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Scott, Holly & David Meads (ES&S) ensure that all the equipment at each precinct functions properly.
â–¶ I, on day one of joining a national campaign to aid the American Civil Liberties Union in its defense of the U.S. Constitution against the actions of Donald Trump.
â–¶ On Twitter, at #DrinkForGood.
â–¶ Personally, I'm donating $1.00 for every beer I order in February.
â–¶ My 'badge' received a few quizzical glances, maybe because I, in my zeal, had written it as #DrinkForJustice.
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â–¶ Pictured: I and a glass of Danzig Baltic Porter at a 'tap takeover' for the beers of Virginia brewery, Devils Backbone, at ...
Avondale Estates, Georgia.
1 February 2017.
â–¶ Please note: neither Devils Backbone nor My Parents' Basement take a position on this campaign.
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"Baltic-style porter that blends a strong English porter with a Germanic lager approach. This fairly robust, strong black lager has notes of chocolate and coffee with hints of caramelized sugar.
Color: Black
ABV: 8.0
IBU: 28
Hops: Northern Brewer, Tettnang
Malts: Pilsner, Vienna, Dark Munich, Brown, Chocolate Wheat, Caramel, Carafe 2 Special"
Yeast: Lager
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Photo by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.
— Follow on Twitter: @Cizauskas.
— Follow on Facebook: YoursForGoodFermentables.
— Follow on Instagram: @tcizauskas.
â–¶ Camera: Samsung Galaxy 7.
â–¶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.
A driftwood and stone fence on Hokitika Beach. I think this was part of Driftwood and Sand, an annual event where people go to the beach and create sculptures from flotsam and jetsam. Very fun.
Hokitika, West Coast, NZ
taken @ backbone while the band sets up.
I didn't actually take this, because i was super comfy and didn't want to get up to take the picture. Also it would have been kind of hard as i had several people on me :D
After Bryce and before the Grand Canyon I went to Escalante and the Grand Staircase. NE of Bryce there was much to see but always a long way to travel to see it
This is the Devil's Backbone, so named because the mountain range protrudes like veins in a leaf from a central ridge, or like the ribs from a backbone.
These were taken during the week of 6/11-6/18 while staying at Backbone State Park.
Everytime I go to Backbone I find something old and something new. This was Iowa's first state park and a destination I visit as often as I can.
Steve W.
This is a selfie that I took with my life's backbone, locomotive Metra 210, at DGMS during the first of two round trips with it on 10/29/2018, the eve of its designated birthday. I had a blast hanging out with 210 and its crews that night!
Taken at the Pacific Science Center in Seattle, Washington.
Photo licensed Creative Commons, please use for any purpose, just provide credit.
Photo by Ryan Somma of ideonexus.com.
These were taken during the week of 6/11-6/18 while staying at Backbone State Park.
Everytime I go to Backbone I find something old and something new. This was Iowa's first state park and a destination I visit as often as I can.
Steve W.
photos by Jeff Dunnicliff
These photos are from the front line of our June 5th flotilla. Backbone's lead support boat, checking in with frontline paddlers, coordinating deployment and supporting the brave kayaktivists as they faced off with a monstrous oil rig in Seattle's Elliott Bay.
When we learned of the 5am departure, we rallied as many as we could to come to the faceoff.
Greenpeace attempted to establish a hard blockade that would have provided much more time to get people on the water, but it collapsed within a few minutes. Backbone Campaign's Flotilla launched and Greenpeace's collection of fierce paddlers joined us in attempting to slow the departure of Shell's arctic destroying, climate cooking plans.
Though we would have loved to have stopped it, we hope that the courage of these few will inspire others in the future and inform future actions. Immediately after it left the waters of Seattle, it was intercepted by additional kayaktivists off the shore of Bainbridge Island, and then again in the more treacherous waters offshore of Port Townsend.
Our power and potential for on water resistance is growing.
sHell No!
Miss Michael Finsterbusch, Queen Mary, University of London
This image is of a pericyte, a specialised cell that wraps around blood vessels. The red lines running along the length of the perticyte are actin fibres, providing strength to the cell like a skeleton.
The green dots are receptor proteins. These are essential for the pericytes to interact with their environment. The scientists hope to discover how pericytes behave during inflammation. Inflammation is a key part of the processes that happen during heart disease.