel Wilkinson. It went up in the 1750s, to replace the smaller, wooden one destroyed by lightning in c.1730.
It is a Grade II* listed building.
Also known as: St Andrew's Tower COPENHAGEN STREET. Also known as: St Andrew's Church Tower ST ANDREW'S GARDENS. Church tower. C15 with spire rebuilt in 1751 by Nathaniel Wilkinson, a journey-man of Worcester. Limestone ashlar. 3-stage Perpendicular tower with slim, recessed, octagonal Gothick spire. Chamfered plinth. Diagonal off-set buttresses to first and second stages, those to first stage have engaged columnettes, with clasping pilasters to third stage. Pointed arches to east, north and south with Perpendicular moulding. 5-light pointed west window. First-stage band. To second stage a 2-light pointed window with Perpendicular tracery to head; second stage band. Third stage has 2-light pointed belfry window. Spire has one level of 2-light, then single light lucarnes. Surmounted by Corinthian capital. INTERIOR: lierne-vault over lower stage, to the east the springers of the first bay of the arcades. To south-west angle a plank door in ogeed surround. HISTORICAL NOTE: the medieval, probably C12 church was demolished after war damage. It now stands in a public garden, opened 1953 to commemorate the coronation of Elizabeth II. The original top of the spire stands in the same garden. The spire is locally known as "The Glover's Needle" due to its shape and to Worcester's association with the glove-making industry. A significant streetscape feature, forming an important landmark. It forms part of the visual context for Worcester Cathedral (qv) from the River Severn, together with Worcester Bridge, Bridge Street (qv), Gascoyne House, Brown's Restaurant and Bond House, South Quay (qqv) and grouping with Merchant's House, Quay Street (qv). NMR photographs. (The Buildings of England: Pevsner: N: Worcestershire: Harmondsworth: 1968-1985: 317-8).
Spire of Saint Andrew's Church, Worcester - Heritage Gateway
The Glover's Needle (or St Andrews Spire) is a spire-carrying tower in the city of Worcester, England.
The tower is a prominent landmark of the city, from road, rail, or the River Severn, and can be seen for miles around. It is located in St Andrews Gardens close to Worcester College of Technology. The spire used to crown the church of St Andrew but this was demolished in the late 1940s. The Glover's Needle is seated on Deansway Road, Worcester Cathedral being very close to the south and All Saints Church to the north. On the western side of the spire the pedestrian can descend into gardens that lead onto the River Severn. Across the road from the Glover's Needle is a "House of Fraser" shop which stands on the site of the old graveyard of St Andrews. At night the spire is illuminated (but not the tower below) and a blue glow is projected from inside one of the windows. The blue represents St Andrew, the colour of the Scottish flag. The blue glow and night lighting were paid for by the Rotary Club of Worcester Severn, to commemorate the millennium in 2000.
In the 15th century, Saxons built a church (called St. Andrews Church) with a tall spire but this was destroyed in a great storm of 1733. Shortly after this disaster, the spire was rebuilt. It was constructed by using the ingenious method of kite flying to carry up the stones. Worcester people took the new masterpiece to their hearts and named it the 'Glover's Needle'. This name came from the industrial glove making that was executed in Worcester. The entire structure measures approximately 245 feet. It is the tallest spire in the country to have such a narrow angle of taper. In the 1920s the slum housing which crowded round the church was demolished. The congregation of the church was thus reduced by a large degree. The church fell into decay, had an overgrown churchyard, few parishioners and a tiny parish of five acres. In the 1940s, the council accepted the Bishop of Worcester's offer of the church. They decided to demolish the church and create a garden of remembrance to replace it. However the council decided to leave the tower and spire, freestanding. Thus St Andrew's church was demolished in 1949.
As a millennium project, a clock was installed in the tower and now the hours are struck on the council bell. A recently reinstated custom is to have the council bell strike from 18:45 to 18:50 before a full meeting of the council. In the early 2000s a fence was put around the base of the spire. A few years ago, the RSPB has taken the Glover's Needle into their own hands and the actual spire is now used for special birds of prey for roosting. Live web cams have been installed in the tower.
The Glover's Needle formerly housed a set of five bells.[citation needed] These were hung full circle for proper English style change ringing. In 1870, four of the bells were sold but the tenor (heaviest bell) was retained in the old bell frame. This bell weighs 20 CWT — 1 ton. This is the so-called council bell mentioned above. It is unlikely that the Glover's Needle could sustain a ring of bells today as there is no church to buttress the swaying tower.