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If you search "Valencia Cathedral" on Google, the first suggestion of a query will be "Is the Holy Grail in Valencia?". Well, apparently, yes. The Vatican even confirmed that with a high probability the cup stored in the Cathedral served Jesus.

 

All rights reserved

___________________

More about this image sumfinity.com/hdr-photos/spain/valencia/cathedral-spain/

Kestrel - Falco tinnunculus (m)

  

The common kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) is a bird of prey species belonging to the kestrel group of the falcon family Falconidae. It is also known as the European kestrel, Eurasian kestrel, or Old World kestrel. In Britain, where no other kestrel species occurs, it is generally just called "the kestrel".

 

This species occurs over a large range. It is widespread in Europe, Asia, and Africa, as well as occasionally reaching the east coast of North America.

 

Kestrels can hover in still air, even indoors in barns. Because they face towards any slight wind when hovering, the common kestrel is called a "windhover" in some areas.

 

Unusual for falcons, plumage often differs between male and female, although as is usual with monogamous raptors the female is slightly larger than the male. This allows a pair to fill different feeding niches over their home range. Kestrels are bold and have adapted well to human encroachment, nesting in buildings and hunting by major roads. Kestrels do not build their own nests, but use nests built by other species.

 

Their plumage is mainly light chestnut brown with blackish spots on the upperside and buff with narrow blackish streaks on the underside; the remiges are also blackish. Unlike most raptors, they display sexual colour dimorphism with the male having fewer black spots and streaks, as well as a blue-grey cap and tail. The tail is brown with black bars in females, and has a black tip with a narrow white rim in both sexes. All common kestrels have a prominent black malar stripe like their closest relatives.

 

The cere, feet, and a narrow ring around the eye are bright yellow; the toenails, bill and iris are dark. Juveniles look like adult females, but the underside streaks are wider; the yellow of their bare parts is paler. Hatchlings are covered in white down feathers, changing to a buff-grey second down coat before they grow their first true plumage.

 

Data from Britain shows nesting pairs bringing up about 2–3 chicks on average, though this includes a considerable rate of total brood failures; actually, few pairs that do manage to fledge offspring raise less than 3 or 4. Compared to their siblings, first-hatched chicks have greater survival and recruitment probability, thought to be due to the first-hatched chicks obtaining a higher body condition when in the nest. Population cycles of prey, particularly voles, have a considerable influence on breeding success. Most common kestrels die before they reach 2 years of age; mortality up until the first birthday may be as high as 70%. At least females generally breed at one year of age; possibly, some males take a year longer to maturity as they do in related species. The biological lifespan to death from senescence can be 16 years or more, however; one was recorded to have lived almost 24 years.

  

Population:

  

UK breeding:

 

46,000 pairs

 

In the Kenroku-en Garden Kanazawa, 'one of the most beautiful landscaped gardens in Japan'. The garden was teeming with visitors at this time the probability of capturing a moment like this was minuscule. But there we are. The image shows Kenroku-en Garden itself was scintillating.

is this all a meaningless distraction? the probability is high.

Kestrel - Falco tinnunculus (m)

  

The common kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) is a bird of prey species belonging to the kestrel group of the falcon family Falconidae. It is also known as the European kestrel, Eurasian kestrel, or Old World kestrel. In Britain, where no other kestrel species occurs, it is generally just called "the kestrel".

 

This species occurs over a large range. It is widespread in Europe, Asia, and Africa, as well as occasionally reaching the east coast of North America.

 

Kestrels can hover in still air, even indoors in barns. Because they face towards any slight wind when hovering, the common kestrel is called a "windhover" in some areas.

 

Unusual for falcons, plumage often differs between male and female, although as is usual with monogamous raptors the female is slightly larger than the male. This allows a pair to fill different feeding niches over their home range. Kestrels are bold and have adapted well to human encroachment, nesting in buildings and hunting by major roads. Kestrels do not build their own nests, but use nests built by other species.

 

Their plumage is mainly light chestnut brown with blackish spots on the upperside and buff with narrow blackish streaks on the underside; the remiges are also blackish. Unlike most raptors, they display sexual colour dimorphism with the male having fewer black spots and streaks, as well as a blue-grey cap and tail. The tail is brown with black bars in females, and has a black tip with a narrow white rim in both sexes. All common kestrels have a prominent black malar stripe like their closest relatives.

 

The cere, feet, and a narrow ring around the eye are bright yellow; the toenails, bill and iris are dark. Juveniles look like adult females, but the underside streaks are wider; the yellow of their bare parts is paler. Hatchlings are covered in white down feathers, changing to a buff-grey second down coat before they grow their first true plumage.

 

Data from Britain shows nesting pairs bringing up about 2–3 chicks on average, though this includes a considerable rate of total brood failures; actually, few pairs that do manage to fledge offspring raise less than 3 or 4. Compared to their siblings, first-hatched chicks have greater survival and recruitment probability, thought to be due to the first-hatched chicks obtaining a higher body condition when in the nest. Population cycles of prey, particularly voles, have a considerable influence on breeding success. Most common kestrels die before they reach 2 years of age; mortality up until the first birthday may be as high as 70%. At least females generally breed at one year of age; possibly, some males take a year longer to maturity as they do in related species. The biological lifespan to death from senescence can be 16 years or more, however; one was recorded to have lived almost 24 years.

 

Population:

 

UK breeding:

 

46,000 pairs

Buriganga River a tide-influenced river passing through west and south of Dhaka City. There is a traditional story behind naming it. In ancient times one course of the ganges used to reach the bay of bengal through dhaleshwari. This course gradually shifted and ultimately lost its link with the main channel of the Ganges and was renamed as the Buriganga. The water levels during high and low tides in this river astonished the Mughals. In the distant past, a course of the Ganges river used to reach the Bay of Bengal through the Dhaleshwari river.

The course of the Padma, as the main course of the Ganges is known in Bangladesh, changed considerably during the period 1600 to 2000 AD. It is difficult to trace accurately the various channels through which it flowed, but the probability is that it flowed past Rampur Boalia, through Chalan Beel, the Dhaleshwari and Buriganga rivers, past Dhaka into the Meghna estuary. In the 18th century, the lower course of the river flowed further south. About the middle of the 19th century the main volume of the channel flowed through this southern channel, which came to be known as Kirtinasa. Gradually the Padma adopted its present course.

When I used to climb the foothills of Mt. Diablo almost daily, mule deer were not an uncommon sight. But they are a standoffish species, rarely letting me get to within 60+ feet before they would take off. This, of course, was especially true when there were three does and one fawn. In this instance, we have one doe, in all probability the mother to this juvenile, probably almost a yearling.

 

"Two forms of black-tailed deer or blacktail deer that occupy coastal woodlands in the Pacific Northwest of North America are subspecies of the mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus). They have sometimes been treated as a species, but virtually all recent authorities maintain they are subspecies.The Columbian black-tailed deer (O. h. columbianus) is found in western North America, from Northern California into the Pacific Northwest of the United States and coastal British Columbia in Canada."

Saffron Walden High Street is part of the B184 which is a long B-road in Essex. It is considerably longer than it was originally by having taken over a sizeable chunk of the A130 when that was downgraded following the building of the M11.

 

The B184 now starts at Stump Cross, also known as M11 J9A, just inside the Essex border with Cambridgeshire and the point where the A11 reappears after a considerable distance playing second fiddle to the M11. The B184 then heads roughly southeast along the ex-A130 into Saffron Walden, where it crosses the B1052, although the classified roads through the one-way system in the town centre could belong to either road!

 

Leaving Saffron Walden, the B184 continues across Essex countryside through Thaxted, where the B184 is definitely the dominant partner in a multiplex with the B1051, and to the edge of Great Dunmow.

 

The Cross Keys Hotel dates back some 650 years and is one of the most important buildings architecturally and commercially in the centre of Saffron Walden. This Grade II* listed building was fully restored and renovated in 2012, re-opened on the Diamond Jubilee weekend. Now offering 6 en suite bedrooms in the main period building plus 3 new luxury en suite boutique bedrooms in The Cobblers Barn.

 

The spire behind belongs to the parish church of Saint Mary the Virgin is the largest in Essex, with an overall length of 56 metres, whilst the height of the tower and spire is 59 metres.

 

The East Saxons who gave their name to Essex were pagan, but after St. Cedd led their conversion to Christianity in the 7th century there was in all probability a Saxon wooden church here, The massive Norman stone church that was known to exist in 1130 was rebuilt and enlarged in the early form of the ‘Decorated’ period between 1250 and 1258.

 

A general rebuilding in the ‘Perpendicular’ style was begun in about 1450 and the present church takes a high place, from an architectural point of view, among the parish churches of England. The spire, however, is more modern, for it was built, and the upper part of the tower was renewed, in 1832, to the design of Messrs. Rickman and Hutchinson.

 

www.sabre-roads.org.uk/wiki/index.php?title=B184

 

www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Hotel_Review-g315967-d3333453-Revie...

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Mary_the_Virgin,_Saffron_Walden#....

Length 64 to 90cm Lifespan: 5 to 10 years, in captivity they are known to reach 20 years plus (with good, healthy, food and living conditions).

The Pekin Duck is a domesticated Duck that was originally bred in China and is a descendant from the Mallard duck that was domesticated in China between 2000 to 3000 years ago.

The images of this bird were taken in the Clot de Galvany, on the edge of a large lake where many other species of wild ducks are feeding and breeding.

Probability that this particular bird has now been living in the wild for some-time (images taken 29.01.2021) and may cross breed with a mallard duck. My guess this P. Duck is a drake, as I would have thought being late January, it may have been pestered by other Mallard Drakes if it was female?

The Peking Duck is very similar in appearance to the Aylesbury duck, but the latter has more of a pastel pink beak, compared to the Peking’s beak, rich yellow/orange colour.

Pekin Ducks are dabbling ducks, which means that they take food from the water’s surface and edges of the water’s edge, they very rarely dive underwater to feed. They will also scavenge on land, for anything they can pick up. They apparently cannot fly, (this Pekin Duck was still dabbling when I left the hide, so cannot confirm this).

It is thought that Walt Disney modelled his cartoon “Donald Duck” on the Pekin ducks appearance.

Pekin Ducks make excellent pets, due to their unique personalities, but they are mainly bred specifically for meat and egg production. They have a strong immune system, giving them the ability to survive in extreme conditions. This durability helps breeders to raise more, in confined spaces, unfortunately not to the duck’s advantage, for its quality of life!

An orchid variety but in all probability pink dipped in blue

PlantNet's fruit-based qualifier produces three varieties - all three with probability within the margin of error.

 

Визначник PlantNet на основі плоду дає три різновиди – всі три з ймовірністю в межах похибки.

 

Platanus orientalis L. Платан восточный (28%)

Platanus occidentalis L. Платан западный (25%)

Platanus x hispanica Mill. ex. Munchh Платан кленолистный (23%)

 

Platanus (Sycamore) belongs to dioecious plants. Small flowers are collected in multi-headed inflorescences. Male flowers are painted yellow, collected in large spherical inflorescences, female flowers have a bright red color. The flowers bloom simultaneously with the leaves in late April - early May.

 

Платан відноситься до дводомних рослин. Дрібні квітки зібрані в багато головчасті суцвіття. Чоловічі квітки пофарбовані в жовтий колір, зібрані у великі суцвіття кулястої форми, жіночі квітки мають яскраво-червоне забарвлення. Квіти розпускаються одночасно з листям в кінці квітня — початку травня.

 

«Київська влада повідомила, що в столиці України стали висаджувати платан кленолистий — штучно виведений культурний вид, оскільки він найстійкіший до буревіїв і гарно росте в міських умовах.» /директор Департаменту захисту довкілля та адаптації до зміни клімату КМДА Олександр Возний./

 

"Зелений гай" - залишки дубового та соснового лісів (між вулицею Ореста Васкула (раніше Пушиною) та Берестейським проспектом (раніше Перемоги). Загальна площа невеликого парку – 2,8 га.

У 2021 році «Київзеленбуд» вздовж алеї, в тіні великих дерев, висадив 17 молодих платанів - дерев, які потребують сонця та вологи, Одне дерево вже загинуло, друге на черзі.

Kestrel - Falco tinnunculus (Juvenile)

 

Parent bringing in prey for Fledglings.

  

The common kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) is a bird of prey species belonging to the kestrel group of the falcon family Falconidae. It is also known as the European kestrel, Eurasian kestrel, or Old World kestrel. In Britain, where no other kestrel species occurs, it is generally just called "the kestrel".

 

This species occurs over a large range. It is widespread in Europe, Asia, and Africa, as well as occasionally reaching the east coast of North America.

 

Kestrels can hover in still air, even indoors in barns. Because they face towards any slight wind when hovering, the common kestrel is called a "windhover" in some areas.

 

Unusual for falcons, plumage often differs between male and female, although as is usual with monogamous raptors the female is slightly larger than the male. This allows a pair to fill different feeding niches over their home range. Kestrels are bold and have adapted well to human encroachment, nesting in buildings and hunting by major roads. Kestrels do not build their own nests, but use nests built by other species.

 

Their plumage is mainly light chestnut brown with blackish spots on the upperside and buff with narrow blackish streaks on the underside; the remiges are also blackish. Unlike most raptors, they display sexual colour dimorphism with the male having fewer black spots and streaks, as well as a blue-grey cap and tail. The tail is brown with black bars in females, and has a black tip with a narrow white rim in both sexes. All common kestrels have a prominent black malar stripe like their closest relatives.

 

The cere, feet, and a narrow ring around the eye are bright yellow; the toenails, bill and iris are dark. Juveniles look like adult females, but the underside streaks are wider; the yellow of their bare parts is paler. Hatchlings are covered in white down feathers, changing to a buff-grey second down coat before they grow their first true plumage.

 

Data from Britain shows nesting pairs bringing up about 2–3 chicks on average, though this includes a considerable rate of total brood failures; actually, few pairs that do manage to fledge offspring raise less than 3 or 4. Compared to their siblings, first-hatched chicks have greater survival and recruitment probability, thought to be due to the first-hatched chicks obtaining a higher body condition when in the nest. Population cycles of prey, particularly voles, have a considerable influence on breeding success. Most common kestrels die before they reach 2 years of age; mortality up until the first birthday may be as high as 70%. At least females generally breed at one year of age; possibly, some males take a year longer to maturity as they do in related species. The biological lifespan to death from senescence can be 16 years or more, however; one was recorded to have lived almost 24 years.

 

Population:

 

UK breeding:

 

46,000 pairs

I thought I was done for the day. I had spent an hour walking in a light rain, photographing the profusion of wildflowers produced by this wet spring, and also some time sitting in the rolling red Toyota blind, not far from a Burrowing Owl nest. Thought I was done. Uh-uh.

 

I started driving home. Two red spots in the tall grass and silver sagebrush caught my eye: pheasants! I stopped and backed the car up about 75 feet; this almost never works, but I try anyway. Just as I got them in focus, they erupted in a dispute, all flapping wings and slashing talons!

 

It didn't last long - about a minute. Finally one broke and ran, the other chasing, both dashing across the prairie like roadrunners.The Cornell site describes it well: "Competitors sometimes resort to physical combat. After a series of escalating threat displays, fighting cocks flutter upward, breast to breast, and bite at each other’s wattles. They may take turns leaping at each other with bill, claws, and spurs deployed. Usually the challenger runs away before long, and these fights are rarely fatal."

 

I didn't get as many useable frames as I would have liked; that grass was tall and they were only visible when they rose flapping into the air for a couple of seconds. Then they would disappear and I'd lose focus. But the misses are irrelevant if the hits are good!

 

In all probability this was a once-in-a-lifetime photo op!

 

Photographed in Grasslands National Park, Saskatchewan (Canada). Don't use this image on websites, blogs, or other media without explicit permission ©2024 James R. Page - all rights reserved.

Monday August the 8th 2022. 56096 has been declared a failure at Tollerton Junctions heading north with train 4Z75, empty boxes for track ballast loading at Redcar Ore Terminal which set out form Longport in Stoke at 1045 that morning. Already an hour late at York since developing problems between Ambergate and Clay Cross in Derbyshire, the train sat for over an hour and a half at Tollerton with help finally coming in the form of GBRf's 0N13, 15:43 Doncaster Decoy to Tees Dock light engine move in the form of Newall and Wright liveried 66747 'Made in Sheffield". The colourful combination here passes Raskelf heading north soon after getting underway 204 minutes late from Tollerton.

 

Arriving home from work and looking at the online freight schedules, I noticed that this train had not reported on RTT since passing Skelton Junction in York for some time. A look at the signal maps confirmed it that it was stationary at Tollerton. A scheduled light engine was making its way North and I figured it would in most probability be commandeered to remove this train from the running lines. After all, the nearest Colas loco with an available driver was be many hours away. So we went out and did not have long to wait. By chance a very nice rescue loco!

I spent a couple of hours down at the Petitcodiac River, yesterday, hoping to catch an eagle fishing. The probability of that happening was fairly high as the my friends tell me that the gaspereau are running. The best time to catch this sort of event is within a couple of hours of the tidal bore arriving, as the river is at its lowest during this time.

 

When I arrived, there was one black-backed sea gull there, and I watched it scoop up a couple of large fish. It was so full it couldn't fly. Unfortunately, I didn't capture any of this activity, as I was waiting for other bird life. Eventually, a great blue heron arrived and stayed on a patch of twigs on the soft muddy shore. It didn't take long for the heron to have enough of waiting with no food, before it decided to lift-off into flight, as captured in this photo.

 

This image is not cropped, with only slight exposure correction.

 

Taken along the Petitcodiac River, in Moncton, NB, Canada on 30 May 2017.

My wife Judy reckons the garden of our former farm cottage in Isham has never looked better, and I'm sure she's right. I must get out there tonight and water it.

 

The cottage, which is Grade II-listed, dates from 1668 and was in all probability the original farmhouse. The farmyard is immediately behind it, and the main barn would appear to be of a similar age, with small triangular-shaped holes beneath the roof to give access to the doves who still roost here. A much larger farmhouse was built about a hundred years later, and is effectively the building next door, with the entrance to the farm in between.

Duke's Place at night. Around the spot near the corner of the building on the left (the light reflecting on the square on the ground), is about the spot where Catherine Eddowes was seen with a man by the three men leaving the Jewish Imperial Club at 1:35am on September 30th 1888.

 

This corner was once known as Church Passage & it was a much narrower passage that led into Mitre Square.

 

Eddowes was found viciously murdered in the south west corner of Mitre Square by PC Edward Watkins at 1:45am.

 

At 1:40am, PC James Harvey entered Mitre Square through Church Passage, but stopped at the edge of the square. He saw nothing unusual, but his lantern would not have given him enough light to see the square completely.

 

I think it is probable that the Ripper was hiding in that dark corner when PC Harvey entered.

 

There has been more nonsense lately about some shawl that had DNA on it. Even without this claim, the shawl can be written off as bogus.

 

It was Mitochondrial DNA, which is only a match for a certain percentage group of the population. Its not a conclusive match.

 

The provenance of the shawl itself is nonsense. It was allegedly found by PC Amos Simpson who took it home as a gift for his wife before it could be cataloged.

 

With the times of witnesses I've written above, it makes it even more beyond probability for a third police officer to some how discover the scene before Watkins, & not only not catch the Ripper in the act, but instead decides to desecrate the scene & takes a piece of evidence home.

 

The Ripper inflicted a lot of damage to poor Eddowes. If Simpson some how stumbled upon the scene, there is no way he wouldn't have been caught.

 

PC Simpson was also with the Metropolitan Police. Mitre Square is in the jurisdiction of the City of London Police. He was not anywhere near the scene of the crime.

 

The City of London Police were pretty thorough in cataloging & recording the scene. If Eddowes had a shawl they would have cataloged it. This story about Simpson is drivel that only started with descendants.

 

Nikon F4. Nikkor 50mm F1.2 lens. Mr. Negative Bat Country 400T 35mm ECN2 film.

The sculpture is intended to remind...

 

That both human beings and molecules exist in a world of probability and that the goal of all creative and intellectual traditions is to find wholeness and unity within the world.

 

Jonathan Borofsky

  

**The Molecule Man is a Berlin monumental work of art created in May 1999 by the American sculptor Jonathan Borofsky . It is a three-person sculpture that was set up in the Spree between Elsenbrücke and Oberbaumbrücke near the intersection of the three districts of Kreuzberg , Alt-Treptow and Friedrichshain .

  

© All rights reserved Anna Kwa. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission

Often times, there is a somewhat low probability that we'll be in the right place at the right time. One of the things I've learned over the years is that increasing the probability of chance events drastically improves successful events. One of the key skills I've developed over the years is reading and predicting weather. Now, I still have what I consider to be a rudimentary skill in this department, however, events like these, where I drive three hours in the dark to get to a place I've never seen because the weather patterns look favorable for the morning seem to indicate I'm getting better at it, slowly but surely. Or maybe I just got lucky again, who knows. Shortly after this moment it started dumping snow as it's about 10 degrees F at the time of this shot.

 

As a side note - I have a few landscape calendars left for 2021. Really just a few. Message me if you'd like to purchase one - or you can find the posting on Etsy.

FR:

 

Invitée surprise sur la Transversale sud cet été, la BB 26001 unique exemplaire de la série encore en livrée "En voyage" (bien qu'un peu crade) s'est vue le loisir d'assurer pendant quelques petites semaines les IC entre Bordeaux et Marseille. Ce ne sera pas pour déplaire aux photographes du sud, bien heureux qu'elle change un peu de ses trains habituels.

 

Si elle était quasiment présente tous les jours, les pannes, la météo, ma disponibilité et la probabilité qu'elle assure la traction d'un train correctement photographiable la rendait quelque peu infaisable pour moi.

 

Mon but ultime était de la photographier avec l'étang de Berre dans le cadre. Pour se faire, les choix n'étaient pas multiples, c'était les IC 4764 de 16h et 4766 (idéalement) de 18h.

Début juillet l'occasion est enfin là pour aller la photographier. Malheureusement elle assure la traction du 4764 qui est un peu tôt et avec une lumière encore un peu dure. Qu'importe, j'y vais ! J'aurais bien fait car cela sera ma seule et unique photo de son séjour dans le sud, elle repartira quelques jours plus tard reprendre ses trains habituels.

 

Sur fond d'étang de Berre, la BB 26001 est photographiée du côté de Saint-Chamas alors qu'elle est en charge de l'IC 4764 entre Marseille et Bordeaux qu'elle atteindra 6h plus tard.

  

EN:

 

Surprise guest in the south of France this summer, the BB 26001, the only one of the series still in "En voyage" livery (although a little dirty) was given the opportunity to provide for a few short weeks the intercity trains between Bordeaux and Marseille. This will not displease photographers from the south, who are very happy that it changes a little from their usual routines.

 

If the locomotive was present almost every day, the breakdowns, the weather, my availability and the probability that the locomotive would will be on a properly photographable train made it somewhat infeasible for me.

 

My ultimate goal was to photograph it with the Etang de Berre in the picture. To do so, there were not many choices, it was IC 4764 at 4 p.m. and 4766 (ideally) at 6 p.m.

 

At the beginning of july the opportunity is finally here to go and photograph it. Unfortunately, the loco is on the IC 4764 which is a little early and the sunlight is still a little hard. Whatever, I'm going! I would have done well because this will be my one and only photo of her stay in the south, she will leave a few days later to take her usual trains.

 

With the background of the étang de Berre , BB 26001 is photographed near Saint-Chamas whilst working on the IC 4764 between Marseille and Bordeaux which it will reach 6 hours later.

 

Although the dominant male in the area surrounding the marsh on the Mara river I fear he is close to his sell by date and has in all probability passed on.

The lion is a large cat of the genus Panthera native to Africa and India. It has a muscular, deep-chested body, short, rounded head, round ears, and a hairy tuft at the end of its tail. It is sexually dimorphic; adult male lions are larger than females and have a prominent mane

39L$/ 1play ("39" = "thank you" in japanese )

product come out same probability

mod ok.

muffler is non rig

sketch book can texture change.(pen3 & book3)

 

沖縄イベのモアさんの突発イベ スターーット!

 

スケッチブックは、あなたの優しいタッチでブックとペンが3チェンジできて分解可能になってます。

Tちゃんによるへっぽこイラストあり。

確率全部一緒なので おみくじとしてよかったらどうぞ~:0

全部編集可能~

 

使用フォント

作  者 : 尚治みきゆ(ショウジミキユ)

サイト名 : 「素材屋405番地」

U R L : sozaiya405.chu.jp/405/

 

place↓

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Pals%20meadow%20Clover/80/...

=THEME=

Christmas, Party, Winter and Funny item(lol)

=SHOP LIST=

***Ambrosia***

andika poses

*Cila*

[Cloud]

!cream spaghetti hair!

DAMI

.EMBW.

embryo

Geist

-IrodorI- and ***En***

Kedama

[KiiKO]

着物屋 恋文〜kokorotayori〜

Le muguet

Luv:Ya

poche

MGSIT STORE

mikunch

MINDS STORE

[MONKEYGirl]

{MUA}

NINI:3

.Nomore.

*RibboN*

+Sixth+

Solita

++Twilight++

violetta

yzk kumapose yuzuya

Xana's

Macro Mondays 13/02/17 theme Hearts.

For this theme I chose a humble cockle as I love the heart shaped shell they form but it took over three hours of scouring a beach to find one that had both halves.For the shot I stuck the shell to a sheet of glass and backlit it with two candles and some tin foil and used the flash off the camera to light the shell.

I was interested in the phrase "Warm the Cockles of Your Heart" and found this info on it from www.innovateus.net/innopedia/what-does-warm-cockles-your-...

 

The origin of the word cockles is not very clear. The earliest reference to the idiom appeared some time in the seventeenth century. Cockles are a kind of bivalve mollusk, which are generally heart-shaped and have ribbed shells. Cockles formed an essential part of the food for the British during the early times. In all probability the cockleshell which resembled the shape of the heart may have resulted in the expression-“cockles of the heart”.

  

Another explanation to the origin of the idiom “Warm the Cockles of Your Heart” can be attributed to its Latin roots. The ventricles of the heart are often called cochleae cordis in Latin with the word cordis originating from the Latin cor, meaning heart.

  

The word cockle also refers to a chamber in a kiln. So in the idiom “Warm the Cockles of Your Heart”, it may be referring to the four chambers of the heart (two ventricles and two atria). The cockle or chambers of a kiln are generally supposed to be cold and they need to be ignited to function properly. In a similar fashion, that a pleasant incident or experience ignites and warms the cockles of your heart.

  

The heart is generally associated with strong emotions of love fear or excitement, and when one experiences such emotion he can literally hear his heart thumping faster. When a thing “Warms the Cockles of Your Heart”, it refers to something good or delightful that makes your heart beat fast and makes you happy.

  

Another theory to the usage of the idiom “Warm the Cockles of Your Heart” may be due to the word cockle having close association to the French word coquille which means shell. So in all probability the comparison of the human heart with its shell-shaped chambers must have been natural. This is an offshoot of the fashionable practice of adopting foreign words in a language.

  

So the word cockles used in the idiom “Warm the Cockles of Your Heart” may be more in a metaphorical sense as there is no medical evidence to label the cockles of the heart. But it is sufficient to remember that anything pleasant and nostalgic is enough fill you with delight and Warm the Cockles of Your Heart”

  

This week Macro Mondays theme is 'Macro Textures'.

Flickr Photowalk have joined in the fun this week.

It rained incessantly on Sunday, making little waterdrop jewels on this Lupin leaf.

@ 22º59'16'' S, 43º11'43" W

 

⭐️Explored on June 24, 2020

 

When planing this sunrise the night before, a friend and I decided to take the risk of photographing a morning that showed good potential but also a strong probability of delivering a very over casted (and gray) sunrise. We pretty much had that right until a very, very short window of luck allowed me to take this shot. Hope you enjoy it! :-)

  

↳ Let's stay connected! Facebook | Instagram | Flickr | 500px

 

If you liked this shot please ✓Fav and/or ✓Comment.

 

If you want to buy this image, please contact me on rafabahiense@gmail.com.

A bird that due to their numerous number we take for granted. When I see a bird flitting around in my garden there is a high probability that it will be a Blue Tit. This particular one was photographed nearby at Old Moor.

Washington series: Mount Rainier

 

🇺🇸 With a summit elevation of 4.394 m Mount Rainier is the highest mountain in the U.S. state of Washington and the Cascade Range. Due to its high probability of an eruption in the (relative) near future, Mount Rainier is considered one of the most dangerous volcanoes in the world. Late May many parts of the national park are still closed due to snow, the lakes are still frozen and spring has not really arrived.

 

🇩🇪 Mit einer Höhe von 4394 m ist Mount Rainier der höchste Berg in Washington und der Kaskadenkette. Ein Ausbruch in (relativ) naher Zukunft wird erwartet und macht Mt. Rainier zu einem der aktuell gefährlichsten Vulkane. Ende Mai sind große Teile des Nationalparks noch immer wegen Schneemassen gesperrt, die Seen sind immer noch zugefroren und der Frühling lässt noch auf sich warten.

Lowestoft Suffolk

 

Bingo is a game of probability in which players mark off numbers on cards as the numbers are drawn randomly by a caller, the winner being the first person to mark off all their numbers.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bingo_(United_Kingdom)

Ponte Vecchio, Florence, Italy

 

With lockdown restrictions tighter than ever, I suspect many of us togs have been forced to dredge through our archives for lost gems or even rework a few old favourites.

 

I was chatting with Mark Waidson the other day on our WhatsApp group discussing the very subject. Our last big outing was February 2020… a week’s togging in the Isle of Skye. Although we all have plenty of images from there it’s been a sense of déjà vu for us with the high probability of us posting similar images for the same location from the same day, hence the archive dipping of late.

 

All this brings me to my posting… yes, I’ve posted this before, but I’ve reworked it now I know more about Photoshop and the Nik Collection. However, this is special to me on many fronts. Firstly, I just love a good bridge (it’s the engineer in me) and it’s been on my bridge bucket list for decades. Secondly, the year this was taken was my first year on Flickr and my first year with a decent SLR camera (no comments from you Nikon togs… you know who you are!). But more importantly, it’s given me the chance to meet people through photography and Flickr. I mention Mark’s name as he was one of the first togs I followed and it just so happened he was going to Florence the week before myself and Mrs R. Hence much swapping of plans and locations. It’s fair to say we might have very similar images in our streams.

 

So, here I am in my 7th year on Flickr… it’s had its ups and downs, as had all of us photography wise. But as long as Flickr stays afloat, I intend to stick with it and continue the journey with so many good friends and togs. Meetups are just around the corner and hopefully a biggie get together somewhere.

 

If this isn't enough just consider the mathematical probability of this consist!

 

The powers that be put together a special one day only consist for an ID run out of Two Harbors. Engineer James Schultz made a damn near record setting run up to and out of Minntac after going on duty at 0700. Near 3pm here he comes running U791 southward into Biwabik with the head end entering the former D&IR Western Mesaba branch and the tail end still visible on the former DM&N Biwabik branch.

 

He said it was the greatest day of his career.

Canon R5

Canon RF 24-70mm F / 2.8L IS USM

Lee Soft GND 0.9

Lee Square Circular Polarizer

 

Yeh, I know I know. I am back after a long time. Busy life doesn't make things easier. But this is an image I wanted to make for many years. Somehow never got the right conditions. In fact this time also the condition was not the best. I wanted to have a bit more snow on the mountains. So the hunt probably continues.

 

With the earth warming up in rapid speed; a perfect shot with more snow will become more and more difficult. Because the snow will not stay on the ground for long. So one need to plan this shot just after a heavy snowfall. But that minimizes the probability of getting a good sky. However it also keeps the challenge and excuse to go back to this beautiful village some more time. :)

 

I knew about the exact location for many years. But this time when I reached there; to my surprise I saw a temporary safety barrier next to the road. Large enough to cover the view. Surely done for good intention as this road becomes a ski route in winter and this place has an open fall on a turn. And probably it is not that safe in winter to stand there with camera on tripod either. Skiers will not see you next to the turn and can hit you and the camera and in the process all three can get damaged.

 

But I needed to take the image. So I just went up the hill next to it. Luckily there was no snow at that part as it wouldn't have been possible to go up if there was snow. It was too steep to go up with loose snow. We used the age old Himalayan technique to stand on the base of the grass to get grip on a steep hill. As always I was there 30 minutes in advance. So had plenty of time to set up everything. Was really lucky with a lovely sky.

 

I still wish I had a bit more snow. But maybe next time. Till them; I will stay happy with this one as a prize for that evening.

 

A special thanks to my son for accompany me there. We spend the time waiting for the sunset playing chees. So the time passed quickly. He also enjoyed the little adventure and gathered the experience that is so important to have while going off route on the mountain.

 

If you are interested on the natural beauty of the location, I did make a little video that might interest you here.

 

Please have a look at my website www.avisekhphotography.com for all my recent works.

 

Have a nice weekend.

 

Hope you will enjoy the picture.

 

Any suggestions or criticisms are always welcome.

FEC train #206 at Stuart with an SD trailing in the consist. This is my third trip to the area this year, and I have the ETA's of 101 and 206 timed out pretty well that I just show up when I expect them to pass, and if the drawbridge stays down after the NB and SB Brightline trains pass, then there's a high probability that they are close.

 

And now the backstory. I'm in Florida for 6 days in the middle of the summer heat and humidity as one of the parental units is in the hospital, which happens to be the white building visible above the radiators of the second unit. I was able to get away a couple of times to get a few images on my IPhone as I decided bringing the big gear would be in poor taste. I was fortunate to return home a day before the airlines melted down last Thursday, and Delta Airlines has still yet to recover.

   

not a flying carpet to set you free from probability :-) Robertson Davies

HGGT!!

 

I will be offline through the weekend, take care friends, ira :-)

 

mock orange, 'Innocence', j c raulston arboretum, ncsu, raleigh, north carolina

Sparrowhawk - Accipiter Nisus

  

Though it is a predator which specialises in catching woodland birds, the Eurasian sparrowhawk can be found in any habitat and often hunts garden birds in towns and cities. Males tend to take smaller birds, including tits, finches, and sparrows; females catch primarily thrushes and starlings, but are capable of killing birds weighing 500 g (18 oz) or more.

 

The Eurasian sparrowhawk is found throughout the temperate and subtropical parts of the Old World; while birds from the northern parts of the range migrate south for winter, their southern counterparts remain resident or make dispersive movements. Eurasian sparrowhawks breed in suitable woodland of any type, with the nest, measuring up to 60 cm (2.0 ft) across, built using twigs in a tree. Four or five pale blue, brown-spotted eggs are laid; the success of the breeding attempt is dependent on the female maintaining a high weight while the male brings her food. The chicks hatch after 33 days and fledge after 24 to 28 days.

 

The probability of a juvenile surviving its first year is 34%, with 69% of adults surviving from one year to the next. Mortality in young males is greater than that of young females and the typical lifespan is four years. This species is now one of the most common birds of prey in Europe, although the population crashed after the Second World War. Organochlorine insecticides used to treat seeds before sowing built up in the bird population, and the concentrations in Eurasian sparrowhawks were enough to kill some outright and incapacitate others; affected birds laid eggs with fragile shells which broke during incubation. However, its population recovered after the chemicals were banned, and it is now relatively common, classified as being of Least Concern by BirdLife International.

 

The Eurasian sparrowhawk's hunting behaviour has brought it into conflict with humans for hundreds of years, particularly racing pigeon owners and people rearing poultry and gamebirds. It has also been blamed for decreases in passerine populations. The increase in population of the Eurasian Sparrowhawk coincides with the decline in House Sparrows in Britain. Studies of racing pigeon deaths found that Eurasian sparrowhawks were responsible for less than 1%. Falconers have utilised the Eurasian sparrowhawk since at least the 16th century; although the species has a reputation for being difficult to train, it is also praised for its courage. The species features in Teutonic mythology and is mentioned in works by writers including William Shakespeare, Alfred, Lord Tennyson and Ted Hughes.

 

Male Eurasian sparrowhawks regularly kill birds weighing up to 40 g (1.4 oz) and sometimes up to 120 g (4.2 oz); females can tackle prey up to 500 g (18 oz) or more. The weight of food consumed by adult birds daily is estimated to be 40–50 g (1.4–1.8 oz) for males and 50–70 g (1.8–2.5 oz) for females. During one year, a pair of Eurasian sparrowhawks could take 2,200 house sparrows, 600 common blackbirds or 110 wood pigeons. Species that feed in the open, far from cover, or are conspicuous by their behaviour or coloration, are taken more often by Eurasian sparrowhawks. For example, great tits and house sparrows are vulnerable to attack. Eurasian sparrowhawks may account for more than 50% of deaths in certain species, but the extent varies from area to area.

 

Males tend to take tits, finches, sparrows and buntings; females often take thrushes and starlings. Larger quarry (such as doves and magpies) may not die immediately but succumb during feather plucking and eating. More than 120 bird species have been recorded as prey and individual Eurasian sparrowhawks may specialise in certain prey. The birds taken are usually adults or fledglings, though chicks in the nest and carrion are sometimes eaten. Small mammals, including bats, are sometimes caught but insects are eaten only very rarely.

  

The upper reaches of the Cache La Poudre River gather steam and round a bend near the junction with Hague Creek on the north side of Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado.

 

My youngest son and I went for an impromptu backpacking trip for one night with a neighbor and his three kids. Although this location is not far from home as the crow flies, the nature of the roads makes it almost a 3 h drive to get to the trailhead from Boulder. My neighbor's youngest is only 4 so we opted for a relatively modest 1+ mile walk in to set up camp.

 

Once we arrived in camp, the afternoon and early evening thunderstorms commenced, ensuring that we were in no danger of overheating. In addition to hauling most all of the gear and food for himself and his progeny, my neighbor also produced a small box of red wine to accompany the pasta. His pack was truly mountainous. Although the mosquitoes were numerous, the sunset was splendid and time in the mountains with the kiddo is hard to pass up.

 

Technical notes: Camera steadied on top of knees while seated, deep breathing, click shutter, then repeat and hope statistical probabilities add up to at least one passable photo...

I remember many years ago just how easy it was to take the family to Disney World (Never again!!!) in Orlando. Twenty minutes with a travel agent selecting a package and we were set. We have spent more time at a drive-thru menu board trying to decide what was for lunch…it was a cookie cutter process that worked out perfectly. Our time planning our trip to England, Scotland and Ireland was the polar opposite of that trip. At times it was so overwhelming that analysis paralysis took over and it had to be simply set aside. This trip wasn’t by design about wildlife and my need to capture it, however the grace extended by our troop members left a lot of flexibility for such a pursuit. We all truly enjoy nature and being engulfed in it; I am the only one of the four who has elevated the need into a sickness.

 

For months I reached out to fellow wildlife photographers through Flickr requesting assistance in finding a short list of species…much like a list a child would submit for Santa. Top of the list was the barn owl with the red stag in a close second. If I could get a clean shot of these two…heaven on earth would be achieved. Also on the list was the badger, pine martin, fox any raptor. I studied others photos, google searched for countless hours the habitats, population density numbers, elevations found in October, migrations…dozens of pages of notes were made and memorized. When it was all said and done one region stood out as THE region of out travel plan to have the highest probability of capturing the most listed. It was while staying in Inverness Scotland and the largest National Park in the UK, just 20 or so miles away from our hotel.

 

The older I get, the more I understand the importance of not getting everything I desire. Having an unfulfilled quest is the best fuel for future adventure, and a very good reason to get out of bed one more day. As life would have it, I arrived in Inverness with the flu…spending a day and a half in bed with the rest of the time feeling very weak. The thought of a zero-dark thirty departure to the forest in search of critters was trumped every morning by my need for rest, coffee and the hotels breakfast to settle my stomach. To say I was disappointed was an understatement as much of our trip was financed with money saved for three years to photograph jaguars in Brazil…taken away by covid. Departing Inverness and heading to Isle of Skye, my prayer was for other opportunities. A prayer that would be answered in the next 48 hours.

 

While making the three-hour drive from Inverness to Portree, we decided to stop by a small coffee shop for a break. While walking out the door I spoke with the young lady behind the counter…you guessed it…about wildlife. She was clearly not into wildlife but did mention how she sees red deer on occasion and hears the male’s calls (called a bugle) all the time. Since we were visiting during the rut, her words brought hope to a heart that was still coughing a bit.

 

It was at some point during our time in Isle of Skye that Cheryl spoke up and suggested departing one day early and heading back to the hotel across from the coffee shop to see if we could spot some red deer. Internally, I was jumping in the air, waiving my arms in a Steve Urkel style manner. Outwardly, I’m not sure how I looked based on my well-known inability to contain emotion. All four agreed and reservations were secured at The Cluanie Inn (Highest recommendations) for the following evening. I believe this discission provided me with a dose of PMA (Positive Mental Attitude) that allowed my body to finally defeat the flu!

 

It was later in the afternoon when we arrived at the inn. During check in the owner informed us that some of the red deer hinds (The doe in the US) will come in behind the inn and will take food from guests. She went on to say that the area is flooded with deer. After an early dinner we went to our rooms to relax. My plan, to be out there early in the morning…thinking that I had already lost the light for that day. I was sitting on the bed cleaning my cameras to ready for the morning when Joann went to the window and said “I can’t believe you are not out there now!” She was right as it was more overcast than dark, I would have a little bit of time to walk up towards the mountains across the street before dark.

 

I wasn’t 200 yards off the highway when I spotted the rump of a red deer grazing behind a large clump of stickers. I had not been noticed so I quickly moved to place a 15–20-foot grass covered mound between us. As I slowly crept up the mound, my internal prayer was for it to please be a stag…please be a stag! Once on top of mound, sucking air in breathless anticipation, not exertion. I sat for a second out of its view to check my camera settings in the ever-changing light…not even knowing I it was still there. I lifted my camera to focus on the rump and snapped off one shot. The reaction of that one small little flip of my shutter sent her head high in the air. I was so disappointed that it was not the stag while being thrilled to have at least seen a red deer, a new species, and she was beautiful!

Little did I know that she would be one of a harem of thirteen being pushed by a trophy male…a male that would grace me by his presence and provide a once it a lifetime photographic opportunity.

 

I will post his photo soon!

 

It's thought that the huge wave crests here are more a result of water being forced into a small area, more than rocks on the river bed. There is a good probability that the river bottom is mostly rock free, due to the erosive quality of the fast rushing water.

"SRENGGENGE (Javanese language) MATAHARI (Indonesian language, Mata=eye, Hari=day: becomes Day Eye or SUN in the English sentence. This describes the sun or life in 2022. A picture of 4 human characters (on the island of Java known as Punakawan,Javanese shadow puppet) symbolizes the four characters of the human form around the world who are never afraid to face all the trials in the world, with full enthusiasm, a giant image as a symbol of disasters that come and go like power from the world of darkness and we will always be calm in dealing with them." rant January 06.2022

 

-----------------------------------------------------

NEW YEARr, NEW YEARNING

A new year bestows hope

Promises new pages

Sliding on a salient slope

Where the wise earn deserved wages.

 

A new year erases mad memories

Folks would rather forget

As they pen in their dainty diaries

‘Don't entertain in the new year a regret secret.'

 

A new year opens vistas

Teeming with profound possibilities

For folks to metamorphose into stars

Provided they make good the propulsion probabilities.

 

A new year affords a chance

To grace, bless and to assess

The right wrong balance

In an effort to forestall any further stress.

 

A new year swings into action

An opportunity to recast lives

Into the right direction devoid of malefaction

As the dawn of hope arrives and thrives.

 

A new year whips sorrow

Into submission and humiliation

So long as society seizes tomorrow

To spread affection, benediction, restoration and cooperation.

 

by John Sensele Thursday, December 28, 2017

The Church of Saint Lawrence in Prague is a church of the Old Catholic Church of the Czech Republic. It is located on Petřín hill, next to Petřín Lookout Tower and the Hunger Wall.

 

Located on the site of a Romanesque church dating back to the 10th century, this Baroque church was restored in the mid-1700s. This restoration project has formed the basis of the church that can be seen today and was designed in all probability by Kilian Ignaz Dienzenhofer and built by Ignazio Palliardi and his nephew of the same name. The dominant features of the church are undoubtedly the three towers, with the side towers standing at 24.5 meters and the central tower measuring 22.7 meters high.

 

There are several different sights within the church that people from around the region regularly come to see, such as the sculpture. of St. Lawrence by J. Lederer and the altarpiece, which is painted by J.C. Monnoto and shows the Martyrdom of St. Lawrence. Although closed between 1784 and 1840, the church has been re-consecrated since the middle of the 1800s.

 

Since 1994 the church has been leased to the Old Catholic Church, and in 1995 it was raised to the position of the cathedral.

This planet seems good. One species seem to be so populous they have infiltrated every continent. They do have some rudimentary language skills but their mathematic ability is so basic they would never be considered an intelligent species. Atmosphere is very similar to ours with minimal terra and bioforming needed making it cheap to colonize.

 

The fingers quickly tapped the device sending a communication to corporate headquarters that they could apply to the commission to colonize earth with a high degree of probability of being approved.

 

Within a decade the ships started arriving. Humans objected to being colonized and threw every nuclear weapon they could scrap up. The colonizers retreated back to orbit, baffled by a species intelligent enough to create a bomb that could destroy the atmosphere and stupid enough to deploy it. The colonizers requested equipment to cleanse the atmosphere which was an extra expense. By the time they received approval and the equipment, all life forms on earth were dead except for cockroaches.

 

The colony shipped in fauna and flora from their original planet. It was much better really. Normally it was very difficult to get permission to make a planet exactly like home. There were groups that fought for planetary diversity but really it wasn't the colonizers' fault the original species killed themselves and almost everything else.

 

No one was happy about the cockroaches tho. Not even the groups for planetary diversity as cockroaches spread quickly across the galaxies once a few managed to get aboard ships. Major funding was approved to eradicate them. Nothing worked. The cockroaches kept surviving and coming back. Very irritating.

 

-------------------------

 

Since SL is a community effort with lots of people making things, like a movie, here is the credit roll of everyone who helped make this picture possible

 

Windlight Sky:

Naturally Dreamy Summer from ColeMarie's Windlight Set (Series #1) by ColeMari Soleil

 

Backdrop:

Data Spaceship Backdrop by Synnergy.Tavis

 

Handheld object with pose:

Data Reader Bento Pose by Synnergy.Tavis

 

Myself:

Catsuit ZX-3 Maitreya White by CyberFactory

 

Hair: River Hair by Raven Bell

13. Bangs / Swept Right Narrow by TRUTH

Simrugh Horns Winter Special Edition by AERTH

Wrist/hands tattoo: Winter Touch, hands by +Fallen Gods Inc.

Lipstick: Evo X - 01 Silver Glitter Lipstick 75% by Izzie's

Eyelashes tinted turquoise through Lel Evox hud for Noel 3.1 by LeLUTKA

Face: Frozen (LeL Evo X) - Porcelain by Bold & Beauty

Skin: Icy by Velour

Head lel Evox Noel 3.1 by LeLUTKA

Body: Lara v.5.3 by Maitreya

Shape: Tessa Shape Vv by WoW Skins with modifications by myself

 

Note: I added texture and the aqua lighting on the right through Photoshop. For the texture, I used NightCafe to create an image with two planets on one layer and then used the SoftLight filter in PS at 40% opacity. The aqua lighting I brushed two circles of aqua, then Guassian Filter to spread them out, then Vivid Light filters at differing opacity for each circle.

 

This is my original raw picture from SL

 

gyazo.com/341542732d38cebe1662b948fae752ac

  

Microseconds of life remaining...

 

Although there's perhaps an element of "Wow! in pics like this for folks not used to shooting bird photographs, it's maybe only truthfully moral to admit to how such are completely unscripted and the result only of statistical probability. That being, that if you shoot enough very closely-coupled high speed shots of aerial insect-feeders, then a certain proportion of those MIGHT show something like what this one does. No kudos to the shooter except for sticking with these frustrating targets..

New Challenge! The Hypo Music Festival!

www.flickr.com/groups/1179479@N25/discuss/721576663667027...

 

Challenge #42 - Blue Skies - The Blind Pig Speakeasy - March 15 to April 14

www.flickr.com/groups/challenges_community_group/discuss/...

 

________________________________________________

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=z92bmlcmyq0

 

A shot of a bird on top of a cross, on a church in the town,with some lightning+rain enhancement.After we dropped my daughter and her bestie off at the pizza place to meet with some of their friends,we passed a certain church,and as i saw the bird sitting on the neon cross in the twilight,i said to my husband:"Stop!! i have to capture this!" Was hoping like mad that the bird would just stay put for a minute or two,and luckily it did:-)

   

♥High RARE probability♥

2018/9/26

♪ SaNaRae Event 2018.9.26 open

♪ 6 COMMON Catwa eyes/Mesh eyes

♪ 3 COMMON lipstick

♪ 1 COMMON star ribbons freckles

♪ 3 RARE

3 catwa eyes/mesh eyes + all eyes

1 milk skin

1 milk&honey skin

♪ All are 100% Original Maitreya HUD/Catwa eyes/Mesh eyes/Catwa head/ Omega HUD

 

♪♪SaNaRae Event Link♪♪

♪♪Main store♪♪

 

Celebrate 3rd Anniversary♥♥♥

Two kinds of shape will be sold next to Gacha.

left is kuriko shape // right is kudori shape

Sikora

Very happy to make a gacha with Sikora.

very cute Skin made by sikora :D plz follow her♥

A common woods bird that resembles its relative the Black-capped Chickadee. The two are often confused. They have different ranges, but where ranges overlap, they may hybridize. Know the chickadee ranges and you can predict the species that live there with a high probability.

 

John James Audubon named this species on a trip to the Carolinas. Conservation status is Least Concern.

 

Our beautiful world, pass it on.

#AbFav_LOVE_❤

 

MESMERISING aren't they? OP-HEARTS or POP-HEARTS? LOL? Best not 'jiggle' it about!

 

If you and your mate master these values, your love will, in all probability, last a lifetime.

 

1. The couple in love is committed to always putting each other first in their relationship with each other.

 

2. The couple in love is committed to democracy in their relationship.

 

3. The couple in love is committed to ensuring their mutual happiness.

 

4. The couple in love values absolute trustworthiness and integrity in their relationship with each other.

 

5. The couple in love is committed to caring and unconditional love for each other.

 

6. The couple in love is committed to being mutually respectful towards each other.

 

7. The couple in love values their mutual sense of responsibility for each other.

 

A special day, but don't forget, Valentine... love not just ONE day... but 365?

  

Have a day filled with love, M, (*_*)

 

For more: www.indigo2photography.com

IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

 

Valentine, KITCHEN-GADGETS, red, prickers, utensils, kitchen, tools, wood, studio, hearts, colour, square, "Nikon D7000", black-background, "magda indigo"

It's the wet season here just now and we hardly ever have a clear sky at night. The not quite full moon showed it's face last night so I took a shot encase it can't be seen on the 14th. The probability is 'not' with a forecast of full cloud cover.

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