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Credit: VOBE - Parpalla Necklace --- is in the Mainstore and Marketplace --- more details in Blogg .
My Blogg:
lunarubydeveraux.blogspot.com/2020/09/not-giving-in.html
My flickr
www.flickr.com/photos/rubynandahar/
Song
Not sure what this bird is, first time I've seen it. It is smaller than a Mockingbird and larger than a Sparrow. If anyone knows, please let me know. Thanks for confirmation from Sue Milks that this is a Juvenile Summer Tanager, I now know what it is!
A heavy delivery arrived on Tuesday and the guy brought it in for us. Kaiser came to investigate and as the guy seemed friendly towards him, I said "this is Kaiser" - we discussed his size and he told us that in Bulgaria Kaiser is a type of sausage - lol. Phill and I couldn't stop laughing, Kaiser on the other hand did not find it at all funny. Turns out the delivery driver also had a huge cat who weighed in the same as Kaiser "The Sausage"
Happy Furry Friday everyone
Wishing you a happy and carefree weekend
Not my usual flavor. But once in a while, why not?
Sponsored:
Backdrop: Sewer Lobby by Dirty Rat. You can find it now at Engine Room, and afterwards at the Dirty Rat MP Store.
Guard Body: Automaton by Somnium, available at Engine Room, and afterwards at the Somnium Mainstore.
Outfit: Steam Engineer by Asteroid Box, available at Engine Room, and afterwards at the AsteroidBox Mainstore.
Face Scars: Scarred by Cubic Cherry. You can find it now at Engine Room, and afterwards at the Cubic Cherry Mainstore.
Skin: Ted by Stray Dog, available at the Stray Dog Mainstore.
Other deets:
Head: Lelutka - Eon
Body: Legacy - Male
Tattoos: Vegas Tattoo - Declares the Lord
Arm Wraps: L'Emporio - Brave
Finger Wraps: L'Emporio - Kick it
All decor items by DRD: Acid Rain Lookout Post, Street Clutter, Constructed Outlook and City Signs (Heavily modified)
Pose made on Black Dragon by yours truly.
As usual, if you're curious about the raw shot, you can find it on my blog. Check it out!
Do not forget to say goodbye, to give a caress before going to work.
Never forget to love who you want
Do not forget that time passes, that today will become
in tomorrow with the passing of the hours.
Do not forget that it is not always easy, that sometimes one is wrong.
Don't forget that not everything is perfect, that dark days suddenly appear.
Maybe everything is summed up in being when you have to be, in staying with someone who makes you smile even when you don't want to, maybe everything is never forgetting who remembers you every day.
Do not forget.
Trunks: GALVANIZED GALVANIZED. Trunks
This years version of my annual forget-me-not macro. First planted by my dad four decades ago, they have reseeded themselves ever since even though this garden is almost 700km away from the initial planting.
© AnvilcloudPhotography
Explore #103, Feb. 16, 2009
This is a photo of a local Wasp that we have around here. It is not very aggressive, we have killer bees for that, but if you get stung it packs a powerful punch.
isnotyourstyle.blogspot.com/2021/08/not-tonight-baby.html
Rebane - TopUp (Inithium Kupra)
Rebane - SkirtUp (Inithium Kupra)
Although, at first glance it does look like a lot of shots I have seen from there.
Just a bit of sunshine on an old fence rail in Alviso, California.
From my Wild and Weathered Wood collection.
Tierpark Hagenbeck, Hamburg, Germany
Nordamerikanischer Baumstachler***
(Urson)***Erethizon dorsatum
prick even as a baby
Vorkommen:Nordamerika (N-USA (Alaska), Kanada, W-USA, N-Mexiko)
Lebensraum:Wälder, offene Buschlandschaften, Gebirgswälder
Kopf-Rumpf-Länge:50 - 65 cm
Schwanzlänge:14 - 30 cm
Gewicht:18 kg
Nahrung:Blätter, Blüten, Zweige, Rinde, Beeren, Früchte
Gefährdungsstatus:LC (Least Concern)
Source: North America (N United States (Alaska), Canada, W United States, N Mexico)
Habitat: Forests, open Bush landscapes, mountain forests
Head and body length: 50-65 cm
Tail length: 14-30 cm
Weight: 18 kg
Food: Leaves, flowers, branches, bark, berries, fruits
Risk status: LC (least concern)
As much as I shot the standard cabs on the former DM&IR property, I really don't have much of the -8 era on the Iron Range Sub, simply because it happened after I left. It's simply not worth the hassle on vacation when every train has 45 people after it. Was much more enjoyable to just run into the locals once in awhile. Guess I'm just an old man now. ETTS! GE trio rips through Aurora on a gorgeous fall day.
A Black-headed gull in a territorial argument with a Pied avocet. Black-headed gulls are notoriously quarrelsome, and it's not only with their own species they love to pick a fight.
Pied avocet (Recurvirostra avosetta).
Black-headed gull (Chroicocephalus ridibundus).
© 2022 Marc Haegeman. All Rights Reserved
they flower in pink as well as blue
just appearing in our garden
I note the date I took this: April 1st, thus on the anniversary of our first date on April 1st, 1969: to see the film 'The Trap' at the local cinema. (It has not proved a bad omen!!)
DISH.
Gacha Im Not Inflatable
8 Items And 2 Rares
I Wear 2 Rares
With hud Animatios 3 steps
Available @ Kinky Event
ALANTORI
Hany Hair
Over 100 Colors
.::StunnerOriginals::.
Set Flash
Bento Nails Mesh Ballerina Long Flash
Maitreya, Legacy, Signature,Belleza & Slink
10 Colors Hud
LipGloss
Catwa, Genus, Omega, Lelutka & BoM Layers
9 Colors Hud
Include Eyeshadow For Catwa, Genus, Omega & BoM Layers
Avalibla @ SaNaRae Event
The birth of Aphrodite it is not. Is it an oversized pearl? Well, we are getting closer. I am not sure whether my advice would carry any weight, but if asked what camera somebody beginning photography should use, my advice is clear. Do not go for the latest and most sophisticated model (very expensive anyway). Get yourself a quality second-hand camera body (mirrorless these days probably) that enables you to do a lot of things manually. And add a fine and 'normal' (close to the human angle of view) prime lens, perhaps second-hand too. And look and behold, you would have a powerful combo that does not break the bank but would allow you to do some serious photography. It took me a while to understand this.
Helios 44M-7 at F11.
♡ Sponsored ♡
Quills & Curiosities - Sentient Sludge @ Dreadmorne Swamplands Horror Event (Opens May 6th, LM TBA)
)O(Artemisia - Sword Glaive )O( @Fantasy Faire (Atheneum)
Press "L" for a closer look! ♪♫♪
KUNI | Random.Matter. | Ladybird | ARCHIVEFACTION | kunst | cinphul | The White Crow | Stray Dog
Credits: privateshowblog.wordpress.com/2021/07/30/not-just-anybody/
Not too far from Chittagong Airport is a nice waterfront strip along the banks of the Karnaphuli River. There were boats and ships moored everywhere but this was one of the few days where the sun didn't shine and it was overcast and very hazy but there was enough colour to lift the mood a little.
Photo By Steve Bromley.
This female Northern Harrier was not skittish to my approach at all. Perhaps it was the rain that bothered her more than my presence.
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Press 'l' (small-L) to see in full size and best quality.
Press 'Esc' to go back.
In 1634 Jacques-Philipe Cornut (1606-1651) saw this Nerine in a French garden owned by the famed Morin family, well-known nurserymen of Paris. He named it Narcissus japonicus. Apparently a Dutch eastindiaman had earlier been shipwrecked on Guernsey. The Dutch traded heavily with Japan and would return to Europe by way of the Cape of Good Hope. Some of that ship's wreckage among which the bulbs of our plant washed away and quickly brightened the shores of Guernsey. Soon they were growing in Europe and England, too. Cornut incorrectly assumed that our plant hailed from Japan by way of South Africa and Guernsey. It is, in fact, a South African plant. In 1820 it was renamed Nerine sarniensis - from Guernsey - by astute English botanist William Herbert (1778-1947). Incidentally, Cornut remarks that their lack of aroma is compensated by the very beauty of the colors of the flower.
Here in the Amsterdam Hortus it's Autumn and one of the few bright plants to be seen. In the background Euryops, also from South Africa.
Milo having a bad day. lol
He didn't want to be woken and the cubs were running around like pork chops and he wasn't in the mood.
Mostly Eider ducks (thanks so much to Joan for the identification) doing their Eider duck thing in sea smoke on a sub-zero morning in Portland, Maine. I believe that two of them are the Red-breasted Merganser duck.
This used to be the building for the Howe Caverns' museum. Not anymore.
The actual caverns are a little bit further down the road with a gift shop now open right at the entrance of the caverns.
This region is full of caverns (some very small, some really large like this one).
Do not feed this monster of the White imagination! This is not a human being. This is a racist creation in the form of a 19th century collecting box: collecting money in Europe for the 'mission' and 'civilisation' of Africans. This paranoid sculpture has nothing to do with Black people. But it says a lot about Europe's frame of mind in previous generations. Don't feed this mindset. Wherever you are.
7Artisans manual lens at F1.2, ND filter, reflector.
I was away for a few days. This pic is not a selfie. I asked my husband to take this photo while we were in this area of BC. I will have more photos to share but some editing to do too. HSS to all.
J'ai fait une petite escapade d'une semaine en CB et USA et je suis revenue avec plusieurs photos. Ici c'est une photo que mon mari a fait samedi dernier. Merci pour la visite. Bon dimanche .
Well, these building may not be the first to catch the eye along Billionaire Row just south of Central Park but I couldn't resist the composition. I thought it interesting to find window A/C units and an old school water tank in real estate that runs way into the millions if not billions. A lot was being prepared for another skyscraper.
Technical Note: The perspective of this image drove me crazy, I couldn't figure out why the bottom of the center-right plane of the building looked a bit off (pulled in) even though the vertical lines are pretty straight. I thought it might have something to do with straightening the perspective or perhaps some lens distortion going on. What I concluded after plenty of study is it's a bit of an optical illusion with the four rows of lower windows having a different horizontal spacing than the top four rows! The result is that they tend to "pull" the image to the right a bit, IMO. Anyway, it was fun trying to figure this out and I was relieved that I didn't have to blame my 24-70. I shot this at 55mm which is a focal length I don't use too often for buildings. That being said, I'll have to run a few field tests next time I'm around tall buildings to confirm my hypothesis.
New York City: 57th St.looking north between 6th and 7th Ave.