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Taylor Swift performs at Staples Center 08.27.11 in Los Angeles, CA.
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EDJ244J ex-St Helens 'replica' Berresfords AEC Swift after arriving at it's storage place for the winter.
Taylor Swift was wearing wide stripes when she stopped by Walgreens, promoting in Hollywood, on Saturday, December 1, 2012 X17online.com
The Suzuki Swift is a subcompact car produced by Suzuki in Japan since 2000. The “Swift” nameplate had been applied for many Suzuki Cultus in export markets. The Suzuki Swift began in 1985 as a marketing and manufacturing rebadge of the Suzuki Cultus, the supermini manufactured and ...
A belt driven radial drill which was manufactured by George Swift & Co of Halifax and was used at Ayr Harbour Workshops until the late 1980's and is now on display in the Doon Valley Railway museum at Dunaskin.
Waterside, Ayrshire
12 March 2022
Jersey Bus Tours Wadham Stringer bodied Leyland Swift arrives at Liberation Station St Helier, ready for another trip to Durrell Wildlife Park (Jersey Zoo) 08/08/15 www.durrell.org
This moth hatches in our back yard at this time of the year, after rain. The moth is 50mm long.
(We had our first decent rain last week.)
Evidently the moths hatch and the females flutter over the ground laying their eggs which are like poppy seed. Somehow the eggs hatch and their offspring live in the ground until the following year when they push their pupae through the soil and hatch.
The Jersey Bus Tours Wadham Stringer bodied Leyland Swift heads towards St Helier along Victoria Avenue. 07/09/16
Airmen from the 821st Contingency Response Group load a pallet onto a C-130J Super Hercules during Exercise Swift Response 16 at the Bydgoszcz Airport, Poland, June 8, 2016. Exercise SR16 is one of the premier military crisis response training events for multinational airborne forces in the world, the exercise has more than 5,000 participants from 10 NATO nations. Contingency Response units are self-sufficient and can deploy with all personnel, equipment and supplies to execute the mission. (U.S. Air Force photo by Master Sgt. Joseph Swafford/Released)
Swift Fox (Vulpes velox) female tending to one of her pups at a den in the native prairie grasslands 4 miles west of Onefour in southeast Alberta.
28 june, 2009.
Slide # GWB_20090628_3589.CR2
Visualizing the various features of the SwiftRiver distributed reputation and veracity functionality.
British paratroopers provide security for stryker vehicles during operation Swiftresponse in Torun, Poland, June 8th 2016. The exercise is one of the premier military crisis response training events for multi-national airborne forces in the world. The exercise is designed to enhance the readiness of the combat core of the U.S. Global Response Force-currently the 82nd Airborne Division's 1st Brigade Combat Team-to conduct rapid-response, joint-forcible entry and follow-on operations alongside Allied high-readiness forces in Europe. Swift Response 16 includes more than 5,000 Soldiers and Airmen from Belgium, France, Germany, Great Britian, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain and the United States and takes place in Poland and Germany, May 27-June 26, 2016. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Juan F. Jimenez/Released)
Fine art drawing of a Swift Fox (Vulpes velox)
This drawing is based on a photo by David and Melinda
U.S. Army 173rd Airborne Brigade paratroopers wait to board a U.S. Air Force C-130J Hercules during exercise Swift Response 16, June 7, 2016 at Ramstein Air Base, Germany. Swift Response is a joint, multinational-exercise designed to train the U.S. Global Response Force alongside high-readiness forces from Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom. The 173rd Airborne Brigade (Sky Soldiers) is the U.S. Army's Contingency Response Force in Europe, providing rapid forces to the United States European, Africa and Central Commands areas of responsibilities. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. DeAndre Curtiss/Released)
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The Common Swift (Apus apus) is a small bird, superficially similar to the barn swallow or house martin. It is, however, completely unrelated to those passerine species, since swifts are in the separate order Apodiformes. The resemblances between the groups are due to convergent evolution reflecting similar life styles.
The scientific name comes from the Greek απους, apous, meaning "without feet". These birds have very short legs which they use only for clinging to vertical surfaces (hence the German name Mauersegler, literally meaning "wall-glider"). They never settle voluntarily on the ground.
Like swallows, Common Swifts are migratory, and in midsummer they are found in Great Britain and northern Europe, while they winter much further south in southern Africa.
Swifts will occasionally live in forests, but they have adapted more commonly to human sites and will build their nests in all suitable hollows in buildings, under window sills, in the corner rafters of wooden buildings, in chimneys, and in smokestacks. A swift will return to the same nesting site year after year, rebuilding its nest when necessary.
Young swifts in the nest can drop their body temperature and become torpid if bad weather prevents their parents from catching insects nearby.
Swifts spend most of their lives in the air, living on the insects they catch in their beaks. They drink, feed, and often mate and sleep on the wing.
The common swift can reach 220km/hr in a dive!!!!
Handheld shot when flying over my back garden.
Driver: Jan van den Hoek
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