View allAll Photos Tagged Relaxing
Lots of green with a splash of blue, wishing you a pleasant day too.
I was looking for a poem and came across this >> link << with some really profound (to me) poetry that I'm compelled to share. The last and next to last are my favorites.
We had just landed in Dubai 36 hours before and Sindi was in severe need of a relaxing bath once the kids were settled in...
Yep, tonight I'm grateful for a relaxing, hot bath. Actually most nights I am : )
from where i soak
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Manayunk, PA, United States November 2011
© 2012 Holly E Clark, All Rights Reserved
This image is available to license at Stocksy United:
DDC-Relaxing
After being outside and able to play in the backyard for the first time in a while she pooped herself out. She likes to lay on the master bedroom carpet, it's nice and warm.
This Red-tailed hawk [Buteo jamaicensis] had just finished eating a squirrel it captured. Note the bulging crop.
Fort Washington State Park
Fort Washington, PA
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I'm taking it easy on my bed: all the pillows in my back, high heels off and satin nightdress on. Just a moment for myself to sit back, enjoy being feminine and feel the soft satin all over my body.
Stourhead is a 1,072-hectare (2,650-acre) estate at the source of the River Stour near Mere, Wiltshire, England. The estate includes a Palladian mansion, the village of Stourton, gardens, farmland, and woodland. Stourhead has been in the ownership of the National Trust since 1946.
The gardens were designed by Henry Hoare II and laid out between 1741 and 1780 in a classical 18th-century design set around a large lake, achieved by damming a small stream. The inspiration behind their creation were the painters Claude Lorrain, Poussin, and, in particular, Gaspar Dughet, who painted Utopian-type views of Italian landscapes. It is similar in style to the landscape gardens at Stowe.
The lake at Stourhead is artificially created. Following a path around the lake is meant to evoke a journey similar to that of Aeneas’s descent in to the underworld. In addition to Greek mythology, the layout is evocative of the “genius of the place,” a concept made famous by Alexander Pope. Buildings and monuments are erected in remembrance of family and local history. Henry Hoare was a collector of art- one of his pieces was Nicolas Poussin’s Aeneas at Delos, which is thought to have inspired the pictorial design of the gardens. Passages telling of Aeneas’s journey are quoted in the temples surrounding the lake. Monuments are used to frame one another; for example the Pantheon designed by Flitcroft entices the visitor over, but once reached, views from the opposite shore of the lake beckon. The use of the sunken path allows the landscape to continue on into neighboring landscapes, allowing the viewer to contemplate all the surrounding panorama. The Pantheon was thought to be the most important visual feature of the gardens. It appears in many pieces of artwork owned by Hoare, depicting Aeneas’s travels. The plantings in the garden were arranged in a manner that would evoke different moods, drawing visitors through realms of thought. According to Henry Hoare, ‘The greens should be ranged together in large masses as the shades are in painting: to contrast the dark masses with the light ones, and to relieve each dark mass itself with little sprinklings of lighter greens here and there.’
Included in the garden are a number of temples inspired by scenes of the Grand Tour of Europe. On one hill overlooking the gardens there stands an obelisk and King Alfred's Tower, a 50-metre-tall, brick folly designed by Henry Flitcroft in 1772; on another hill the temple of Apollo provides a vantage point to survey the magnificent rhododendrons, water, cascades and temples. The large medieval Bristol High Cross was moved from Bristol to the gardens. Amongst the hills surrounding the site there are also two Iron Age hill forts: Whitesheet Hill and Park Hill Camp. The gardens are home to a large collection of trees and shrubs from around the world.
Richard Colt Hoare, the grandson of Henry Hoare II, inherited Stourhead in 1783. He added the library wing to the mansion, and in the garden was responsible for the building of the boathouse and the removal of several features that were not in keeping with the classical and gothic styles (including a Turkish Tent). He also considerably enhanced the planting - the Temple of Apollo rises from a wooded slope that was planted in Colt Hoare's time. With the antiquarian passion of the times, he had 400 ancient burial mounds dug up in order to inform his pioneering History of Ancient Wiltshire.
So happy to have gotten Alina into the lake. It was a very cold week and there were usually people at the little beach area so Alina would have stayed in my bag. However, we lucked out and had the beach to ourselves for about 2 hours on this beautiful day.
Doll: Curvy Barbie on Made to Move Body
Suit: Barbie
Float: from a 1980s clone pool set
Adirondack Park, NY