View allAll Photos Tagged cherokee

Cherokee Fiddle - Phil Salazar. This is the true story about a fiddler named Scooter from Silverton, Colorado. If you're a fan of fiddle music and steam trains, enjoy the link!

 

Scooter, Cherokee Fiddler - 1919-1997

 

youtu.be/N9tUTgy0TZU

 

Precious dolls house fiddle measuring 2.5 inches x 1 inch, 6.5 cm x 2.5 cm.

 

Monday, January 9: Member’s Choice: Inspired by a Song

 

also for

 

45. A Musical Instrument - 117 pictures in 2017

May the Warm Winds of Heaven

Blow softly upon your house.

May the Great Spirit

Bless all who enter there.

May your Mocassins

Make happy tracks

in many snows,

and may the Rainbow

Always touch your shoulder.

 

In the Colorado San Juan Mountains near Telluride

  

Just getting out on a drive one weekend..

Near Cherokee Park Road, Colorado.

Cherokee 140 in snow-melt at Loveland-Ft Collins Airport, Colorado.

A Cherokee Dogwood in full bloom. The variegated leaves enhance the colors. #tree #flower #CherokeeBraveDogwood #plant #nature #Natur #Baum #arbre #Blumen #fleur #花 #木

A Cherokee Brave Dogwood after the blooms are gone. Even after the flowers are gone the foliage is beautiful. #plant #leaves #Pflanze #nature #Natur

 

Cloudland Canyon State Park - GA

Cherokee County, Oklahoma

Kestrel preening. The shape of the feathers reminds me of the American Indian's feathered headgear, worn by the Cherokee.

A Cherokee Dogwood Tree blooms in the springtime.

Cloudland Canyon State Park, GA

LOUISVILLE,KENTUCKY (USA)

Bit of a wonky one, sketched standing up!

Jeep Cherokee at the Tag der Helfer in Delmenhorst.

Cherokee Alphabet daze and confuse everyone! First, the Cherokee alphabet is technically not an alphabet at all, but a syllabary. That means each Cherokee symbol represents a syllable, not just a consonant or a vowel. More at: www.native-languages.org/cherokee_alphabet.htm

Hats available at the Cherokee Nation in Cherokee North Carolina

The name "Cherokee Rose" is derived from the Cherokee native American tribe-, who widely distributed the plant. It came to symbolize the pain and suffering of the Cherokee people on the long and terrible Trail of Tears. In 1916 it was set as the State Flower for the State of Georgia.

 

I chose this for the the March 27, Flowers in March Theme of the Smiles on Saturday Group. HSoS everyone.

Rosa laevigata (Cherokee Rose) is commonly associated with the Trail of Tears, the forced relocation of Native Americans in the southeastern United States. Its white petals are said to represent the tears the Cherokee women shed during the period of great hardship and grief throughout US government-forced march from the Cherokees' home to U.S. forts, such as Gilmer. The flower's gold center is said to symbolize the gold taken from the Cherokee tribe. (from Wikipedia) (22-05-26-2736)

Another view of Cherokee Falls form further down Sitton Gulch Creek in Rising Fawn, GA.

My Dogwood isn't as far along an the one a few doors from me but it's looking good...

Delta Heritage Air Park, Delta, BC. September 1, 2018.

Beautiful Hike. Thank God we had 2 inches of rain, or the Falls would have only been a trickle.

Cloudland Canyon State Park - Georgia

Dog Hill in Cherokee Park

Louisville, KY

Jeep Cherokee Laredo in Hamburg.

N226NV 🇺🇸

🏢 Allegiant Air 🇺🇸

✈️ Airbus A320-214 🇪🇺

Flight : G42020

Sarasota, FL 🇺🇸 to Columbus, OH 🇺🇸

 

N4491F 🇺🇸

🏢 Cirrus Aviation 🇺🇸

✈️ Piper PA-28-161 🇺🇸

 

📍 KSRQ/SRQ 🇺🇸

38× 27㎝ pencil drawing

Georgia Northeastern grain empties return south to Marietta, GA behind a mix of first generation EMD's passing through some nice autumn colors.

I've shot this barn before, but never got any decent light on it. And there was always a lot of mud. And no bales--totally lucked out here!!! HSS!

Texture by Skeletalmess.

Our 3 small dogwoods in line with the daffodils are now blooming as the daffies are now gone! These trees really haven't grown since we planted them and only 3 of 5 survived. They do bloom sparingly every year. They bloom a couple weeks later than our native dogwoods.

Os presento al primer cherokee de la temporada, fruto de la primera de las tres sesiones realizadas a esta especie hasta el momento (si descuento otra previa a todas ellas, improvisada en otro área distinta). El otro día me decía el compañero con el que comparto el trabajo de las avutardas (Otis tarda) que es una especie "cansada", y tiene toda la razón. El trabajo de campo acaba haciéndose duro y complicado antes de empezar a disparar la cámara. Han sido numerosos (muuuchos) viajes a la zona avutardera, prescindiendo de muchas tardes con la familia, desánimos ante los inconvenientes que la nefasta protección que la administración autonómica hace del entorno del Lek han propiciado molestias muy serias a las aves (un día censábamos más de medio centenar de individuos y otro solo dos), muchas horas de observación con los telescopios intentando identificar las áreas más querenciosas de las aves, a la vez que adivinar las mejores ubicaciones para los hides, solicitud de los permisos, colocación de un hide fijo, ... Y cuando ya estás por fin dentro del cubículo de tela o de madera ubicado para la ocasión, el trabajo sigue requiriendo una cierta fortaleza mental; llámalo "motivación". O pones el despertador a las 5:00 de la madrugada innecesariamente porque esa noche no has dormido y vas viendo pasar las horas y te acabas levantando antes de que suene, o ves que las avutardas se te vienen al atardecer delante de donde tú estás y te obliga a quedarte en el interior del zulo hasta entrada la noche para poder salir sin molestarlas.

 

Sí, trabajar esta especie requiere necesariamente una gran dosis de motivación.

 

Al final no teníamos nada claro que este año pudiéramos llegar a fotografiarla y hemos temido incluso por la integridad del Lek ante la dejación de funciones de Medio Ambiente. Sin embargo, ... acabamos hasta sorprendiéndonos nosotros mismos y hubo recompensa en nuestra primera sesión, aunque no hubiera cerca bolas blancas como semáforos. Os dejo esta primera imagen de un elegante macho luciéndose por las arenas nupciales con unas luces muy agradables. Espero que os guste y espero no cansaros demasiado con las siguientes, jejeje.

 

Saludos a todos en vuestro regreso de las vacaciones, seguro que con las pilas bien cargadas.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

They have about played, their pretty colors, away for the season ...

But when in full bloom, they were so pretty ..

This was taken back, around Easter ....

 

Wishing each of you, a wonderful...~

~ TREE- MENDOUSLY Tuesday

Jeep Cherokee at the Street Mag Show Hannover.

The blossoms on the Dogwood are open now and I was able to get this one that was hanging over the fence.. Max cut off a little branch that was leaning on the fence to the backyard and I kept it so I could get a few more shots while it is in bloom...

I'm not great with identifying plants so it's just my best guess that these are cherokee roses. They're the state flower here so that'd explain why I see them all over.

Limpkin on the railing at Cherokee Point Park

A second sunrise photo over downtown Vancouver (BC, Canada) on a Friday morning. 1600ft over Burrard Inlet about 5 minutes after the beginning of civil twilight -- the best light of the day.

 

Photo shot from my Piper Cherokee, looking out the vent window, using a Nikon D850, Nikkor 24mm f1/4 lens wide open, with Kenyon Labs gyro.

 

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