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So as you can see my desk needed a radical tidy... I think I succeeded :D
Bonus points if you understand the title!
I need some help from a flickr friend in the UK.. I wanted to buy this necklace from forever21, but I waited too long.. And now it's sold out on the EU site. :(
Can somebody from the UK help me out? I will love you forever! <3
Thank you so much Nicole! <3
IEOP, Miércoles 4 de abril de 2018.
El convento Santo Tomás de Aquino de Sevilla, perteneciente a la Provincia de Hispania, acoge el Encuentro de provinciales dominicos de Europa entre el 3 y el 7 de abril de 2018.
[order] Passeriformes | [family] Turdidae | [latin] Turdus pilaris | [UK] Fieldfare | [FR] Grive litorne | [DE] Wacholderdrossel | [ES] Zorzal Real | [IT] Cesena | [NL] Kramsvogel
Measurements
spanwidth min.: 39 cm
spanwidth max.: 42 cm
size min.: 22 cm
size max.: 27 cm
Breeding
incubation min.: 10 days
incubation max.: 13 days
fledging min.: 12 days
fledging max.: 15 days
broods 2
eggs min.: 5
eggs max.: 7
Physical characteristics
Large, bold, long-tailed, often noisy thrush, with rather rakish form both on ground and in the air. Plumage more boldly variegated and richly colored than any other west Palearctic thrush, with blue-grey head, vinous-chestnut back, grey rump, and almost black tail obvious on ground, and heavily speckled breast and flanks, white vent, and black undertail obvious from below. Combination of grey rump, black tail, and white underwing diagnostic. Flight characteristically leisurely. Commonest call diagnostic. Sexes closely similar, little seasonal variation.
Habitat
Breeds in middle and higher latitudes of west Palearctic, in subarctic, boreal, and temperate zones, in woods of birch, pine, spruce, alder, and mixed species, usually in open growth or on fringes of moist areas with grass cover. Often along rivers or in groups of trees in fens or bogs, in sheltered but cool and humid situations.
Other details
Turdus pilaris is a widespread breeder in central and northern Europe, but winters across much of the continent, which constitutes >75% of its global wintering range. Insufficient information was available to assess the species's status using wintering population data, but its European breeding population is extremely large (>14,000,000 pairs), and was stable between 1970-1990. Breeding populations in most countries (including Russia) were stable or increased during 1990-2000, and the species probably remained stable overall.
This thrush inhabits a major part of Eurasia, from central Europe and Scandinavia to eastern Siberia. It is a species of the taiga, which has considerably extended its breeding area to the west, and colonised Iceland and Greenland. Inside the European Union it has colonised Belgium, the Netherlands and eastern France. Most birds are migratory and winter in western and southern Eur
Feeding
Wide range of invertebrates, also fruits from late summer to early winter. Feeds on ground and in trees and bushes. When collecting food for young, adult usually eats small items itself, will collect items in a pile before carrying them off.
Conservation
This species has a large range, with an estimated global Extent of Occurrence of 10,000,000 km². It has a large global population, including an estimated 28,000,000-48,000,000 individuals in Europe (BirdLife International in prep.). Global population trends have not been quantified, but the species is not believed to approach the thresholds for the population decline criterion of the IUCN Red List (i.e. declining more than 30% in ten years or three generations). For these reasons, the species is evaluated as Least Concern. [conservation status from birdlife.org]
Breeding
Breeds late Apr to late June in Scandinavia, May-June in Lapland. Nest site is in tree, placed in crotch of branch against trunk, or on side branch, exceptionally on ground or in depression anmong rock. Nest, bulky though compact structure with outer parts of grass reinforced with twigs, roots, etc, lined with thick layer of mud, and inner lining of fine grasses and a few roots. 5-6 eggs, incubation 10-13 days, by female only.
Migration
Migratory, though in some years of winter abundance of food some resident or move only short distances. Winters mainly in western, central, and southern Europe, Turkey, and Iran, also south to Canary Islands and Persian Gulf states. Usually reaches southernmost parts of Europe only in bad winters and rarely occurs on North African coast in good numbers. Birds flock prior to departure, becoming increasingly restless and making local movements. Spring passage generally more visible than in autumn with some impressive continual movements of birds often totalling several thousand passing along lines of hills or valleys in a matter of hours. Sudden movements of large numbers as a consequence of severe weather are commonplace across the entire wintering range. Individuals do not necessarily return to same area in successive winters with some subsequently recovered in winter up to 1600 km distant. Southward migration begins late September or early October and continues into November. Return often begins early, birds wintering in south-central Europe making partial return movements in February. Main arrivals in Norway from mid-April and in Sweden and Finland from late April.
Saint Dominic stands wearing a monk's robe and short haircut, holding an open book of scriptures with his proper left hand. His proper right arm is raised with index finger pointing to the sky. A dog lays at his feet on the proper right side. The sculpture is mounted on a rectangular base. The sculpture is situated on a circular path of small white pebbles in a grove setting.
The sculpture was installed at some point after the Order of the Dominican Sisters was founded in 1881 and before Caldwell College was founded in 1939. The dog at St. Dominic's feet symbolizes the preaching of the gospel throughout the world. The sculpture is power washed yearly.
Mt. Saint Dominic Mother House - Caldwell College - 120 Bloomfield Avenue in Caldwell, New Jersey 07006-6195
It is appropriate all these photos are in the snow...it was waaay below zero while I finished this up last week! blogged here
Because a lot of people were asking about pre-orders for ordering <3 Thank you for your opinions!
Same day will be a fast sale of Fang heads! Also there will be a pre-order for Fang as head or complete doll as soon as the body is finished!
More info at the website ;D
This is a photograph from the 5th annual Clongowes 5KM road race and fun run which was held at Clongowes Wood College, Clane, Co. Kildare, Ireland on Sunday 20th March 2016 at 11:00. The race is held annually as a fundraiser in aid of Clane Athletic Club and the Order of Malta International Camp and Lourdes fund. The weather was very good for road running. A cold dry crisp spring morning with clear skies and little wind. The race starts within the grounds of Clongowes Wood College at the Gold Course Side. The race proceeds out the golf course exit onto the Clane Kilcock road (the R407) and heads towards Kilcock. At the next junction (Borehole Cross) the course then takes a left and heads towards Prosperous village on the R408 known locally as 'the straight road'. About 1KM after the turn the course turns left in Ballynaboley and makes its way along a small boreen road which brings runners to join up again with the Clane Kilcock road. The race then runs right towards Clane and soon the runners see the famous landmark of the gates of the entrance to Clongowes Wood College. There is about a 400m straight stretch down the avenue to the finish as runners look down the straight avenue to the finish and the backdrop of the historic college buildings. Overall the course is flat and fast with a small incline over the first 2KM before the race turns off the Clane-Kilcock road.
The race is supported by Clane Athletic Club which is one of Ireland's newest athletic clubs. The club was reformed in 2012 with the principal aim of promoting athletics for all ages in the village of Clane and surrounding areas.
The grounds of the college provide a historically significant backdrop to the race. The school can trace its history back to a large estate owned by a local family in the 1400s. The estate became a school in the 1800s. While Clongowes is well known in the educational domain it is also well known for its strong history in schools rugby union. Today Clongowes Wood college is a voluntary secondary boarding school for boys.
Event organisation and electronic timing was provided by www.popupraces.ie/
We have a full set of photographs from the start and finish of this race on Flickr at www.flickr.com/photos/peterm7/albums/72157665954293712
Some useful web links include en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clongowes_Wood_College and
www.facebook.com/clongowes5k/?
USING OUR PHOTOGRAPHS - A QUICK GUIDE AND ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS
Can I use these photographs directly from Flickr on my social media account(s)?
Yes - of course you can! Flickr provides several ways to share this and other photographs in this Flickr set. You can share directly to: email, Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter, Tumblr, LiveJournal, and Wordpress and Blogger blog sites. Your mobile, tablet, or desktop device will also offer you several different options for sharing this photo page on your social media outlets.
BUT..... Wait there a minute....
We take these photographs as a hobby and as a contribution to the running community in Ireland. We do not charge for our photographs. Our only "cost" is that we request that if you are using these images: (1) on social media sites such as Facebook, Tumblr, Pinterest, Twitter,LinkedIn, Google+, VK.com, Vine, Meetup, Tagged, Ask.fm,etc or (2) other websites, blogs, web multimedia, commercial/promotional material that you must provide a link back to our Flickr page to attribute us or acknowledge us as the original photographers.
This also extends to the use of these images for Facebook profile pictures. In these cases please make a separate wall or blog post with a link to our Flickr page. If you do not know how this should be done for Facebook or other social media please email us and we will be happy to help suggest how to link to us.
I want to download these pictures to my computer or device?
You can download this photographic image here directly to your computer or device. This version is the low resolution web-quality image. How to download will vary slight from device to device and from browser to browser. Have a look for a down-arrow symbol or the link to 'View/Download' all sizes. When you click on either of these you will be presented with the option to download the image. Remember just doing a right-click and "save target as" will not work on Flickr.
I want get full resolution, print-quality, copies of these photographs?
If you just need these photographs for online usage then they can be used directly once you respect their Creative Commons license and provide a link back to our Flickr set if you use them. For offline usage and printing all of the photographs posted here on this Flickr set are available free, at no cost, at full image resolution.
Please email petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com with the links to the photographs you would like to obtain a full resolution copy of. We also ask race organisers, media, etc to ask for permission before use of our images for flyers, posters, etc. We reserve the right to refuse a request.
In summary please remember when requesting photographs from us - If you are using the photographs online all we ask is for you to provide a link back to our Flickr set or Flickr pages. You will find the link above clearly outlined in the description text which accompanies this photograph. Taking these photographs and preparing them for online posting takes a significant effort and time. We are not posting photographs to Flickr for commercial reasons. If you really like what we do please spread the link around your social media, send us an email, leave a comment beside the photographs, send us a Flickr email, etc. If you are using the photographs in newspapers or magazines we ask that you mention where the original photograph came from.
I would like to contribute something for your photograph(s)?
Many people offer payment for our photographs. As stated above we do not charge for these photographs. We take these photographs as our contribution to the running community in Ireland. If you feel that the photograph(s) you request are good enough that you would consider paying for their purchase from other photographic providers or in other circumstances we would suggest that you can provide a donation to any of the great charities in Ireland who do work for Cancer Care or Cancer Research in Ireland.
Let's get a bit technical: We use Creative Commons Licensing for these photographs
We use the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License for all our photographs here in this photograph set. What does this mean in reality?
The explaination is very simple.
Attribution- anyone using our photographs gives us an appropriate credit for it. This ensures that people aren't taking our photographs and passing them off as their own. This usually just mean putting a link to our photographs somewhere on your website, blog, or Facebook where other people can see it.
ShareAlike – anyone can use these photographs, and make changes if they like, or incorporate them into a bigger project, but they must make those changes available back to the community under the same terms.
Above all what Creative Commons aims to do is to encourage creative sharing. See some examples of Creative Commons photographs on Flickr: www.flickr.com/creativecommons/
I ran in the race - but my photograph doesn't appear here in your Flickr set! What gives?
As mentioned above we take these photographs as a hobby and as a voluntary contribution to the running community in Ireland. Very often we have actually ran in the same race and then switched to photographer mode after we finished the race. Consequently, we feel that we have no obligations to capture a photograph of every participant in the race. However, we do try our very best to capture as many participants as possible. But this is sometimes not possible for a variety of reasons:
►You were hidden behind another participant as you passed our camera
►Weather or lighting conditions meant that we had some photographs with blurry content which we did not upload to our Flickr set
►There were too many people - some races attract thousands of participants and as amateur photographs we cannot hope to capture photographs of everyone
►We simply missed you - sorry about that - we did our best!
You can email us petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com to enquire if we have a photograph of you which didn't make the final Flickr selection for the race. But we cannot promise that there will be photograph there. As alternatives we advise you to contact the race organisers to enquire if there were (1) other photographs taking photographs at the race event or if (2) there were professional commercial sports photographers taking photographs which might have some photographs of you available for purchase. You might find some links for further information above.
Don't like your photograph here?
That's OK! We understand!
If, for any reason, you are not happy or comfortable with your picture appearing here in this photoset on Flickr then please email us at petermooney78 AT gmail DOT com and we will remove it as soon as possible. We give careful consideration to each photograph before uploading.
I want to tell people about these great photographs!
Great! Thank you! The best link to spread the word around is probably http://www.flickr.com/peterm7/sets
Received this package about two days ago, after ordering it on the second. I really like everything I bought, and hope to use this stuff well!
Order total without shipping was $45 I believe. The big "L" pieces were freebies as well as the Gray dog tag piece.
NONE FOR TRADE
[order] Charadriiformes | [family] Alcidae | [latin] Cepphus grylle | [UK] Black Guillemot / Tystie | [FR] Guillemot à miroir | [DE] Gryllteiste | [ES] Arao aliblanco | [IT] Uria nera | [NL] Zwarte Zeekoet
spanwidth min.: 50 cm
spanwidth max.: 56 cm
size min.: 30 cm
size max.: 32 cm
Breeding
incubation min.: 22 days
incubation max.: 24 days
fledging min.: 38 days
fledging max.: 40 days
broods 1
eggs min.: 1
eggs max.: 2
Physical characteristics
The Black Guillemot (Cepphus grylle) is a striking bird with almost entirely black breeding plumage, a bright, white patch on the upper wing and spotless, white underwings. Its plumage is set off with bright red legs and feet, a slender black bill, and a coral red mouth-lining.
Habitat
Black Guillemots are an ice-dependent (pagophilic) species. Their survival is inextricably tied to the arctic pack ice. Satellite observations indicate a decrease in the extent of ice cover of nearly three percent per decade since the late 1970s, with the rate of loss accelerating this decade. Changes in Black Guillemot colonization and populations in the western arctic are already among the first documented biological effects of climate change. Typically, the species nests in crevices on rocky sea cliffs or in cavities found on rocky shorelines or headlands. They require a minimum of 80 snow-free days for laying eggs, hatching their young, and for the fledglings to leave the nest.
Other details
Cepphus grylle is a widespread breeder in coastal areas of northern Europe, which constitutes >50% of its global breeding range. Its European breeding population is large (>130,000 pairs), but underwent a moderate decline between 1970-1990. Although the populations in Norway and Sweden continued to decline during 1990-2000, the species was stable, fluctuated or increased across most of its European range, and remained stable overall. Nevertheless, its population has not yet recovered to the level that preceded its decline.
The breeding distribution of Black Guillemots is circumpolar. They nest from the Gulf of Maine northward throughout eastern Canada, over most of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, north to Greenland, and across Eurasia. There are also isolated colonies in northern Alaska and the Yukon Territory in Canada.
Feeding
Black Guillemots eat all kinds of animals from the sea, including crustaceans (crabs and shrimp), mollusks (clams and snails), and worms. They can dive 50-60 meter deep. Foraging habitat varies dramatically with the seasons. During the breeding season birds forage in inshore waters generally less than 50m in depth. Although they remain fairly close to shore year round, in winter months black guillemots are more pelagic, frequently feeding along pack ice edges where pack ice occurs.
Conservation
This species has a large range, with an estimated global Extent of Occurrence of 1,000,000-10,000,000 km². It has a large global population estimated to be 400,000-700,000 individuals (del Hoyo et al. 1996). Global population trends have not been quantified, but the species is not believed to approach the thresholds for the population decline criterion of the IUCN Red List (i.e. declining more than 30% in ten years or three generations). For these reasons, the species is evaluated as Least Concern. [conservation status from birdlife.org]
Breeding
Black guillemots breed in relatively small scattered colonies and lay 2 eggs. The typical reproductive cycle is as follows. Some adults over-winter near breeding colonies while the others return between late February and early May. Birds have been seen searching for suitable nest sites (see habitat section for nesting requirements) immediately after copulation and eggs are usually laid between late May and mid June. Guillemots have a double brood patch; two eggs are the standard clutch size but sometimes one and more rarely three are laid. More experienced parents often lay slightly earlier and have a larger mean clutch size. Once the last egg is laid incubation is continuous with both parents sharing shifts for 28 to 32 days. Colony attendance is highest in the early morning. Down-covered semi-precocial chicks take 3 to 4 days to fully hatch then are left unattended in the nest. As the chicks get older they wander inside the nest crevice. Both sexes feed the demanding chicks up to 20 fish a day until they fledge at age 30 to 40 days. Sometimes parents must entice young from the nest with fish, but once fledged, chicks are on their own. The average breeding success ranges from 0.48 to 1.6 young per pair with losses due to predation, bad weather, and flooding from high tides. By age three or four, young birds start to breed and join this cycle.
Black guillemots form monogamous pairs and show remarkable site fidelity, returning to the same colonies and often the same nest site year after year. Their social behavior ranges anywhere from solitary pairs to highly colonial. In the southern portion of their range guillemots are less social and less colonial, living in colonies of 10's and 100's while birds of the high arctic occur in colonies as large as several thousand. In some areas nesting habitat will overlap with other Alcids (Razorbills, Alca torda and Atlantic puffins, Fratercula arctica) with one documented case of Razorbill and guillemot eggs in the same hole.
Migration
Resident and mostly sedentary except in Northern regions, where movement to adjacent ice-free waters occurs. In general, winter distribution of adults essentially the same as breeding, with concentrations at traditional locations to moult, usually in sheltered waters near colony, where they spend the winter. Juveniles often move considerable distance from natal sites, usually in direction of prevailing sea currents. Reasons for their long distance dispersal are unclear. The overall dispersal patterns of the various populations poorly known, particularly in remote and inaccessible regions.
A Derbyshire constabulary mercedes sprinter public order van outside Derby crown court whist the Parents of the six children killed in the Derby house fire were sentenced in court, Note members of the press and news crews rushing to get shots and coverage of the police vans carrying the accused into court.
NME may 1988 pg 1 top
CREDIT: Mari
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Barney's Angels - More photos and discussion about Bernard Sumner and New Order
ORDER froM: HalfTime (Rock Band)
www.myspace.com/halftimerockband
CUSTOM: JimRul
ORIGINAL MODEL: Taeyang MJ
MAKE UP: Customized by Mei
EYES: Acrylic brown 22 mm
HAIR: from luts
BODY: original
CLOTHES: ebay’s sellers/ original
LOCATION: Spain
BASS: Fender 1/6 Scale
Order our unique and best baby towels online at mizutowel.com, One of the best bacteria-fighting towel providers. We are providing the most absorbent and super soft towels to protect your babies. Choose from a wide range of collections. Free shipping is also available on orders above $100. Visit now and place an order with us.
Honourable Janet Austin, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia, and Premier David Eby bestowed the province's highest honour, the Order of British Columbia, on influential leaders who have served with distinction and excelled in fields of endeavour benefiting the people of British Columbia and elsewhere, on December 1, 2022.
My 245-contribution to the In Numerical Order group.
The 7" record is B.J Arnau - I Want to go back there again, a nice soul stomper. I was actually searching for a "Side 2" in combination with "45 RPM" but couldn't found a single record with these numbers placed directly after each other.
7 Days of Shooting – Week #36 (w/b 13 March) Chaos - Oh, this is going to be a good and an interesting week. You are looking for subjects that are well and truly out of order - if you have or know a teenager then it is very, very possible that his or her bedroom is a little chaotic, or is that cutlery drawer in the kitchen as it should be? Have a look in the “clutter” drawer - yep, well and truly out of order!!
One special order from my brother Tom. He wanted a paper wallet for one great IT specialist. :-)
Details: jennagallery.blogspot.cz/2015/03/an-it-paper-wallet.html