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Fabric Lenny is at it again. He has organised a superb mash with 6-7 year old pupils from the Hoyland School in Yorkshire. Congrats to Frankie for giving my such a great drawing to work from!!
You can read more about here on Fabric Lenny's blog. fabriclenny.blogspot.com/2011/03/hoyland-pupils-collabora...
"Brushes" by SNAILICIOUS. The new SNAILICIOUS summer dish. It features just 4 products. The full recipe @
SNAILICIOUS - Rose
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"Клонки" от SNAILICIOUS. Новото SNAILICIOUS лятно ястие. Включва само 4 продукта. Пълната рецепта @
SNAILICIOUS - Роза
Brush cuckoo in the front yard. I have been hearing a bird call that i haven't recognized before. Finally i got a photo of this bird and from the photo i was able to identify it as a brush cuckoo, another new bird for me. At Marrakai NT Australia.
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Showing less than 1/2 inch of the tip of a #10 white nylon sable watercolor brush that has been well-used. (You might even say it has been over-used and abused...)
Macro Mondays: Less Than 1 Inch theme
Nashville & Eastern NE01, the companies rock quarry run that runs 6 days a week, makes the run to the quarry in Gordonsville on this day through the morning fog in Brush Creek. 10-2-23
47830 Beechings Legacy catches the last of the evening sun as it bisects the HS2 works at Lichfield heading 6Q51 Wolverton to Crewe Basford Hall conveying 197109, great to catch the Brush twice in one day.
An eastbound BNSF manifest passes over the CB&Q Brush Creek truss bridge near the border of Parkville on a warm October morning.
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BNSF Saint Joseph Subdivision
Parkville, Missouri, USA
October 13, 2023
Canon EOS 60D
Canon EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6
A tiny bottle brush, too small perhaps for this water bottle.
'Brush' for 'Macro Mondays'
Thank you to all who view, fave or comment on my photo.
HMM
Having a break from photo stacking this week
Here is a photo of my watercolour paint brushes
HMM everyone
thanks for all the comments and favs
Angry because the staff at San Jorge de Quito Ecolodge forgot to fill the banana feeders in the "birding circle."
Rocky Mountain NP
Indian Paint Brush of the Rocky Mountains
Indian paintbrush flowers are named for the clusters of spiky blooms that resemble paintbrushes dipped in bright red or orange-yellow paint. Growing this wildflower can add interest to the native garden. About the Indian paintbrush, also known as Castilleja, Indian paintbrush wildflowers grow in forest clearings and grasslands across the Western and Southwestern United States. Indian paintbrush is a biennial plant that usually develops rosettes the first year and stalks of blooms in spring or early summer of the second year. The plant is short-lived and dies after it sets seed. However, if conditions are right, Indian paintbrush reseeds itself every autumn. This unpredictable wildflower grows when it is planted in close proximity with other plants, primarily grasses or native plants such as penstemon or blue-eyed grass. This is because Indian paintbrush sends roots out to the other plants, then penetrates the roots and “borrows” nutrients it needs in order to survive. They are hemiparasitic on the roots of grasses and forbs. Indian paintbrush tolerates cold winters.