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If you want to have a good collection of sunrises and also very breath-taking sunsets, you have to come to Miami Fl. That's the only thing I can tell you.
We are still free, but remember all the countries of the world the maxim of "Divide and conquer" is a strategy used by the elites ("the oppressors") to break relations and unity between groups subjugated by taxes and fears that fight for justice, liberty and liberation, in order to maintain the status quo.
This maxim of divide et impera has been attributed to Philip II of Macedonia and was used by the Roman ruler Julius Caesar when he used it against Roman slaves when they tried to destroy Rome. As told in legends, there is an event in which it is said that Julius Caesar manipulated a division between the slaves who rebelled against Rome, when he was a young man who had a position of quaestor that is something like responsible for the income public and other financial matters...
Reflection of today in times of the virus...
Remember that the sun always rises for everyone and even more so if faith exists, remember, for any religion you have, faith exists, because it is only just a god with different names...
I hope you understand the maxim, the faith and the prayer....
The rainbow... It comes out, when a deceptive agreement to lie to others, becomes like a conspiracy and this is discovered, that's why the price of a freedom is eternal vigilance....
Momentous describes an important event or moment in time. It is used for a time of great consequence or for a major accomplishment, and is almost always reserved for good things..... ☺
Supposedly the moon is full from my point of view but they say that today is after Full Moon, when the face of the Moon is 100% illuminated, the intermediate phase called Waning Gibbous Moon starts Waning means that it is getting smaller but I certainly do not see it that way. Gibbous refers to the shape, which is less than the full circle of a Full Moon, but larger than the semicircle shape of the Third Quarter Moon.
Cuando el precio de la libertad. Quand le prix de la liberté. Когда цена свободы. Ko cena svobode. Коли ціна свободи. Wenn der Preis der Freiheit. Özgürlüğün bedeli ne zaman. Cando o prezo da liberdade. Кад цена слободе. जब स्वतन्त्रताको मूल्य। Khi giá của tự do. Quando il prezzo della libertà. כאשר מחיר החופש. जब आजादी की कीमत। وقتی قیمت آزادی. Askatasunaren prezioa denean. عندما يكون ثمن الحرية. 價格自由的時候。Když cena svobody. Kapag ang presyo ng kalayaan. ときに自由の代償。자유의 대가.
Matheson Hammock Park is a 630 acres urban park in metropolitan Miami at 9610 Old Cutler Road, just south of Coral Gables, Florida. The park surrounds the north and western ends of Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden.
Matheson Hammock opened in 1930 as the first county park of Dade County, a gift of 80 acres to the county from William J. Matheson. Originally administered by the county's first director of public parks, A. D. Barnes, and designed by the landscape architect William Lyman Phillips, today it is owned and managed by Miami-Dade County.
Matheson wanted the land to be used as a park "to preserve the wild and natural beauty." It grew with further donations by the Matheson heirs, purchases by county commissioner Charles Crandon, and other donations to its current 630 acres. Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) crews were assigned to Matheson Hammock in 1936 and began to develop the Bayfront park area. Coral stone buildings rose and the picnic area had a coral stone shelter.
Without the use of the inexpensive and skilled labor force under the state and federal assistance programs, it would have been impossible to build the miles of carefully hewn coral-stone walls and native stone buildings. The quality of the CCC's work was verified in 1945 when a hurricane resulted in 12-foot waves rolling over Matheson Hammock, causing immense damage to equipment and furnishings, and depositing layers of mud and trash in the park, but the basic CCC structures stood firm and the park recovered.
(The Civilian Conservation Corps-built structures have served as a gateway for Texans' interactions with the outdoors for decades. Though many visitors might not give a second thought to a park's architecture, the CCC buildings are the product of an architectural vision of people and nature and how they interact.)
These sunset colors are the only thing that can be obtained in photos in this area. Remember the beach of Miami Beach is for the South in this area you can not catch sunset, only the sunrise is possible to see here. The sunsets that I have photographed are from the Gulf of Mexico.
All the roads go to the city, of course, Miami has to learn a lot about what it means to be a city and what that implies, bus transportation is the scariest I've seen, a bus takes more than most the cases, one hour and I think I'm being a bit soft, the only excellent thing that the city has in transportation is monorail, the rest is bad, the only city in the United States with transportation time is New York, at least I know that, remember what I said, public transport and prepare for it when you visit Miami.
Siesta Key is a barrier island off the southwest coast of the U.S. state of Florida. It is situated between Roberts Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. A portion of it lies within the city boundary of Sarasota, but the majority of the key is a census-designated place (CDP) in Sarasota County. After the probable Amerindian name of Sarasota for the area and the bay, the key was originally named "Zarazote Key" by European cartographers during exploration beginning in 1513. That name can be seen on maps from the early 18th century as well as on all local maps drawn before the name change to "Siesta Key" in the 1920s. The population was 6,565 at the 2010 census.
Siesta Key is made up of four main districts: Siesta Beach, Crescent Beach, Turtle Beach, and Siesta Key Village.
Siesta Key is part of the Bradenton–Sarasota–Venice Metropolitan Statistical Area.
Use polarizing filter, just take this photo and it started to rain, I think it was lucky... although it is not great because I was not prepared with the light that come up at the moment...😉
Forgive me if I put photos that maybe you think they look alike, but, honestly, they are not the same, the city of Miami is changing, I do not say this for its residents, if not rather it is that every time you go out to the street you find one crane with new construction. Since I started making these panoramas, I was motivated by that, I want to one day move this in sequences and for years, although in the last four years the architectural growth has been much faster, if you look at some of my photos you will see the number of buildings that have been done so far, so this is to never end, apart from the architectural, the skies of Miami, the daylight and the afternoon, are worth always worth taking a photograph, of which I have hundreds of them honestly.