View allAll Photos Tagged fuzz
I built this pedal stock first and found it to be very polite...which is not what I"m looking for in a fuzz.
Garage Fuzz e Againe no Sesc Pompéia.
Se quiser usar alguma imagem, por favor, dê os devidos créditos:
www.flickr.com/robertogasparro
Contato : rrgasparro@gmail.com
My new Skreddy Pedals Hybrid Fuzz Driver showed up today. Man, that is one amazing pedal. I hesitate to even call it a, "fuzz" pedal. It really kind of straddles the overdrive/fuzz line at a lot of settings. A lot of fuzz pedals don't behave well with humbuckers and I almost always play guitars with humbuckers, so this is kind of a big deal for me. I've wanted one for ages and it's everything I'd hoped it would be.
It's not a very involved board, but it does the things I want to hear.
I think eventually I'd like to put a Catalinbread Talisman pedal back behind the Heptode. Other than that, I'm pretty happy with my little Boss board.
Demeter Opto Compulator, Skreddy Hybrid Fuzz Driver, Retrosonic Distortion, Catalinbread Zero Point, Heptode Virtuoso.
They seemed to be everywhere today when I went for a bike ride along the river. The adults seem to do a very good job of keeping them away or at a bad vantage point for photographing. I am sure there will be plenty of opportunities in the next couple of weeks.
Alternate post-processing (playing around with VSCO) of a shot from 2012. Original here: www.flickr.com/photos/timichango/7997650024/
fuzz around a flower seed along with part of the hairy seed magnified 300x taken with a Scanning electron microscope.
Finally found out that it is called a "Crowned Crane" or "Balearica pavonina" these birds are quite common in Senegal.
The Black Crowned Crane (Balearica pavonina) is a bird in the crane family Gruidae. It was once called also Kaffir Crane.
It occurs in dry savannah in Africa south of the Sahara, although in nests in somewhat wetter habitats. There are two subspecies: B. p. pavonina in the west and the more numerous B. p. ceciliae in east Africa.
This species and the closely related Grey Crowned Crane, B. regulorum, which prefers wetter habitats for foraging, are the only cranes that can nest in trees. This habit, amongst other things, is a reason why the relatively small Balearica cranes are believed to closely resemble the ancestral members of the Gruidae. It is about 1 m (3.3 ft) long, has a 1.87 m (6.2 ft) wingspan and weighs about 3.6 kg (8 lbs).