View allAll Photos Tagged folklore
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♥ Pixie
They will stay here through the winter, but have to share the lake with a lot of extra geese.
Folklore: they are a sign of fidelity as they mate for life.
Each city of Flanders has its giant, which are a part of Flanders folklore... The giant of Hazebrouck is Tisje Tasje, see more on Wikipédia: fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tisje_Tasje
Scacciapensieri e "ciancianedda"...
Lo scacciapensieri, chiamato in gergo marranzanu o 'ngangaranguni, è uno strumento tipico siciliano usato dai gruppi folkloristici per le ballate e le canzoni. E' in metallo ed ha un suono molto particolare. La campanella invece qui è detta ciancianedda. Buon ascolto :DD
Anche se giriamo il mondo in cerca di ciò che è bello, o lo portiamo già in noi, o non lo troveremo.
Even if we turn the world in search of what is beautiful, or the port is already in us, or is not.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Dancers of Ballet Folklorico. Yashica Electro 35 GSN. Ilford Delta 3200 @ 1000. Developed in Xtol 1+1. Digitized with DSLR.
Being a Welshman now living in Wiltshire, I will always love taking trips back to Wales and exploring the country, especially around Brecon Beacons National Park.
It's an incredibly beautiful part of Wales and not only takes on a different appearance throughout the year, but also from one minute to the next.
This was shot about 3 hours after the previous picture that I posted of LLyn Y Fan Fach.
It was completely transformed from the serene and calm lake with crystal clear still waters that I had just walked away from, to the image you see now.
Even with the cloud coming in shrouding the top of the mountain and the wind whipping across the lake, it changed the mood of the area but still remains stunning to look at.
Many Thanks to the +3,950,000 visitors of my photographic stream
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© Ioan C. Bacivarov
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“Guinea Fowl craned her head and admired the delicate speckles covering her back”- How The Guinea Fowl Got Her Spots: A Swahili Tale Of Friendship by Barbara Knutson
Krampus was created as a counterpart to kindly St. Nicholas, who rewarded children with sweets. Krampus, in contrast, would swat "wicked" children, stuff them in a sack, and take them away to his lair.
According to folklore, Krampus purportedly shows up in towns the night of December 5, known as Krampusnacht, or Krampus Night. The next day, December 6, is Nikolaustag, or St. Nicholas Day, when children look outside their door to see if the shoe or boot they'd left out the night before contains either presents (a reward for good behavior) or a rod (bad behavior).