View allAll Photos Tagged echo
ms Echo (JR Shipping) ten anker Macapa (ingang Amazone Rivier) wachtend op de autoriteiten en loodsen
My brother [and family] dog Snickers and my friend's dog Scout are both Australian Shepherds. All three get along great.
Not my idea of a photogenic background but was lucky to get all three to sit still for this shot. Echo's sit/ stay is great but Snickers [middle dog] won't sit long and Scout [on the right] is six months old and this is almost impossible for him to do when other dogs are there as all he wants to do is jump and run.
This is not her first snow. That came early. We have photos of her and her littermates... just a few weeks old... with Echo poking her little snout into crunchy snow beside a river in Merritt.
Needless to say, she's thrilled with this new snow. (We've been having a pretty good time too!)
So basically, I follow a bunch of Ask Pony roleplay blogs and all of them combine art and writing seriously well. Now while I usually only follow alternate versions of the main characters I do read a bunch of background character blogs as well. It’s actually because of them I’ve been able to give a crap about making the custom pony versions of them.
Now, Echo Fleetfoot had such a pretty colour scheme and such a sweet backstory (being blind and having echolocation as her talent) I decided to give doing her hairstyle and eyes would be an awesome challenge.
I am debating on giving her rosy cheeks but hey, I got her little buck teeth and eyes mostly well done…
Check out her blog here: ask-echo-wonderbolt.tumblr.com/
Couldn't decide on the processing for this one- retouched with LR4, CS5, and PP64
Lit with an alienbees B800 and small DIY softbox from overhead, reflector below held by model. Powered on location in Annapolis with a vagabond mini
A850 and Zeiss
The projects carried out by FAO not only provides communities with means for production, but also improves nutrition by providing a more diversified diet.
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Les projets réalisés par la FAO ne se contentent pas de fournir des moyens de production aux populations concernées; ils leur permettent également d'améliorer leur alimentation grâce à un régime plus diversifié.
© EU - Credits: EC/ECHO/Isabel COELLO
The first visitors to Indian Echo Caverns, most likely were the Susquehannock Indians. They lived along the Swatara creek, upon which the mouth of the caverns sits. It is currently believed that they used the caverns as a refuge during inclement weather because of the constant 52° temperature inside the caverns. The Susquehannock vanished from the area in the 1670's leaving the region around the caverns virtually unoccupied.
The first non-Native American explorers of the caverns were most likely French fur trappers. They traveled along the rivers and creeks of the north east during the latter part of the 17th Century and into the early 18th Century. Most likely they discovered the mouth of the caverns as they traveled on the Swatara Creek. These intrepid explorers wrote about their tales in the caverns attracting more and more explorers.
The Caverns were first opened to the general public in 1929, when Mr. John Bieber opened the doors to the caverns. Mr. Bieber realized that many people wishing to visit the caverns might be put off by the treacherous, uneven terrain that nature created. Bieber undertook a massive commercialization process, in which all of the pathways in the caverns were made safe for travel, as well as opening up many rooms closed off because of huge mineral deposits. The caverns were a natural Mecca of the region, attracting thousands of visitors in its first years. However, sadly, the caverns fell upon hard times during the Great Depression, and Mr. Bieber lost ownership to the bank. All was not lost, for in 1942, Mr. Edward S. Swartz, a Hershey native purchased the caverns. Today, the ownership of the caverns still remain in his family, with hundreds of thousands of visitors walking the paths of the Susquehannocks each year.
Zachary Zufreur looks great in Shiki's Echoes Mesh Outfit in Black.
marketplace
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/SHIKI-ECHOES-blazer-outfit-B...
slurl
ECHO Six Transistor green body w/dark green reverse dial,this set looks awesome in person Its a stand out.There are Several versions of this radio in body design and circuity, six transistors 3 transistors and 2 transistors,this one is a early version with holes in the grill,Has Kobe Kogyo TEN transistors inside.Please excuse the reflection in the center brass dial and say hello to the camera.
The first visitors to Indian Echo Caverns, most likely were the Susquehannock Indians. They lived along the Swatara creek, upon which the mouth of the caverns sits. It is currently believed that they used the caverns as a refuge during inclement weather because of the constant 52° temperature inside the caverns. The Susquehannock vanished from the area in the 1670's leaving the region around the caverns virtually unoccupied.
The first non-Native American explorers of the caverns were most likely French fur trappers. They traveled along the rivers and creeks of the north east during the latter part of the 17th Century and into the early 18th Century. Most likely they discovered the mouth of the caverns as they traveled on the Swatara Creek. These intrepid explorers wrote about their tales in the caverns attracting more and more explorers.
The Caverns were first opened to the general public in 1929, when Mr. John Bieber opened the doors to the caverns. Mr. Bieber realized that many people wishing to visit the caverns might be put off by the treacherous, uneven terrain that nature created. Bieber undertook a massive commercialization process, in which all of the pathways in the caverns were made safe for travel, as well as opening up many rooms closed off because of huge mineral deposits. The caverns were a natural Mecca of the region, attracting thousands of visitors in its first years. However, sadly, the caverns fell upon hard times during the Great Depression, and Mr. Bieber lost ownership to the bank. All was not lost, for in 1942, Mr. Edward S. Swartz, a Hershey native purchased the caverns. Today, the ownership of the caverns still remain in his family, with hundreds of thousands of visitors walking the paths of the Susquehannocks each year.
Excited to have the project Susan Tuttle & I Started featured in the upcoming issue of Artful Blogging :)
Learn more at my site:
Echo Lake Park is a park located along the Mount Evans Scenic Byway about 60 mi (97 km) west of Denver, Colorado. The park provides a stone shelter with picnic tables and barbecue grills on one end of the lake, while an Arapaho National Forest campground is found at the other. Access to backpacking trails, including the Chicago Lakes trail and Lincoln Lakes trail, can be found adjacent to the lake. The park is part of the Denver Mountain Parks system.
Echo Lake is a shallow, oligotrophic lake situated at 10,600 ft (3,230 m) above sea level near Mount Evans in the Colorado Rocky Mountains. It formed during the latest period of glaciation roughly 10,000 years ago. As glaciers retreated in the Chicago Creek valley, lateral moraines formed a natural dam to drainage, forming the lake. The ecosystem around the lake is dominated by Engleman Spruce and Sub-Alpine Fir, with some Limber Pine on exposed sites. (Wikipedia)
The good ship S.S. Down The Hatch is no longer sailing the high seas. Now she's permanently moored in Hollywood's Echo Lake. Her owner, Min, cut a hole in the port hull and serves food to the locals in Min & Bill's Dockside Diner.
For those of you who don't believe that movies existed before Star Wars was released in 1977, Min and Bill are the main characters in the 1930 film Min and Bill starring Marie Dressler and Wallace Beery in the title roles. Dressler won an Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance in the film.
the more I look at her, the more she reminds me of Adriana from The Soprano's. this is not a bad thing.
I missed most of this, but managed to catch a few pics of the final night. Echoes of Oz in Bradford City Park, by Irregular Arts.
Okay, this has nothing to do with the photo... but I have to get it off my chest.
If I hear one more media person talk about the "extra hour of daylight" we now have.... I'm going to explode.
(Of course, the upside of exploding would be the release of all the pent-up ideas in my head...)
Much smaller than a great horned owl, Echo is a barred owl. When people come close to his enclosure, he often tries to scare them away with a "who-WHO" that has earned him his name.
The first visitors to Indian Echo Caverns, most likely were the Susquehannock Indians. They lived along the Swatara creek, upon which the mouth of the caverns sits. It is currently believed that they used the caverns as a refuge during inclement weather because of the constant 52° temperature inside the caverns. The Susquehannock vanished from the area in the 1670's leaving the region around the caverns virtually unoccupied.
The first non-Native American explorers of the caverns were most likely French fur trappers. They traveled along the rivers and creeks of the north east during the latter part of the 17th Century and into the early 18th Century. Most likely they discovered the mouth of the caverns as they traveled on the Swatara Creek. These intrepid explorers wrote about their tales in the caverns attracting more and more explorers.
The Caverns were first opened to the general public in 1929, when Mr. John Bieber opened the doors to the caverns. Mr. Bieber realized that many people wishing to visit the caverns might be put off by the treacherous, uneven terrain that nature created. Bieber undertook a massive commercialization process, in which all of the pathways in the caverns were made safe for travel, as well as opening up many rooms closed off because of huge mineral deposits. The caverns were a natural Mecca of the region, attracting thousands of visitors in its first years. However, sadly, the caverns fell upon hard times during the Great Depression, and Mr. Bieber lost ownership to the bank. All was not lost, for in 1942, Mr. Edward S. Swartz, a Hershey native purchased the caverns. Today, the ownership of the caverns still remain in his family, with hundreds of thousands of visitors walking the paths of the Susquehannocks each year.
"Why?"
His ears flat against his head, fighting back tears, that was the the one thought that echoed through his mind again and again.
He stood there, holding the flowers that had been meant for her. His heart was beating erratically in his chest, his body shaking as he felt the chilling sadness gripping him like a grim arctic wind. It was all he could do to keep himself from collapsing right then and there.
Why?
He clenched his eyes shut, tears starting to stream down his face. He looked down at the ground, hoping nobody noticed hom, hoping nobody could see him. He felt a lump rising in his throat and he knew he couldn't fight it back any longer.
He started to walk away from the front of the theater - the very theater where they had first met. The theater where they had gone on their first date. The theater where he first professed his love for her. The theater where he had proposed.
The same theater where he found out, that she would no longer be a part of his life.
As he walked away, he could feel their eyes on him. He just wanted them to go away, all of them, and leave him alone. He needed to be alone. He simply dropped the flowers on the sidewalk, burying his face in his paws and running down the street, no longer capable of holding it back. He started to bawl as he ran, barely able to run straight, barely able to breathe.
The last thing he would remember her by, would be the sweet scent of the flowers he had brought her.
***DISCLAIMER***
This was just an interesting story I wrote up for an interesting picture. I assure you both he and the Ms are fine and dandy.