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One of Monty Hall's most flexible volunteers, Bones is up for adoption for the very first time!
If you would like to adopt a Fixture, please make a Swag for Life or paid-in-full pledge of $180 or more to WFMU's 2026 Marathon by 11:59pm on March 15th, 2026, and then send an email via this page to stake your claim. Make sure that you specify in the email that you'd like the WFMU Fixture of your Choice!
First Come, First Served!
Burning Man 2007 - Unfortunately I do not know the name of this piece, but it is Incredible. It is entirely made of bones. It was also at First Camp in 2008.
My son custom carves these pendants from bone. He does custom design work. His attention to detail is amazing. Each one is a little work of art.
Colonel Edward Lucas carved two bone rings (left and center) while incarcerated at Libby Prison in Richmond, Virginia. Lucas, the son of Territorial Governor Robert Lucas, made the initialed ring (center) for his own son. The initials S.K.F (on the ring at the right) refer to Samuel K. Fishel of Manchester, Iowa, a veteran of the 30th Iowa Infantry, who was held at Andersonville.
Annual teen library clue hunt. This year celebrated all the dead things with the Book of Bones. Vampires, Necromancers, The day of the dead and gravediggers were all present in Nambour library.
I love Carol O'Connell's books. I stumbled onto them a few years ago and now own almost all of the Mallory series. I important word in that sentence is "own" because while I read a lot, I am no longer driven to own every book.
This is not one of the Mallory series, but it does share the mystery aspect of them as well as the psychological tension, the good writing, the depth of characters and the twist at the end- just when you think it's over, but it's not really. I loved it.
Set out one day on a photo trip. Packed up the van with food, camera gear, redbull. Ready for anything. We didn't even get a mile from the house and came across these bones in the middle of the street. The sun was starting to set, and the light was amazing. Whenever I see a great sunset, I turn around to see whats behind me. Something is being lit by that wonderful light, and is usually more interesting than yet another sunset. Behind me there were some very interesting trees so I walked over a little bit to shoot them. By the time I got back to these bones the light was already gone. I set up an SB-600 on a stand with a full CTO and created my own sunset. The photo came out interesting. But not nearly as interesting as it would have been 10 minutes prior.
The upper floor of the former bone mill in Aylsham, built in the 1860s on the Aylsham Navigation.
Blogged - uealandscape.wordpress.com/2012/01/28/dunkirk-aylsham/