View allAll Photos Tagged Pulsating

... this was still a town that existed in black and white and pulsated to the great tunes of George Gershwin

 

Poem.

 

A silhouetted, rapier-like peninsula piercing the radiant splendour of a pewter-grey sea.

Domed islands capped by the heavenly spokes of a setting-sun.

Timeless beauty.

Silence, but for the distant scream of a gull and the gentle, pulsating whistle of an oyster-catcher.

Sky, rock, sand, light and sea uniquely combine

to produce a glimpse inside heaven’s door.

Don’t yearn for heaven.

Look around.

It’s already here!

 

" Your love ignites me, shining brighter than a thousand suns. ☀️💖 "

 

Saphira & Zeboran 💕

 

ღ.-:**★**:-.ღ.-:**★**:-.ღ.-:**★**:-.ღ

 

. . . Infinite Flames . . .

 

Within his embrace, the storm's fury fades, replaced by the sunlit warmth of his heart, a celestial fire brighter than a thousand stars. He holds me, not just with arms but with a love that rewrites destiny, whispering secrets in the velvet shadows where our souls, forever entwined, defy fate's fragile strings.

 

Our universe, a constellation swirling in the curve of his touch, burns with a passion that consumes like an eternal pyre, two flames merging, brighter than a thousand suns, dancing forever in the starlight of each other's eyes and pulsating in love, hearts pounding.

 

ღ.-:**★**:-.ღ.-:**★**:-.ღ.-:**★**:-.ღ

 

Full Version

www.flickr.com/photos/161478161@N05/53447600352

Variable stars are stars that change brightness. The brightness changes of these stars can range from a thousandth of a magnitude over periods of a fraction of a second to years, depending on the type of variable star. Over 30000 variable stars are known and catalogued, and many thousands more are suspected to be variable. There are a number of reasons why variable stars change their brightness. Pulsating variables, for example, swell and shrink due to internal forces. While an eclipsing binary will dim when it is eclipsed by a faint companion; and then brightens when the occulting star moves out of the way.

 

Variable stars fascinate me since ever. I am used to say, because I am variable too.

Anyway, thanks to old and new friends for those thirty thousand clicks on my pictorial atlas.

 

That's my bino (a Canon 10x30 IS, excellent baby), and that's one of my books.

Facebook Fan Page | Twitter | Formspring | My Blog | Getty | Tumblr

 

Boracay is a tropical island about an hour's flight from Manila in the Philippines. Its long white sand beaches rival the best beaches of more popular destinations such as the Caribbean, the South Pacific as well as neighbouring Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.

 

Facilities are available to suit different levels of activity. For those wanting to just lounge around and take in some rays, beach-front hotels usually have lounge chairs set up just a few steps away from the hotel entrances.

 

Facilities for the usual water sports activities such as sailing, wind surfing, snorkeling, diving and jet skiing are also widely available for those in search of more active pursuits. The fun in Boracay also doesn't end when the sun sets. Boracay nightlife is pulsating with many bars and restaurants serving food, drink and fun until the very late evening.

 

Explored Front Page: Highest Position: 78

The Roman Forum even in its ruins is an impressive site. It takes you back in time to some 2000 to 2500 years & in spite of the shambled rubble, it gives you an inkling how the center of Rome would have pulsated with life then. It was the main piazza where people would meet to do business, sell and buy things and visit with friends. Many of the oldest and most important structures of the ancient city were located on or near the Forum. The massive pillars of the Temple of Saturn, the column of Phocas, the famous Julius Caesar's palace & the temples of Castor & Pollux are the major remaining structures in the Roman Forum.

 

The fact that this glorious Roman Forum remained buried & forgotten & was only fully excavated & brought to the current state at the beginning of the 20th century, tells us how time is the supreme game changer. A glorious past lies in bits & pieces here & makes you wonder how the world would be in another 2000 years from now.

I should just, not write any description on this and see if anyone can figure out what the Hell it is…

 

Alright… Last week, one afternoon I was driving down old Rt 66 and spotted this bridge and thought it might make a cool dusk shot, shooting from the center divider, looking towards old Albuquerque. (photo below) Last night I went back and was treated to an unexpected surprise. At night the entire underside of the bridge is lit by these hundreds of amazing colored lights. They change around in all different crazy patterns. Sometimes they slowly drift from one color to another. Other times they pulsate wildly in a rainbow of colors.

 

So, this first photo was taken inside one of the pedestrian tunnels you can see on the left and right. No, it is not Photoshopped. It really came out of the camera like this.

 

Facebook Fan Page | Twitter | Formspring | My Blog | Getty | Tumblr

 

Boracay is a tropical island about an hour's flight from Manila in the Philippines. Its long white sand beaches rival the best beaches of more popular destinations such as the Caribbean, the South Pacific as well as neighbouring Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.

 

Facilities are available to suit different levels of activity. For those wanting to just lounge around and take in some rays, beach-front hotels usually have lounge chairs set up just a few steps away from the hotel entrances.

 

Facilities for the usual water sports activities such as sailing, wind surfing, snorkeling, diving and jet skiing are also widely available for those in search of more active pursuits. The fun in Boracay also doesn't end when the sun sets. Boracay nightlife is pulsating with many bars and restaurants serving food, drink and fun until the very late evening.

 

Explored Front Page

Explored: Highest Position: 91

Just a little something for the season.

 

Witch Please neon sign.

 

2Li - Tintable & Pulsating Neon Sign

 

TELEPORT TO MAINSTORE

Excerpt from webapp.driftscape.com/map/c1f3d4de-f6a8-11eb-8000-bc1c5a8...:

 

Spring

 

Further down south, spring has arrived and a brown bear comes out of hibernation, searching for food and water. Ecosystems abound, and as the bear paws around, she is surrounded by networks of underground mycorrhizae, who live in symbiosis with plants, insects, and bacteria. These under-soil mycorrhizae help to provide phosphorus and nitrogen to their soil-plant friends. And every once in a while, these mycorrhizae reproduce and send up fruiting bodies that produce spores, or as we know them, mushrooms, truffles and chanterelles.

 

Fresh water gives life to surrounding fauna, and with help from the sun, growth is restored. These ecosystems are a source of energy, a glowing nucleus pulsating life into centuries old forests. In these woodlands, a magical owl watches over the cycles of life that have sustained themselves since before humans arrived. Forests that thrived, where once prehistoric animals roamed, and where hybrid dinosaur creatures capture our imaginations. They come to remind us that the fossil fuels we excavate today - oil, gas and coal, come from these ancient forests, plants, algae and plankton. As we consume these decaying organic remains that are over millions of years old, we release carbon dioxide into our airs and consequently cause man made exponential global warming.

 

As spirits of these ancient plants are released into the skies, they take the form of carbon dioxide and populate the air like vagabonds far from their underground home. Upon their journey drifting through northern skies, they too are witness to the surreal beauty of Aurora Borealis. Northern lights - a sign that solar winds have paid us a visit and altered electrons and protons in Mother Earth’s atmosphere. A reminder that our tiny earthly ecosystems are interconnected with far away giant stars and energies.

 

Down below, an elder shares the ways of times past when humans lived in harmony with nature, when we lived from earth, with earth, and we would make sure to replenish and respect all living beings. We treated Mother Nature for the grand spirit that she is, abundant, inspiring, magical, and strong. Humans were not above nature but part of her great and wise ecosystems.

 

The big blue moon overhears these tales and whispers her song down to the waters, making the tides dance to her melody, as the fisherman paddles through the currents and is guided by her nightly sky map. She sings to the fox and the farmer, and all of the villagers below, telling them when to plant their crops in harmony with her lunar cycles, reminding them to cultivate sustainable lands and to respect the wisdom of ancient seeds. The farmer listens intently, casting her eyes up thanking the moon for its song, and grateful for her crop. The farmer’s friend, a Praying Mantis, known as a master predator of arthropods, sits guarding her crop of corn. Corn is a staple food and cultural symbol of Indigenous Peoples across the Americas for over 10,000 years. After Indigenous peoples taught European settlers to grow the indigenous grain, it was introduced around the world. Considered a sacred plant, Maize shapes daily meals, and influences spiritual, physical and economic systems.

While trying to focus a grass detail with a macro lens I noticed something moving in the background. A small spider building her thin web! I had never found a suitable situation to photograph a spider before, but this one looked really, really small, not more than 7 or 8mm. And she kept moving all the time!

 

I will not bother you with encyclopedic details about spiders. How their specialized structures adapted from gill branches of aquatic ancestral arthropods, how that evidence helped to understand how from multiple, multifunctional feeding / swimming / respiratory / walking appendages Nature has shaped specialized structures that enabled species to invade entirely new ecosystems and to establish new body designs. However, that tale is even more fascinating than the spider itself!

HMM

 

🎵 🔊📣 📯 🎻🎺 🎧🎹 🎷🎶

 

Loud colours

 

I wondered why this speaker was so cheap. Very cheap. Muy barato. Too-good-to-be-true cheap, but I took a punt anyway. After all, einem geschenkten Gaul sieht man nicht ins Maul.

 

It seems solidly constructed. The sound it produces is perfectly adequate for my modest requirements. The battery life doesn't disappoint. But the drawback, the reason for its bargainaciousness, is that as soon as you turn it on, flashing pulsating gaudy colours emanate from behind the grille - reds, purples, yellows, greens. Like this: Disco speaker on YouTube

 

A 1970s disco setup is not recommended for the bedside table and listening to A Book At Bedtime.

Jellyfish or jellies are softbodied, free-swimming aquatic animals with a gelatinous umbrella-shaped bell and trailing tentacles. The bell can pulsate to acquire propulsion and locomotion. The tentacles may be utilized to capture prey or defend against predators by emitting toxins in a painful sting. Jellyfish species are classified in the subphylum Medusozoa which makes up a major part of the phylum Cnidaria, although not all Medusozoa species are considered to be jellyfish.

 

Jellyfish are found in every ocean, from the surface to the deep sea. Scyphozoans are exclusively marine, but some hydrozoans live in freshwater. Large, often colorful, jellyfish are common in coastal zones worldwide. Jellyfish have roamed the seas for at least 500 million years and possibly 700 million years or more, making them the oldest multi-organ animal.

Even with the energy saving drive in Tokyo, the city skyline still pulsates. Thank goodness.

 

BTW, it's a great time to visit Japan. Flights and hotels are cheap, because of the reduced number of visitors.

A series of 425 images spanning just about one hour.

 

Rokinon f2.0 16mm (manual) lens, camera set at 8 seconds, ISO 1600, using a cabled shutter release set to continuous.

 

A retired meteorologist knowledgeable on northern lights from the Fairbanks Weather Service office explained the ‘shimmering’ northern lights to me thus: (thanks Jan)

 

'Katy: After the substorm passes (ends), the relaxation phase occurs and manifests itself as pulsating aurora. Your video captures this well. Since the pulse frequency can vary from seconds to minutes, your time exposure has to be just right in order to sync with these pulses.'

 

I have also found that during this period of 'flux' the northern lights loose much of their vibrancy and color.

Some luxurious "Devices" devices shot in Hongkong nearly one Year ago. Arrived exactly on May 9 in HKg coming from MUC. No plan to go there this Year, but 2019 is on the List for travelling to this pulsating City again.

This is what can happen when you use an Ultra Wide Angle on a Full Frame camera...

 

Recent Photos - As Seen on Explore - Sigma 10-20mm

 

Congrats to Nautilus 1 (see below) for predicting that this was going to be single figure on Explore - number 1.

 

That's correcto mundo. Numero uno. With a bullet. We're number one. We're number one...

Strokkur, Haukadalur, Iceland

DSC_2156_tif_k_L

Aurora Borealis in Henningsvæ. The Lofoten Islands are much further north than Iceland, and this of course positively affects the ability to see and photograph the Northern Lights. All the number of times I've been to Lofoten, I've seen the Northern Lights every time. The Kp index is not relevant Lofoten, as Lofoten is under the "aurora oval". A high Kp index means that northern lights can be seen further south, but that's irrelevant if you are in Lofoten. Most aurora apps rely heavily on the Kp index, and are not useful. Some good northern lights info:

visitlofoten.com/.../northern-lights-in-lofoten/

visitlofoten.com/en/how-to-see-the-northern-lights/

www.68north.com/info/northern-lights/

guidetolofoten.com/northern-lights-in-lofoten.../

www.norway-lights.com/.../611ed37900c8b87521bcaa27/ Many thanks to everyone who took the trouble to view comment or fave.

Excerpt from webapp.driftscape.com/map/c1f3d4de-f6a8-11eb-8000-bc1c5a8...:

 

Spring

 

Further down south, spring has arrived and a brown bear comes out of hibernation, searching for food and water. Ecosystems abound, and as the bear paws around, she is surrounded by networks of underground mycorrhizae, who live in symbiosis with plants, insects, and bacteria. These under-soil mycorrhizae help to provide phosphorus and nitrogen to their soil-plant friends. And every once in a while, these mycorrhizae reproduce and send up fruiting bodies that produce spores, or as we know them, mushrooms, truffles and chanterelles.

 

Fresh water gives life to surrounding fauna, and with help from the sun, growth is restored. These ecosystems are a source of energy, a glowing nucleus pulsating life into centuries old forests. In these woodlands, a magical owl watches over the cycles of life that have sustained themselves since before humans arrived. Forests that thrived, where once prehistoric animals roamed, and where hybrid dinosaur creatures capture our imaginations. They come to remind us that the fossil fuels we excavate today - oil, gas and coal, come from these ancient forests, plants, algae and plankton. As we consume these decaying organic remains that are over millions of years old, we release carbon dioxide into our airs and consequently cause man made exponential global warming.

 

As spirits of these ancient plants are released into the skies, they take the form of carbon dioxide and populate the air like vagabonds far from their underground home. Upon their journey drifting through northern skies, they too are witness to the surreal beauty of Aurora Borealis. Northern lights - a sign that solar winds have paid us a visit and altered electrons and protons in Mother Earth’s atmosphere. A reminder that our tiny earthly ecosystems are interconnected with far away giant stars and energies.

 

Down below, an elder shares the ways of times past when humans lived in harmony with nature, when we lived from earth, with earth, and we would make sure to replenish and respect all living beings. We treated Mother Nature for the grand spirit that she is, abundant, inspiring, magical, and strong. Humans were not above nature but part of her great and wise ecosystems.

 

The big blue moon overhears these tales and whispers her song down to the waters, making the tides dance to her melody, as the fisherman paddles through the currents and is guided by her nightly sky map. She sings to the fox and the farmer, and all of the villagers below, telling them when to plant their crops in harmony with her lunar cycles, reminding them to cultivate sustainable lands and to respect the wisdom of ancient seeds. The farmer listens intently, casting her eyes up thanking the moon for its song, and grateful for her crop. The farmer’s friend, a Praying Mantis, known as a master predator of arthropods, sits guarding her crop of corn. Corn is a staple food and cultural symbol of Indigenous Peoples across the Americas for over 10,000 years. After Indigenous peoples taught European settlers to grow the indigenous grain, it was introduced around the world. Considered a sacred plant, Maize shapes daily meals, and influences spiritual, physical and economic systems.

 

Poem.

 

A silhouetted, rapier-like peninsula piercing the radiant splendour of a pewter-grey sea.

Domed islands capped by the heavenly spokes of a setting-sun.

Timeless beauty.

Silence, but for the distant scream of a gull and the gentle, pulsating whistle of an oyster-catcher.

Sky, rock, sand, light and sea uniquely combine

to produce a glimpse inside heaven’s door.

Don’t yearn for heaven.

Look around.

It’s already here!

 

The lazily winding spiral arms of the spectacular galaxy NGC 976 fill the frame of this image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. This spiral galaxy lies around 150 million light-years from the Milky Way in the constellation Aries. Despite its tranquil appearance, NGC 976 has played host to one of the most violent astronomical phenomena known — a supernova explosion. These cataclysmicly violent events take place at the end of the lives of massive stars, and can outshine entire galaxies for a short period. While supernovae mark the deaths of massive stars, they are also responsible for the creation of heavy elements that are incorporated into later generations of stars and planets.

 

Supernovae are also a useful aid for astronomers who measure the distances to faraway galaxies. The amount of energy thrown out into space by supernova explosions is very uniform, allowing astronomers to estimate their distances from how bright they appear to be when viewed from Earth. This image — which was created using data from Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 — comes from a large collection of Hubble observations of nearby galaxies which host supernovae as well as a pulsating class of stars known as Cepheid variables. Both Cepheids and supernovae are used to measure astronomical distances, and galaxies containing both objects provide useful natural laboratories where the two methods can be calibrated against one another.

 

Credits: ESA/Hubble & NASA, D. Jones, A. Riess et al.; CC BY 4.0

Another bright planetary nebula to capture during a full moon.

NGC 1501 is a complex planetary nebula in the constellation Camelopardalis.

It's progenitor star is a pulsating star, meaning that its brightness varies regularly and periodically. In the case of NGC 1501’s progenitor star, this is incredibly fast, with the star’s brightness changing significantly in just half an hour.

 

Image captured on my dual rig in Spain.

Scopes: APM TMB LZOS 152 Refractors

Cameras: QSI6120wsg8

Mount: 10Micron GM2000 HPS

A total of 7 hours image capture.

 

More details are available on my website at: www.imagingdeepspace.com/ngc-1501.html

View large

 

Desire is the starting point of all achievement, not a hope, not a wish, but a keen pulsating desire which transcends everything...

 

All photos, above, have been shot with the Samsung NX10,

which has been provided by Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.

 

© ph Eva Montecchi - All Rights Reserved

 

♪♫♥♪ Maria Gadù - Shimbalaiê ♪♥♫♪

 

Welcome back to Everyone ;-)

These glands of sunlight pulsate before me

giving more than the mere light I can see

it's the lifeblood, a paen of deepest Summer

that which supplies a heartbeating drummer

in choral waves across the walden hills

teasing ploughlines a vessel for harvesting mills

that time of year again, on a crest of a wave

when all one's senses unto Nature behave

 

it wasn't so long ago...indeed still filling my thoughts

with a fragrancy so virtuous it deeply exhorts

those warm comforting moments over these so chilling and frail

a shiver...is frabjous or just a bitter present wind that can impale

my wishes, and desires to feel what makes me happy

it's a basic need for this here chappy...

 

oh that dextrous day under the beautiful guardianship -

of Deutscher Sonnenschein, entered my gladship

in the vale's cradle of golden-hued sunbaked beauty

my eyes did neither deceive nor perceive the true equity

of that day of all days, upon the hill of countless detail

bales and pales, straw and smoke, into the continuing trail

 

like a quartan passing, rude health lies in wake

it's overnight passage is safe and free of memory ache

ready and willing to be written of in positive tomes

posing as it does for a snapshot of summery homes

living forevermore every second intake of breath

for the first was a living death-

that has been exhaled once and for all, totally expunged

over there where the glorious sunlight plunged.

 

by anglia24

12h20: 18/08/2008

©2008anglia24

Excerpt from rbg.ca:

 

Anamazon (Limb) by Pamela Rosenkranz

 

b. 1979, Switzerland

 

Lives and works in Zurich, Switzerland

 

In her works, Pamela Rosenkranz investigates transitions from the natural to the artificial, dissolving their distinctiveness with reciprocal copying strategies. Anamazon (Limb) appears in a cacophony of sounds from the Amazon in a seemingly natural environment. Pulsating waves run through the branch as if it were an organ pumping blood through its capillaries while a sticky green fluid oozes from its wounded broken edge. The use of the phosphorous green (derived from the RGB color model) as well as the intertwining of the botanic and the organic lends the branch a futuristic character, and raises a question regarding the larger entity from which this branch or limb originates, and the possibility of chlorocruorin* running through its veins.

 

Like the microbiome in the human body, whose multi-branched mode of action remains largely unexplored, the myriad connections and interactions of plant and fungal systems in the Amazon, for example, are yet to be fully recognized and described. Anamazon (Limb) appears as an extraction from an ecosystem that can only exist as far as the human imagination can reach.

 

* Chlorocruorin is a dichroic red-green respiratory protein, chemically similar to hemoglobin, and is only found dissolved in the blood of certain annelids.

 

Pamela Rosenkranz has had solo exhibitions at Kunsthaus Bregenz; Kreuzgang Fraumünster, Zurich; GAMeC, Bergamo; Fondazione Prada, Milan; Kunsthalle Basel; Centre d’Art Contemporain, Geneva; and the Swiss Institute, Venice, among others. She has participated in several major international group exhibitions, including the Okayama Art Summit and the 15th Biennale de Lyon. In 2015, her project Our Product was selected for the Swiss Pavilion at the 56th Venice Biennale.

As a misty dawn began to break over the Tengger Sand Sea the figures started appearing.

At first it was a trickle, a few hardy souls briefly appearing before disappearing into the ether. Before long it became a deluge as more and more shadowy forms skulked past, some on motorbikes, others on horseback. Most were on foot but all held a common purpose.

Their destination was Mt Bromo, an active volcano in East Java and one of Indonesia’s truly iconic images. Try as it might, the morning sun could not break through the smoke belching forth from its crater.

 

Early start

The day had begun in the early hours of the nearby village Cemoro Lewang. A convoy of jeeps raced across the flatlands, their passengers sitting silently, trying to gauge their surroundings as the impenetrable blackness raced by.

Before long they reached the viewing platforms of Mt Pananjakan. An already formidable formidable crowd had gathered to take in the otherworldly grandeur of Bromo Tengger Semeru National Park.

Below lay some of the conservation area’s volcanic inhabitants, seemingly emanating from the swirling fog itself. The collapsed crater of Mt Bromo, dormant Mt Batok and in the far distance Mt Semeru, a gigantic cone rearing over the entire landscape, the constant plume of grey smoke, ash and stones rising from its peak reminding visitors of its destructive, and most definitely active, power.

 

Cosmic ebbs and flows

A dense mist was already ebbing and flowing around the vast plain, bestowing upon the area a somnambulant quality, ideally suited to the park’s mystical atmosphere. As the crowds descended upon the volcanic sand sea the fog, if anything, had grown thicker as smoke continued to pump from Bromo’s crater. The outline of strange swirling forms quickly grew and reconfigured themselves before disappearing completely.

Finally though, the sun had finally broken through the cloud cover. Despite the clear skies above a new challenge presented itself in place of the morning’s limited visibility: the unforgiving Indonesian humidity. Soon enough the exhausting climb up Bromo’s side slowed to a crawl as brows were mopped and water bottles downed in thirsty gulps.

Strange altars

In this state of semi-exhaustion, the landscape took on newer, odder dimensions.

Serene Batok seemed to pulsate gently as it lay covered in casuarina trees, their verdant green swathes at odds with the surrounding shades of white and grey and somehow surviving in spite of the volcanic ash from its neighbour.

The impression was that of a long-forgotten alien moon, an effect heightened by the smoke pouring from great fissures at Bromo’s base, covering the jagged craters and extending out to the edge of the desolate sand sea.

After the final, lunging climb came to an end, it was easy for the visitors to stand overawed in the presence of these ancient monoliths. Under the gaze of the incessant mid-morning sun the volcanic trio offered only a glimpse into their ultimately unknowable natural power. The fog, uncomprehending, continued its ebbing gyrations across the park’s floor.

 

from: www.eyeinthemiddle.com

The aurora started off as a normal aurora (but still awesome), with the brilliant rivers of green streaming overhead, but just after midnight the G4 solar storm hit the earth and the aurora exploded into a brilliance of colors and pulsating aurora that could be seen in all directions. At the top of this image the aurora corona can be seen as the full force of the G4 (out of G5) storm hits the earth after midnight on the morning of the 24th. It was so mesmerizing to watch, I don't know how to describe the power and gracefulness of the sun's fury...it was like I was being pulled into a worm hole, it was like the sky was falling down all around me or how about this one...(queue the music)

"You're travelling through another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind; a journey into a wondrous land whose boundaries are that of imagination. That's the signpost (aurora corona) up ahead - your next stop, the Twilight Zone!" credit to The Twilight Zone :) see other images of the aurora corona below...

A Cosmic Journey to the Infinite Imaginary Center.

Our world is not exactly as we think it is: it's pulsating with vibrations, ever changing, never the same from instant to instant...

 

Poem.

 

A silhouetted, rapier-like peninsula piercing the radiant splendour of a pewter-grey sea.

Domed islands capped by the heavenly spokes of a setting-sun.

Timeless beauty.

Silence, but for the distant scream of a gull and the gentle, pulsating whistle of an oyster-catcher.

Sky, rock, sand, light and sea uniquely combine

to produce a glimpse inside heaven’s door.

Don’t yearn for heaven.

Look around.

It’s already here!

 

Actually, cuttlefish. Looks cool on black, and you can see the detail better at the larger size.

 

This is a situation where a still photo can't do justice to the reality: the pulsating, shimmering colors were incredible. You get the sense that they are sizing you up and have a measure of intelligence. A bit like meeting a presidential candidate.

 

New England Aquarium, Boston.

 

EDITORIAL NOTE: As I was looking at my home page, it appeared that the title of this photo was "Allen" instead of "Alien." Now I wish I had named it Allen. :-)

BITH'S JUKEBOX #116

VAMPIRE WEEKEND "OXFORD COMMA"

Drop a coin the slot :

www.youtube.com/watch?v=P_i1xk07o4g

 

EDIT : THIS IS THE FIRST TIME I HAVE REBOOTED A PHOTO. HOWEVER THIS PHOTO HAS BEEN AN ONGOING PROJECT AND HAS NOW REACHED 200 COMMENTS, MANY OF WHICH YOU HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO. SO I THOUGHT I'D LEAVE IT AT THE TOP OF THE PILE AS I AM AWAY FOR ONE WEEK AS OF TUESDAY 20TH SEPTEMBER. SO ENJOY THE UPDATED WORDING AND THANKS FOR ALL YOUR CONTRIBUTIONS THAT HAVE BEEN PILFERED FROM YOUR ASSORTED PHOTO STREAMS AND COMMENTS!

 

Many of you who hang around the back of flickr's bike sheds love language as much as I do. However, I've never been too keen on the so-called correctness of commas etc because today's correctness may have been yesterday's or tomorrow's four-out-of-ten....try harder. The English language is an evolving organism, always changing, pulsating, upsetting, but always allowing for creativity and always interesting to read, to hear.

 

Your evidence from flickr is that playing with words and tinkering with phrases is fun. You rebirth old words; build new words and phraseology and often nail an unexpected juxtaposition of letters that says it all.

 

An idea has been smouldering for some time now around "word of the day" Its time to bring it out of incubation and award it the status of its very own 'set' so allow ease of access for months to come. Your wording and phrasing efforts will be scavenged forthwith. Below are some recent highlights. More will be added as time tick-tocks by. Some below are explained in the comments boxes. Some are self-explanatory. Some just look and sound right, so in they went!!

 

Updated : Recently!

 

Gubernatorial.

Cacophony of slurpage.

The stoop.

His Assholiness

iPood

A Nooner

Cucurbit

Batik Bold Font

Cucumber Straighteners

Turtellian

Bibulous

Antediluvian

Bunce

Galoot

Wordifying

Fondence

Lading

Filter Pill

Tittybottle

Myrmidon

Lollygag

Tarry

Onomatic

Mytacism

Intelist

Bikeage

Buttock Feast

Spazzy Glasses

Crepuscular

Supine

Rapscallion

Funambulists

"Our Garbage Is In Your Bins"

Animalia

Carapace-less

Papal tarmac-licking

Endless Ear-ing Sessions

Summer Nipples

Shortoids

Unhaired

Flueing technician

Billy Connolly's incontinence pants

Shitcatcher kacks

Lesbionica

Hirsuit

Aerosol retentive

Neologism

Lexiconious

Sheveled

Lapidated

Gruntled

Turbing

Truction

Hippocampus

Optirectomy

Diphthongs

Melancholiac

Skunked

Kaleidogasm

Doughnuts

Munter

Minging

Testiculate

Intestate

Premature Mastication

Anorector

Maniac Depressive

Senile Dimension

3rd Dementia

Shitsandwich

Twatter

Spangled

Crudified

Strangeality

Spray-mate

Fornicaution

Vanilla Plod

Amphidromic

Geraniacs

Fontophile

Cottaging

Obliterati

Importuning

Curmudging

Cantanker

Ornerily

Crapsticulate

Experanto

Petrichor

Thrum

Cumbia

Polliwogs

Wenglish

Wrummage

Schizophrensic

Invisabalarious

Plasticity

Wankplate

Metallicy

Billowing

Sit Up and Beg Bike

Echelon

Snot On A Stick

Farkleberry

Pit Deodorant

Assplosion

Cowgirl Up

Wonkly

tone papping

low wattage Bez

Ocular acuity

suavenicity

Geraniacs

Shellakybooky

Onomatopoeia

Insex

Prawnography

do-goaders

blatting about

fantascinating

Armadilldo

Geekphone

Corn-holed

Bonkersness

quinqueradiate

cybercagoule

sargasm

multiple colourgasm

chromotheism

effulgence

persnickety

patootie

cruciverbalist

perspicacity

lardscape

industrialana

Petrichor

fulminant

suavity

Proctologist

Anagrammatizeable

Snow Dropping

Quondom

Quantulucunque

Urbanariumousity

Clumpage

Caprine

Bimbling

Accarezzévole

Antipodean Pandette

toonage klinkage

Poppyness

Knacker drinking

musophobia

typages

Mintality

Negativitree

escutcheons

petroleaganda

Mouldering

faetanica

eatgasm

gastrogasm

aspargustine

ottonomious

technologised

chimping

liquormortis

stopnads

nabobs

perplexitude

petrochemically

detritivore

triskelion

Kebabylon

effectified

mullation

anticrepuscular

geosmin

gloveography

cloudquake

undercheesed

vocablebabble

ungulate segway

shardy

monocularly

gunology

snailology

schnoz

cancer tubes

roomination

scooterists

comfeable

acronymphomaniac

bithotune

poetography

sphygmomenometer

Invisibelist

hipsterisation

palpebronasal folds

polycephaly

signology

spider rigging

Perspicacitate

Caught the donkey's magic eye

figbob

crimps

bonkodynamic equilibrium

boondoggle

phlebotomist

dieselised

caudal peduncle

whirlycoil

outiots

ambidrevent

as black as yer 'at

peegasm

fatassicle

brumous

frottage

bumpography

monochromish

liminal

efflux

thunderjug

Anasocumulocoulrophobia

re-beautification

Grimbarians

heapasitis

chickentrepreneur

regurgitatable

Explwhores

pandemane

oversixtyitis

overseventyitis

prededuced

grammarnazi

Edumacated

Check out the time lapse of this event here: vimeo.com/131833869

 

With news that Mother Nature was going to put on a Northern Lights display we headed to one of our favorite spots to view and capture them – Moosehead Lake, Maine - located just above the 45 degree latitude point.

 

The Visual: a huge green arc with dancing spikes, pulsating waves of light that stretched overhead and over 180 degrees across the sky. At a few different points it was a variable rainbow of colors. All of this was being perfectly reflected in the smooth-as-glass water right in front of us.

 

The Audio: a nearby crackling campfire, the call of the loons, some crickets & frogs and the occasional sound of a chipmunk scurrying past.

 

The show started just before 10PM. It ebbed and flowed through the night until almost 3AM - this was easily the longest and most impressive aurora display we have witnessed. This image is one frame from an 800+ frame time lapse that captured the entire event.

 

Nikon D600 & 14-24mm @ 14mm

f/2.8 - 15 secs - ISO 1600

Very lightly processed through Lightroom CC only

 

© Mike Taylor | Taylor Photography

Workshops - Presentations - Prints

miketaylorphoto.com

©2023 Peter Mardie, all rights reserved. Protected by Pixsy.

 

Red Valley had more than its share of strangeness...” (The Liar Of Red Valley, by Walter Goldwater, 2021).

 

Riding on horseback some 20 miles East of San Bubblelito on my return trip from the silver mine one evening, I could not help but be enthralled by the strange, mystical quality of the landscape; the exotic plants; and the hypnotic bioluminescent twinkling, flashing, pulsating light ahead of me which attracted me greatly in the dark ancestral ocean of my mind.

 

"Pssst! Hey Gringo!," a voice said.

 

It was a charming voice with a delightful combination American-Mexican-Bubblehead accent. I strained my eyes and noticed a small lady with a big plastic plasma gun hiding behind a rock, fashionably dressed.

 

I was being ambushed.

 

I moved my right hand closer to my water pistol.

 

"You want to join my gang?," she asked sweetly.

 

"What are you offering?," I said, narrowing my eyes. I noticed the rope behind her and could not help but be impressed by her scenario-based planning.

 

"12-hour shifts, 6 days/week, no O/T, baseline profit sharing, a performance incentive and career progression plan, stock options, 5 days of annual holidays, free access to a time-share condominium in Honobubblelulu, free business cards, a free T-shirt - and your own bubblehead in a color of your choice!"

 

I was just blown away. These were outstanding terms and conditions! Only the top bubblehead desperados could offer these kinds of employment benefits!

 

It was my lucky day!

 

-

The Fashionable Desperado: Tiger Lily

 

More Tiger Lily adventures:

www.flickr.com/photos/petermardie/52706080493/in/dateposted/

 

-

The image title is inspired by the movie of the same name, directed by Andreas Prochaska and starring Sam Riley (2014). It's a Western set in the Austrian Alps and well worth seeing - only half as exotic as a Western set on Planet Bubblehead, mind you!

 

-

In real life, it is Tiger Lily's day off today. She works 12-hour shifts in a restaurant in Asia, earns minimum wage and gets one day off every 2-3 weeks. She was going to go to the dentist on her day off today. Instead, she is sick with influenza. It sucks. Big time. She is being worked too hard. She is sick a lot. I want to help her get to a better future. She is a genuinely nice person, never had a chance to go to school, and deserves a little bit of help in her life.

 

-

Our incipient web page:

petermardie.smugmug.com

The red piece is a 2013 dance production from Ann Van den Broek (Ward/WaRD).

 

“The vivid, powerful esthetic and the balanced combination of movement, imagery and music make The Red Piece an excellent production."

 

A group of people, alive, driven, rhythmic and fiery. The urge to create, the power of persuasion, charisma. Drive brings change. They move around a transition point in pulsating waves, building up to the extreme. Obsession, destructive, damage. Bodies bound by personal passion and focus. A protective feeling that creates its own freedom. A loving, summoning cry.

 

We're here visiting Coiled, Knotted, Twisted

A sky-filling Kp7-level aurora on the morning of November 4, 2021, from home in southern Alberta. The aurora was pulsing and flaming upwards over most of the sky, while more normal curtains slowly moved across the north. For a few minutes, very prominent red-topped curtains formed and filled the northern sky and moved from west to east. This was at their peak. Note the blue curtains to the east as they catch the sunlight at their high altitude pre-dawn.

 

This is a single 4s shot with the 7.5mm TTArtisan fish-eye lens at f/2 and the Canon R6 at ISO 6400. Taken at 4:57 am MDT.

Der historische Ortskern erstreckt sich um den normannischen Dom, der zugleich die bedeutendste Sehenswürdigkeit der Stadt ist. Die Kathedrale Santissimo Salvatore liegt an der Piazza Duomo, um die tagsüber und nachts das Leben pulsiert. Die Piazza ist nämlich ein beliebter Treffpunkt für Jung und Alt, wo man sich in einem Restaurant oder Café hinsetzten und sizilianisches Ambiente schlicht genießen kann. In den schmalen Gassen abseits des Platzes sind auch ganz lauschige und ruhige Ecken zu finden.

Der Strand von Cefalu ist einer der schönsten auf Sizilien.

 

The historic center of the town is centered around the Norman Cathedral, which is also the most important landmark of the town. The Cathedral of Santissimo Salvatore is located in Piazza Duomo, around which life pulsates during the day and at night. In fact, the piazza is a popular meeting place for young and old, where you can sit down in a restaurant or café and simply enjoy Sicilian ambience. In the narrow streets away from the square you can also find quite secluded and quiet corners.

The beach of Cefalu is one of the most beautiful in Sicily.

Visit Salsa at Blue event in Blue Mountains Village, Ontario, Canada, and see the Dance Migration of Toronto’s leading Brazilian dance company. It is a free family street party that transforms the entire Village into a showcase of Latin life with hot pulsating music and passionate dancing. Capture a scene of the culture of dance like Samba, Afro Brazilian dance or Capoeoira. You bet, it is a lot of fun!

 

© all rights reserved by Mala Gosia. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.

 

Thanks for you visits, faves and comments! Gracias por usted visitas, favoritos y comentarios!

 

Match of the hard hitting smashers. Taiwan's No. 1 seed Chou Tien Chen over China's Qiao Bin 21-12, 18-21, 21-16 in a pulsating match to reach the finals of the Singapore Badminton Open 2018,

Jean-Michel Basquiat (* 22 December 1960 in New York City; † 12 August 1988 ibid.)

Acylic and oilstick on wood

 

From the exhibition BASQUIAT. THE RETROSPECTIVE at the Albertina Museum in Vienna

 

"The depiction of the police officer in Basquiat's works is an explosive socially critical commentary on the problem of ruthless police brutality and the racism associated with it. La Hara is a Puerto-Rican slang word for "police"..." (Information text in the museum)

 

"Virtually no other artist comes anywhere close to being as representative of the 1980s and that decade’s pulsating New York art scene as does the brilliantly exceptional artistic phenomenon that was Jean-Michel Basquiat." www.albertina.at/en/exhibitions/basquiat/

  

Rhythms created by flowing water reflecting warm granite. The ever shifting, pulsating patterns never repeating. These are the moments when the beauty of nature reveals itself resulting in photographic inspiration. So, when I sent this image to a friend for an opinion, I was honored to hear how inspired she became with her writing and that it instantly had a positive effect on her creativity.

When I made this image, the thought of inspiring others was not my intention. But I am happy to share it with you now in hopes that maybe the cycle may continue.

Hello, here's Ned and your watching the Trans Galactic Info Channel (TGIC) directly from Umbra-serpentos II.

 

I was looking for a new rover and found this weird one roving around.

 

It's rounded shape is certainly eye catching, as is the single arm with grabber that looks like a tail of some kind of scorpion.

 

Directly between the canopy and arm is some kind of pulsating device? Which seems to beat with a fixated pulse, like some kind of heart beat, could it be alive?

 

I wanted to ask the driver, but sadly the universal translator malfunctioned and couldn't be used.

 

Looking around me, I also spotted several weird plants. That seem to grow in this sand of Umbra-serpentos II.

 

Thanks for watching, and don’t forget to subscribe, and follow me @NedIsTheBest.meta3.moon2be.

Done in Ai, Finalized in Photoshop

 

From the depths of a lightless cosmos, the Darkstar Empress emerges — a sovereign born from the collapse of dying suns. Her sapphire skin is fractured with obsidian veins, each crack aglow with the molten essence of extinguished stars. Twin horns crown her head, entwined with a gothic diadem that clasps a pulsating crimson gem, its facets holding the echoes of ancient galaxies. Her eyes blaze like solar flares in the void, unblinking, eternal. Armored in blackened steel and adorned with blood-red crystals forged in the hearts of supernovae, she commands the silence between worlds. Embers drift through the air, remnants of realms reduced to ash beneath her reign, as she stands — the eternal flame in a universe of shadows.

Commentary.

 

The endless swathes of imperial Scots Pine.

Exquisite, calm waters of Loch Beinn á Mheadhoin and Affric,

convoluted by dips, hollows, bays and enchanting fresh-water islands.

Lofty, imposing peaks of Càrn Eighe, Màm Sodhail and Sgùrr na Lapaich, often snow-capped, well into April, and even May.

A glen of pulsating life.

From Wood-Ants and Dragon-Fly

to Salmon and Trout.

From Red Deer and Golden Eagle

to Wood-Cock and Wildcat.

Iconic, momentous, overwhelming, breath-taking in early morning mists, under winter snow or in colourful Autumn garb.

In Spring when Broom and Gorse smother slopes in dazzling yellow flower to Summer when green dominates and life buzzes with a frenzy.

As here, in Autumn, when the sun falls earlier behind the West Coast peaks, the tranquil, golden reflections of peaks, forest and island create a sumptuous vision of utter peace, serenity and prodigious beauty.

Beyond doubt, this glen has a mystical magic beyond my powers of description.

If you ever go there, and catch it in a more convivial mood,

you will never forget it, never regret it

and you will surely return.

It really is a little bit of heaven……paradise.

I know nowhere quite like it.

Once smitten, the love affair

is likely to be eternal!

 

Late Autumn In Venice

(After Rilke)

  

The city floats no longer like a bait

To hook the nimble darting summer days.

The glazed and brittle palaces pulsate and radiate

And glitter. Summer's garden sways,

A heap of marionettes hanging down and dangled,

Leaves tired, torn, turned upside down and strangled:

Until from forest depths, from bony leafless trees

A will wakens: the admiral, lolling long at ease,

Has been commanded, overnight -- suddenly --:

In the first dawn, all galleys put to sea!

Waking then in autumn chill, amid the harbor medley,

The fragrance of pitch, pennants aloft, the butt

Of oars, all sails unfurled, the fleet

Awaits the great wind, radiant and deadly.

 

Delmore Schwartz

  

On our walk around the lake today, shortly after sunrise, this ripple ring in the ice caught my attention. With its pulsating nature, it looked to me like the heartbeat of the lake. Its action would alternate from a depression to a bulge at which point I captured this image.

 

The temps have been low enough to allow for some very thin ice to form near the shore. The lake was pretty calm, but the gentle wave action was pushing water under the ice layer which forced small pulses of water up through a hole in the ice layer. The center ring is the actual hole with the current pulse of water. The outer ring is the previous pulse flowing away from the hole.

We were on the shady side of the lake which made the light directional.

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