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Quality of life improvements galore in patch 1.20, due ahead of The Witcher 3’s next expansion on 31 May.

  

bit.ly/20L3tjl

Dearborn and Schiller

Here is my sweet witch that is still nameless... Any ideas are welcome! I never wanted a cat anthro but this Romance Persi is so adorable and since she come in a pink and black combo with lots of glitter and stars I just had to get her! I don't like her complete fullset outfit, she doesn't wear her shirt, wig and the hat doesn't work with her ears at all...

Witches Dancing around a Black Kettle

Witches of Ellezelles.

 

Ellezelles is the center of "Pays des Collines", a landscape of hills in the southern part of Belgium where the ghost of Quintine de la Glisserie (a witch burned in 1610) is still wandering around.

 

Autor of repaint - AZHILL

 

Witches broom, Veil

canon 10D

8" f4 Reflector

 

Hamamelis or Witch-hazel in Fota Arboretum.

(Hamamelis virginiana) Greely, Ontario, Canada.

Witch's Nest is a small pocket in Pennsylvanian age Warren Point Sandstone. It is decorated with numerous faint prehistoric petroglyphs. The age of this artwork is unknown. The site has been know for many years and it has suffered some modern abuse. Someone tried to remove a section of decorated wall, without success I imagine. The sandstone, in the pocket, is very soft making it a good media for carving but it would crumble if chiseled on.

B-17F-60-BO. 42-29645. 49th Bomb Squadron. 2nd Bomb Group (H)

 

Noseart name “Wiley Witch” was misspelled at Morrison Field by a painter who completed the artwork and thought the crew was inspired by famed aviator Wiley Post. The noseart was supposed to be spelled “Wily Witch” from the poem Kathusala, instead it was referred to affectionately as “Witch” by the original crew assigned to the aircraft who rotated home after 30 missions. Wiley Witch completed 53 missions with various crews, 300 plus combat hours, no turn-backs and never missed a scheduled mission. First crew accumulated 197 flak or bullet holes in the airframe that were subsequently patched up.

 

Wiley Witch was one of of four B-17s to ditch from the error prone mission to bomb the Sophia railyards on January 24th 1944. This aircraft along with 'Evil Eye Egbert' , 'Wolf Pack' & # 42-31463 ditched into the Mediterranean sea a few hours after the mission. Crew was that of 2nd Lt. Charles McCrary assigned to the “Wiley Witch” for the mission crash landed on the water fifteen nautical miles east-northeast off the coast of Bari Itayly because of a fuel shortage, strong headwinds, and a run-away propeller. This aircraft also had a shortened down propeller because a prop had been damaged in earlier months and with no replacement, the chief mechanic snipped the edges off the other 2 good blade tips to balance out the prop. After the crash landing onto the water, the plane stayed afloat for about twenty minutes before it sank. The crew made it safely into their assinged life rafts, one of which only half inflated, so they lashed the two rafts together and started paddling toward the coast of Bari Italy. There were three Italian fishing vessels in the vicinity whose search lights spotlighted their rafts, but none picked them up as they were rescuing crews from other aircraft (Evil Eye Egbert). The crew of the "Wiley Witch" made it to shore about 1:00 PM the next day and started walking towards Bari. They came to a British Army camp where they were fed and put to bed after the exhausting day. The 26th General Hospital were called and an ambulance was sent to pick up the crew. All of the men suffered from exposure, one had frozen feet and another a slight burn.

 

The sister B-17F, the ill fated 42-29646 named "Peg O'My Heart" (serial one number after Wiley Witch 42-29645), also with the 49th Bomb Squadron 2nd Bomb Group (H), shared the similar demise when she was damaged by flak and ditched in the Mediterranean sea near Cape Corse Corsica on November 10th 1943. However some of the crew of the Kenneth Spinning Jr. were seen swimming from the down aircraft, yet were unsucessfully rescued. Later all the assigned crew of "Peg O'My Heart" were declared dead (DED) after the war.

 

En el Mercado Medieval de Ordizia.

On Ordizia's Medieval Market.

From Slagmaur show at Inferno Festival 2017

Just a quick little gift for someone that has never received a dotee and collects witches.

9/24/2016 A Luna Park employee with a witch's hat on the Coney Island boardwalk. Sony a7. Carl Zeiss Planar 45mm 1:2.0.

Halloween Witch Flying on Broomstick

Gezien op een dak in Oud-Aalden, Drenthe.

 

On a roof.

Made Using Nvidia Ansel, while running the game at near max graphical settings, Also using the STLM mod with DNA extreme graphics settings and some LOD mods with parralax mapping.

The Witcher 3 is owned by CD project RED.

Model: Ellie B

Python supplied by Ellie's Reptile Room

 

Copyright Sophie Merlo Photography, 2015

Witch of the Ramblas in Barcelona and his crow.

Find this witch hazel, Hamamelis x intermedia, near King William's Temple.

A project/sculpture for my wife, grew from just 'oh can you make me a witch' to and a caulron, and a set/diorama. There you go a paper macheo diorama complete with mouse, skull, and an even a talking wall, hard to see thta mind you.

Salem Witch Trials Memorial @ Salem, Massachusetts

This one resembles the MPC witch.

Witches' broom gall on a bush.

San Pedro Valley Park

Pacifica, CA

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Reference: Field Guide to PLANT GALLS of California and Other Western Sates by Ron Russo- ISBN 978-0-520-24886-1

Allegedly ‘witch balls’ were hung up in 18th and 19th-century windows to ward off evil spirits. It was believed that witches could be entrapped by their own reflection. The problem being the witch craze was a 14th to 17th century phenomenon according to historians. A more plausible explanation is they were "watch balls" placed in a front window to give a clear view of approaching visitors, welcome or not, early surveillance.!!

What happens when you leave a window open and a witch flys by.

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