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... Sniffed out the whole shopping bag ... not óne single juicy bone found ! ... I think I'm being neglected ! ...
LIMG_4471_lr
In Italy where my husband is from there is a tradition to give small packages like soft bags with colorful candy inside. This was a bigger one with the hard shell around and candy inside of it. This is a miniature bag, super cute blue, meant for a baby boy. My son was born 13 years ago but I still keep this as a souvenir and memory from that time.
HSOS!!
Mummy Marian has bought a bag that Peter and Oleg can sit in
PETER:
Being carried is great Oleg
OLEG:
It's a bit small though.
PETER:
I like sitting so close to you Oleg.
OLEG:
I want at least 1 inch of space between you and me.
PETER:
Half an inch....please.
OLEG:
(Sigh)....Okay then..., but then you have to sit still.
PETER:
I will
ODC: Bag(s)
"... for CrAzY TuEsDaY and yes, it must be a bag showing Bears, I don’t go out without any Bears :-)) "
[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]
Taken May 4, 2026 and uploaded for the group
CrAzY Tuesday #Bags
Gigaset GS290
ƒ/2.0
3.5 mm
1/33 Sec
ISO 530
Hello my amazing Flickr friends !!
Today is a blue day Color My World Daily and the theme at Looking close on Friday is bag. Once again, it is an awesome theme ! Few years ago (but it seems like yesterday) we had a birthday party for my oldest son. It was his 5th birthday, I believe, and we had a « candy bar » for this occasion. It was the easiest thing to set up : a table, few balloons and bowls of candies with spoons and some paper cups to put candies in them. The kids were so impressed !!!! My son was super happy with his « candy bar » and he become the coolest kid in school for the next few years. Of course, the parents were less thrilled after realizing that the effects of sugar rush can last way after the trip back home. The bags you see in my picture are what is left from our glorious candy bar. Those were full of tiny yellow bubble gums looking like gold nuggets and a huge hit at the candy bar. Today I use them as props but I always smile when thinking about my son’s 5th birthday.
FYI: I’m very busy at work so I might not be able to answer your comments… So comment at your own risks ! However, I will read everything for sure !
Mucho, mucho amor for you !!
Thank you so much for all your lovely comments / favs/ general support / happy thoughts!! Stay safe and well!! And see you soon on Flickr !
Chilling on Hongdae Street, one of Seoul's most popular and overrated street venues.
Trivia: There is one communality with my "Full Colour Feature" image posted two days ago. Can you find it?
... theme for Macro Monday
It's full of treasures but my most valuable treasure is still waiting to be found
I'm grateful for your views... happy Macro Monday :)
Unlike bees and hummingbirds that play an important role in plant reproduction as pollinators, flowerpiercers are more likely to be anti-pollinators. That is, they gather nectar directly at the source by piercing the blossom at the base without carrying pollen from plant to plant and even restrict visits by true pollinators. However, the Masked Flowerpiercer with its longer beak is able to reach nectar in the normal manner, contacting and transporting pollen a good percentage of the time. In fact, this particular Masked Flowerpiercer was competing with the hummers at one of the feeders in the gardens at Balcón Tumpiki in the Andean cloud forest of northwest Ecuador.
Vue sur Bages avec mes super cuissardes de sept lieux.
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An image originally uploaded to Flickr in early 2011 (a few days after I joined) now rescanned / processed to yield a better result, including correcting the overly warm colour cast. Well, I figured it deserved a bit of TLC for its 50th Anniversary! The original version has been deleted.
The shot, taken in the summer of 1974, captures the eastern end of Healey Mills Marshalling Yard from the Storrs Hill Road overbridge. The yard was still a vibrant and busy operation with reasonably well-maintained tracks and a small locomotive depot (55C / HM). No surprise then that this was a well-visited spot by both local enthusiasts and those from further afield.
Having only just arrived I was pretty lucky to bag this rarity, a green livered class 40 unit 40039, heading east with an unfitted rake of empty 16T mineral wagons. Rare because there were very few class 40s still knocking around in the original British Railways green (most were now in rail-blue), but also because 40039 was one of the first members of the class to be withdrawn some 18 months later in January 1976. It lasted just over 16 years in service and never received the rail-blue paint job.
Strangely enough the Yard was opened as recently as 1963 but, with the closure of the Yorkshire collieries and a move to trainload rather than wagonload traffic, sorting work would come to an end in 1985. The slow death of other activity around the yard, including locomotive maintenance, finally saw some of the tracks removed and others abandoned to the encroachment of nature. In the last few years it has been a somewhat surreal experience to see the still-glowing ground signals shining amongst the trees and shrubbery guarding rusted and unusable tracks that hadn't seen any activity for years.
On a positive note however, in recent months the area has been gradually 'de-forested' and tracks once again exposed in readiness for lifting and partial replacement. Apparently the Yard might see some life again, this time as a train-holding facility for the Transpennine Route Upgrade project.
Kodak Ektachrome 64
22nd July 1974
2017 was a mixed bag - a great year personally, but a disaster for society and the environment.
It was also the year of the mobile phone, with over 1/2 of the images on Flickr this year coming from mobile phones. This image was with the iPhone 6S, at the Atlanta Marriott Marquis.
Here are my favorite images that I posted to Flickr in 2017: www.flickr.com/photos/pagedooley/albums/72157691640966225