View allAll Photos Tagged gargle."
The De Chambeau Ranch was one of the largest ranches in the Mono Basin. It raised cattle, sheep, chickens, alfalfa, and vegetables to be sold in Bodie, Aurora, Lundy, and Lee Vining.
The 320-acre ranch contains the original buildings, some of the original barbed wire, ditches, roadways, fence lines, and wells.
Drawn to California by gold, Louis W. De Chambeau's father moved to Bodie from Ontario, Canada in 1878. Louis W. followed two years later when he was 18. In 1906 he purchased the ranch from Italian immigrant Nicholas Dondero, who sold it to fund exploration in Alaska.
The De Chambeau family was self-sufficient except for a few staples, such as sugar and salt. Their beds were stuffed with feathers frm Mono Lake ducks and if they had sore throats, they gargled with Mono Lake water.
Ranchers could handle many tasks: stack hay, shape horseshoes and nails from iron, grow vegetables in the sandy soil, butcher hogs and sheep. They also traded skills for goods. Louis W. De Chambeau crafted skis, for example, which he sold in Body, Lundy, and throughout the Mono Basin.
Norm De Chambeau:
“So my grandfather decided that when he moved here to the ranch that he would, uh, make skis from then on, (And, uh, he sold them, the men’s skis for $8 a pair plus 50 cents or a dollar for the pole. And that was huge money in them days. And he ended up estimating between 500 to 1000 skis that he’d built in Mono Basin, (and) sold to the different people in here.”
A pair of De Chambeau’s hand-carved skis is on display at the Mammoth Ski Museum and at Bodie State Historic Park.
Edibility
· Fruit is eaten in Malay and Sierra Leone.
· Fruit used as flavoring.
· In some parts of India, leaves used as tea substitute.
Folkloric
· In the Philippines, decoction of fresh roots used as gargle for toothaches, and a decoction of the leaves and fruits to clean wounds.
· Decoction or syrup of roots (in sugared water) used for asthma.
· In Sinaloa, plant used for snake bites. Strong decoction of leaves taken internally and poultice of wounds applied to the wound.
· Influenza, cough, mumps, incessant high fever, malaria, cervical lymph node tuberculosis: use 30 to 60 gms dried roots or 60 to 120 gms fresh roots in decoction.
· Fever: Take decoction of bark or infusion of leaves and flowering tops as tea.
· Hemoptysis, pulmonary tuberculosis: use 6 to 9 gms dried flowers in decoction.
· Dermatitis, eczema, pruritus: use fresh stems and leaves.
· Rheumatism - Spread oil on leaves, warm over low flame and apply on affected part.
· Sprains, wounds, contusions: Use pounded fresh leaves applied as poultice.
· Leaf oil used for pruritic skin conditions and antiseptic for wounds.
· Decoction of plant used for tetanus, rheumatism, malaria.
· Decoction of fresh leaves used as gargle for toothaches.
· In Java, leaves applied to swellings; also used as lotion or fomentation for rheumatism.
· Decoction of leaves used internally as emetic.
· In West Africa, an aromatic infusion of the leaves and flowering tops, sometimes mixed with Ocimum, is used as febrifuge and diaphoretic.
· In Uganda, used to treat symptoms of tuberculosis.
· In Costa Rica, leaf infusion used as stimulant.
· Infusion of leaves used for bilious fevers and catarrhal affections.
· Lotions used externally for eczematous eruptions.
· Infusion of flowers used as pectoral for children.
· Tincture of bark used as tonic.
· Pounded leaves used as antiseptic for cuts, ulcers and swelling.
· Decoction of leaves and fruits used for wounds.
source: stuart xchange
Ref. IS 10bis_21
Iceland 2003
Fotografías tomadas a las 12 de la noche, bajo una ténue luz solar reflejada. Llegar a la explanada de Namaskard en plena noche, sin nadie alrededor, sobrepone, se oye respirar la Tierra. Ritmicamente los diversos pozuelos humeantes lanzan ruidos gorgogeantes, como de respiración pesada y lenta mientras se forman bulbos de agua que se hinchan y explotan para soltar los gases que salen de las entrañas. Cada expiración fotografiada ofrece formas distintas como en una danza ininterrumpida. Es la respiración de la tierra.
© Manel Armengol
Contact: armengol.manel@gmail.com
Folk medicine
16th-century herbalist John Gerard recommended Auricularia auricula-judae for curing a sore throat.
Auricularia auricula-judae has been used as a medicinal mushroom by many herbalists. It was used as a poultice to treat inflammations of the eye,[14] as well as a palliative for throat problems.[12] The 16th-century herbalist John Gerard, writing in 1597, recommended A. auricula-judae for a very specific use; other fungi were used more generally. He recommends the preparation of a liquid extract by boiling the fruit bodies in milk, or else leaving them steeped in beer, which would then be sipped slowly in order to cure a sore throat.[41] The resultant broth was probably not dissimilar to the Chinese soups that use A. polytricha.[41] Carolus Clusius, writing in 1601, also said that the species could be gargled to cure a sore throat,[49] and John Parkinson, writing in 1640, reported that boiling in milk or steeping in vinegar was "the onely use the are put unto that I know".[49]
Writing in 1694, herbalist John Pechey described A. auricula-judae by saying "It grows to the Trunk of the Elder-Tree. Being dried it will keep a good year. Boyl'd in Milk, or infus'd in Vinegarm 'tis good to gargle the Mouth or Throat in Quinsies, and other inflammations of the Mouth and Throat. And being infus'd in some proper Water, it is good in Diseases of the Eyes."[12] The species also saw use as an astringent due to its ability to absorb water.[41] There are recorded medicinal usages from Scotland, where it was again used as a gargle for sore throats, and from Ireland, where, in an attempt to cure jaundice, it was boiled in milk.[17] The medicinal use of A. auricula-judae continued until at least 1860, when it was still sold at Covent Garden; at the time, it was not considered edible in the United Kingdom.[41]
Medicinal use in Indonesia was also recorded in the 1930s,[48] and was more recently reported in modern-day Ghana. A report for the 2005 Commonwealth Forestry Conference examining the possible effects of deforestation in southern Ghana on medicinal and edible fungi found that A. auricula-judae was in use as a blood tonic.[50]
Pharmacology[edit]
Auricularia auricula-judae has been the subject of research into possible medicinal applications. Experiments in the 1980s concluded that two glucans isolated from the species showed potent antitumour properties when used on mice artificially implanted with Sarcoma 180 tumours.[51] This was despite the conclusion of earlier research indicating that, while aqueous extracts from several other fungal species had antitumour effects, extracts from A. auricula-judae did not.[52] Further, research on genetically diabetic mice showed that a polysaccharide extracted from A. auricula-judae had a hypoglycemic effect; mice fed with food including the polysaccharide showed reduced plasma glucose, insulin, urinary glucose and food intake.[53]
Another chemical extracted from the species was an acidic polysaccharide (made up of mostly mannose, glucose, glucuronic acid and xylose) which showed anticoagulant properties. The article concluded that "the polysaccharides from these mushrooms may constitute a new source of compounds with action on coagulation, platelet aggregation and, perhaps, on thrombosis".[54] Another study reported that the species may be effective in stopping platelet binding in vitro,[55] with possible uses regarding hypercholesterolemia. Research has shown that A. auricula-judae can be used to lower cholesterol levels generally, and, in particular, is one of two fungi shown to reduce the level of bad cholesterol.[55]
The word "Gargoyle" shares a common root with the word "Gargle"; which comes from "gargouille", an French word for "Throat". A true gargoyle is a waterspout. The word “gargoyle” is also a derivative from the Latin word, “gurgulio”, which had a double meaning, “throat”, and the “gurgling” sound water makes as it passes through a gargoyle. A carved creature that does not serve the purpose of a drain pipe is frequently referred to as a "Grotesque". legend has it, that a fierce dragon named La Gargouille described as having a long, reptilian neck, a slender snout and membranous wings lived in a cave near the river Seine. The dragon caused much fear and destruction with its fiery breath, spouting water and the devouring of ships and men. Each year, the residents of Rouen would placate Gargouille with an offering of a victim, usually a criminal, though it was said the dragon preferred maidens. Around 600, the village was saved by St. Romanis, who promised to deal with the dragon if the townspeople agreed to be baptized and to build a church. Romanus subdued the dragon by making the sign of the cross and then led the now docile beast back to town on a leash made from his priest's robe. La Gargouille was then burned at the stake, it is said that his head and neck were so well tempered by the heat of his fiery breath, that they would not burn. These remnants were then mounted on the town wall and became the model for gargoyles for centuries to come. 3
(Excerpted from northstargallery.com/gargoyles/aboutgargoyles.htm)
Blackthorn, also known as 'sloe', is a small deciduous tree native to the UK and most of Europe. It is spiny and densely branched, mature trees can grow to a height of around 6-7m, and live for up to 100 years. The dark brown bark is smooth, and twigs form straight side shoots, which develop into thorns. The twigs are black and spiny with leaf buds along the spines. The leaves are slightly wrinkled, oval, toothed, pointed at the tip and tapered at the base. Blackthorn is a hermaphrodite, meaning both male and female reproductive parts are found in one flower. White flowers appear on short stalks before the leaves in March and April, either singularly or in pairs. Once pollinated by insects, the flowers develop into blue-black fruits measuring 1cm across. Blackthorn is native to Europe and western Asia. It can also be found in New Zealand and eastern North America. It grows best in moist, well drained soil and thrives in full sunlight. It grows naturally in scrub, copses and woodlands, but is commonly used as a hedging plant. Early flowering, blackthorn provides a valuable source of nectar and pollen for bees in spring. Its foliage is a food plant for the caterpillars of many moths, including the lackey, magpie, common emerald, small eggar, swallow-tailed and yellow-tailed. It is also used by the black and brown hairstreak butterflies. Birds nest among the dense, thorny thickets, eat caterpillars and other insects from the leaves, and feast on the berries in autumn. === The expression "sloe-eyed" for a person with dark eyes comes from the fruit, and is first attested in A. J. Wilson's 1867 novel Vashti. Blackthorn was long associated with witchcraft, and it is said that witches' wands and staffs were made using blackthorn wood. The shrub, with its savage thorns, is traditionally used in Britain and other parts of Northern Europe to make a cattle-proof hedge. The timber is hardwearing and tough, light yellow with a brown heartwood. It was traditionally used for making walking sticks and tool parts. It burns well, and is often used as firewood. Blackthorn is used as a hedging shrub, particularly in wildlife gardens. The sloes are used for wine making and preserves, and, most commonly, flavouring gin. In the British Army, blackthorn sticks are carried by commissioned officers of the Royal Irish Regiment; the tradition also occurs in Irish regiments in some Commonwealth countries. Some people apply blackthorn flower directly to the skin for rashes, “skin impurities,” and “blood purification.” In foods, blackthorn flower is used in herbal teas as a colouring agent. A marmalade made from the berry is used for upset stomach. Blackthorn berry is used as a mouth rinse (gargle) for mild sore throat and mouth Wine made from fermented sloes is made in Britain, and in Germany and other central European countries. Sloes can also be made into jam and, used in fruit pies, and if preserved in vinegar are similar in taste to Japanese umeboshi. The juice of the fruits dyes linen a reddish colour that washes out to a durable pale blue. === Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae (unranked): Angiosperms (unranked): Eudicots (unranked): Rosids Order: Rosales Family: Rosaceae Genus: Prunus Subgenus: Prunus Section: Prunus Species: P. spinosa Binomial name Prunus spinosa
[group] Herons and egrets | [order] CICONIIFORMES | [family] Ardeidae | [latin] Egretta garzetta | [UK] Little Egret | [FR] Aigrette garzette | [DE] Seidenreiher | [ES] Garceta Comun | [NL] Kleine Zilverreiger | [IRL] Éigrit bheag
Measurements
spanwidth min.: 88 cm
spanwidth max.: 106 cm
size min.: 55 cm
size max.: 65 cm
Breeding
incubation min.: 21 days
incubation max.: 22 days
fledging min.: 40 days
fledging max.: 45 days
broods 1
eggs min.: 3
eggs max.: 5
Status: Resident along coasts and rivers throughout Ireland, but still scarce in the Midlands and north-west of the country. Little Egret was considered rare in Ireland until it first started breeding here in 1997. It has since expanded and now occurs in almost every coastal county, as well as at a number of inland sites.
Conservation Concern: Green-listed in Ireland. The European population is considered to be Secure.
Identification: Medium-sized white heron, with long black legs, yellow feet, black bill and blue-grey lores, and two elongated nape-feathers in breeding plumage.
Similar Species: Unmistakable in Ireland. Great White Egret is a rare visitor from Continental Europe, but is twice the size.
Call: Rook-like hoarse 'aaah' on alighting from the ground. At colonies, hoarse hard gargling 'gulla-gulla-gulla…' often heard.
Diet: Takes a wide variety of animals including small fish, frogs, snails and insects and forages across a range of wetland habitats from lakes to flooded grassland. Often forages alone; but maybe encountered in small groups.
Breeding: Clutch: 4-5 eggs (1 brood) Incubation: 21-22 days.Fledging: 40-45 days (Altrical). Age of first breeding: not known. Breeds in lakes, marshes, flooded fields & estuaries.
Wintering: Little Egrets use a variety of wetland habitats, including shallow lakes, riverbanks, lagoons, coastal estuaries and rocky shoreline.
Medical Uses : Roots are diaphoretic, diuretic, expectorant, stimulant. The root is used against bronchitis, itch and for body aches, for asthma and to cure wounds while the seeds are used to treat toothache.
The berries are injurious to children but are often eaten by adults with impunity, especially when quite ripe as the poisonous principle is chiefly associated with all green parts.
Medical use: It is applied in medicine similarly to bittersweet but is more powerful and possesses greater narcotic properties.
The leaves are placed in the cradles of infants to promote sleep. It is useful in coetaneous disorders. Their juice has been used for ringworm, gout and earache and when mixed with vinegar, is considered to be good for gargle and mouthwash.
Like to see more?
Go to my profile.
If your house could gargle, it'd smell like this.
Have you ever wondered why oral hygiene products smell like mint, but household hygiene products smell like ammonia? We think about stuff like that a lot... peppermint scented Windex seems like a fantastic idea. Anyway, consider THE MOUTHWASH CANDLE one small step in the right direction.
This candle is a great bathroom companion, and when combined with THE URINAL CAKE CANDLE, it creates a near invincible odor shield in your "home office."
LEGAL CYA: THE MOUTHWASH CANDLE is just a candle that smells like mouthwash and produces really hot wax when burned and is not intended in any way for actual oral consumption. It’s not mouthwash! Putting it in your mouth will burn you, your tongue, the germs on your tongue, the germs on the germs on your tongue, and is a bad idea. Don’t do it.
Stratford City is an interesting place to visit right now. With the Olympics less than four months away everywhere in the immediate vicinity (and large areas of London, come to think of it) is on a "last big push" to floss, brush and gargle so we can put on a nice shiny white smile for the our moment in the world's spotlight.
Anyone who knows the centre of Stratford will understand the challenges facing the urban cosmetic surgeons. The picture above is an attempt soften the view of the old Stratford Centre from the Westfield side of the road. The water inspired, free-standing cladding is striking but unfortunately draws attention to what it hopes to obscure: a 1970s shopping centre that is externally challenged.
The millions of micro tidying decisions, from the corporate and strategic to the individual ones, remind me of the mild panic that ensues when a suprise family visit is spring upon us and we have 2 hours to tidy up. Never rule out sweeping things under the carpet, I say.
Simone Johanna Maria Simons, lahir pada 17 January 1985 asal Belanda. Seorang penyanyi mezzo-sopranodia, lebih dikenal sebagai vokalis dari band symphonic metal Epica.
Karakter vokal sopran koloratura dengan tingkat nada sampai oktaf empat. Nadanya sedikit gargly serta berlinang-linang. Dia menggunakan suara klasik secara keseluruhan.
Grootwaterhoender
(Gallinula angulata)
The common moorhen (Gallinula chloropus) (also known as the waterhen and as the swamp chicken) is a bird species in the family Rallidae. It is distributed across many parts of the Old World.
The common moorhen lives around well-vegetated marshes, ponds, canals and other wetlands. The species is not found in the polar regions or many tropical rainforests. Elsewhere it is likely the most common rail species, except for the Eurasian coot in some regions.
The closely related common gallinule of the New World has been recognized as a separate species by most authorities, starting with the American Ornithologists' Union and the International Ornithological Committee in 2011.
The name mor-hen has been recorded in English since the 13th century.[5] The word moor here is an old sense meaning marsh;[5] the species is not usually found in moorland. An older name, common waterhen, is more descriptive of the bird's habitat.
A "watercock" is not a male "waterhen" but the rail species Gallicrex cinerea, not closely related to the common moorhen. "Water rail" usually refers to Rallus aquaticus, again not closely related.
The scientific name Gallinula chloropus comes from the Latin Gallinula (a small hen or chicken) and the Greek chloropus (khloros χλωρός green or yellow, pous πούς foot).
The moorhen is a distinctive species, with dark plumage apart from the white undertail, yellow legs and a red frontal shield. The young are browner and lack the red shield. The frontal shield of the adult has a rounded top and fairly parallel sides; the tailward margin of the red unfeathered area is a smooth waving line. In the related common gallinule of the Americas, the frontal shield has a fairly straight top and is less wide towards the bill, giving a marked indentation to the back margin of the red area.
The common moorhen gives a wide range of gargling calls and will emit loud hisses when threatened. A midsized to large rail, it can range from 30 to 38 cm (12 to 15 in) in length and span 50 to 62 cm (20 to 24 in) across the wings. The body mass of this species can range from 192 to 500 g (6.8 to 17.6 oz).
Wikipedia
Blackthorn, also known as 'sloe', is a small deciduous tree native to the UK and most of Europe. It is spiny and densely branched, mature trees can grow to a height of around 6-7m, and live for up to 100 years. The dark brown bark is smooth, and twigs form straight side shoots, which develop into thorns. The twigs are black and spiny with leaf buds along the spines. The leaves are slightly wrinkled, oval, toothed, pointed at the tip and tapered at the base. Blackthorn is a hermaphrodite, meaning both male and female reproductive parts are found in one flower. White flowers appear on short stalks before the leaves in March and April, either singularly or in pairs. Once pollinated by insects, the flowers develop into blue-black fruits measuring 1cm across. Blackthorn is native to Europe and western Asia. It can also be found in New Zealand and eastern North America. It grows best in moist, well drained soil and thrives in full sunlight. It grows naturally in scrub, copses and woodlands, but is commonly used as a hedging plant. Early flowering, blackthorn provides a valuable source of nectar and pollen for bees in spring. Its foliage is a food plant for the caterpillars of many moths, including the lackey, magpie, common emerald, small eggar, swallow-tailed and yellow-tailed. It is also used by the black and brown hairstreak butterflies. Birds nest among the dense, thorny thickets, eat caterpillars and other insects from the leaves, and feast on the berries in autumn. === The expression "sloe-eyed" for a person with dark eyes comes from the fruit, and is first attested in A. J. Wilson's 1867 novel Vashti. Blackthorn was long associated with witchcraft, and it is said that witches' wands and staffs were made using blackthorn wood. The shrub, with its savage thorns, is traditionally used in Britain and other parts of Northern Europe to make a cattle-proof hedge. The timber is hardwearing and tough, light yellow with a brown heartwood. It was traditionally used for making walking sticks and tool parts. It burns well, and is often used as firewood. Blackthorn is used as a hedging shrub, particularly in wildlife gardens. The sloes are used for wine making and preserves, and, most commonly, flavouring gin. In the British Army, blackthorn sticks are carried by commissioned officers of the Royal Irish Regiment; the tradition also occurs in Irish regiments in some Commonwealth countries. Some people apply blackthorn flower directly to the skin for rashes, “skin impurities,” and “blood purification.” In foods, blackthorn flower is used in herbal teas as a colouring agent. A marmalade made from the berry is used for upset stomach. Blackthorn berry is used as a mouth rinse (gargle) for mild sore throat and mouth Wine made from fermented sloes is made in Britain, and in Germany and other central European countries. Sloes can also be made into jam and, used in fruit pies, and if preserved in vinegar are similar in taste to Japanese umeboshi. The juice of the fruits dyes linen a reddish colour that washes out to a durable pale blue. === Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae (unranked): Angiosperms (unranked): Eudicots (unranked): Rosids Order: Rosales Family: Rosaceae Genus: Prunus Subgenus: Prunus Section: Prunus Species: P. spinosa Binomial name Prunus spinosa
Ref. IS 10bis_19
Iceland 2003
Fotografías tomadas a las 12 de la noche, bajo una ténue luz solar reflejada. Llegar a la explanada de Namaskard en plena noche, sin nadie alrededor, sobrepone, se oye respirar la Tierra. Ritmicamente los diversos pozuelos humeantes lanzan ruidos gorgogeantes, como de respiración pesada y lenta mientras se forman bulbos de agua que se hinchan y explotan para soltar los gases que salen de las entrañas. Cada expiración fotografiada ofrece formas distintas como en una danza ininterrumpida. Es la respiración de la tierra.
© Manel Armengol
Contact: armengol.manel@gmail.com
Medical use: Wood powder paste used against Bllious headaches and swellings and internally against dermatitis or as a vermifuge. Charred wood soaked in poppy juice and made into a paste was used to relieve the swelling of eyelids. Bark has been used as an astringent and the wood oil as a hair tonic. Decoction of fresh and dried leaves for menstrual disorders, for hemorrhages, taken as gargle for sore throat. Flowers and seeds are dieuretic. Oil of the nut for making the hair grow and soothes itches of the skin. Counters inflammation.
Like to see more?
Go to my profile.
0818-2040-55 (YOGIES), Membersihkan Karang Gigi Cara Membersihkan, Membersihkan Karang Gigi Cara Membersihkannya, Membersihkan Karang Gigi Dan Bau Mulut, Membersihkan Karang Gigi Di Geraham, Membersihkan Karang Gigi Garam, Membersihkan Karang Gigi Gatal, Membersihkan Karang Gigi Geraham, Membersihkan Karang Gigi Gusi, Membersihkan Karang Gigi Gusi Bengkak, Membersihkan Karang Gigi Gusi Berdarah, Membersihkan Karang Gigi Hitam,
JOYPOLINSE PROPOLIS MOUTHWASH
Ribuan Orang Telah Merasakan Manfaat JOYPOLINSE Propolis Mouthwash… Sebagai Solusi Cerdas Mengatasi Bakteri Di Mulut Yang Membahayakan Kesehatan, Sekarang Giliran Anda!
Inovasi Baru Obat Kumur Spektakuler!
LIHATLAH HASILNYA BISA BIKIN KAMU SHOCK!
Hanya Butuh Waktu 30 Detik & 1 Kali Kumur Obat Kumur Joypolinse Dapat Mengikat Kotoran Mikro Yang Terakumulasi Di Dalam Rongga Mulut Dan Kemudian Membuangnya Keluar. Bahkan 99% Bakteri Berbahaya Yang Bersarang Di Dalam Mulut Anda Ikut Di Musnahkan.
Apa Itu Joypolinse?
Joypolinse Merupakan Obat Kumur Premium Tanpa Alkohol Yang Di Formulasi Secara Khusus Dan Seimbang Dari 7 Bahan Aktif Yang Sangat Kuat, Terutama Propolis Yang Di Hasilkan Dari Lebah Yang Dikenal Sebagai Antibiotik Alami Fungsinya Untuk Membunuh Kuman, Bakteri Yang Bersarang Dalam Rongga Mulut.
JoyPolinse JoyBiz Dengan Extrak Propolis dan Green Tea, Obat Kumur Higenis, HALAL dan Non Alkohol yang Hasilnya Langsung terlihat dengan cepat.
Kebanyakan orang belum menyadari bahayanya bakteri yang ada di dalam mulut. Bakteri-bakteri tersebut sebenarnya tak akan bermasalah jika jumlahnya seimbang dan hidup harmonis. Tapi, begitu muncul gangguan seperti karies (gigi berlubang), penyakit penyangga gigi (periodontal), atau terdapat infeksi, maka kondisi ini bisa menyebabkan gangguan kesehatan yang lebih serius.
Joypolinse Membantu Menyembuhkan Sariawan & Penyakit Mulut Lainnya
SHOCKING! SEE YOUR DIRTS AFTER GARGLE!
Benefit :
⁃ Menjaga kesehatan mulut secara menyeluruh.
⁃ Memperkuat gusi dan menghindari radang gusi
⁃ Membunuh bakteri sisa protein
⁃ Membunuh bakteri dan senyawa penyebab bau mulut
⁃ Membuat nafas tetap segar
⁃ Mengurangi penimbunan plak pada gigi, gingivitis, serta peradangan gusi tahap awal
⁃ Membantu mencegah karang gigi dan gigi berlubang.
⁃ Membantu mencegah kemunculan noda pada permukaan gigi dan membuat gigi bersih cemerlang
⁃ Membantu mengurangi risiko gigi berlubang akibat bakteri dan zat asam, serta menjadikan gigi lebih kuat
⁃ Bisa mengobati sariawan ringan pada mulut dan bakteri di tenggorokan Anda
⁃ Mengurangi pertumbuhan jamur dalam mulut
Joypolinse Membuat Nafas Selalu Segar Dan Terhindar Dari Bau Mulut
Kumur 20-30 detik setelah sikat gigi pagi hari dan malam hari, atau setelah makan, JoyPolinse dapat membantu menumpas bakteri di rongga mulut dalam waktu 30 detik.
– 30 Detik Kotoran di mulut Rontok
– 30 Detik 99% Kuman / Bakteri di Mulut Punah
– 30 Detik Menghilangkan Bau Mulut
– 30 Mulut Terasa Lebih Fresh dan Segar Sekali…
– Runtin di Gunakan dapat mencegah Karang Gigi, Merontokkan Tar Bagi anda Perokok Aktif
Itu Sebabnya Semua Orang Membutuhkan JOYPOLINSE Propolis Mouthwash, Karena JoyPolinse mengandung formula yang seimbang & efektif dengan kandungan:
⁃ PROPOLIS
⁃ XYLITOL
⁃ SODIUM FLOURIDE
⁃ ALANTOIN
⁃ GLYSERIN
⁃ GINSENG
⁃ GREEN TEA
Kumur JoyPolinse Setiap Hari Membuat Percaya Diri Setiap Saat......
Manfaat
Joypolinse membantu menjaga kesehatan mulut secara menyeluruh dengan mengurangi bakteri jahat dan sisa protein makanan. Membuat nafas segar, mengobati sariawan ringan, membantu mengurangi penimbunan plak, gingivitis dan peradangan gusi tahap awal. Membantu mecegah gigi berlubang dan munculnya noda pada permukaan gigi serta pertumbuhan jamur dalam mulut.
Cara Pakai
Gunakan minimal 2x sehari, pada pagi dan malam hari. Kumur dengan 20ml Joypolinse selama 30 detik.
Penyimpanan
Tutup rapat kemasan setelah digunakan. Pastikan kemasan tidak teruka dan cairan keluar kemasan.
HARGA JOYPOLINSE :
Harga Member : Rp. 150.000 (*Zona WIB)
Informasi Lebih Lengkap Hubungi:
HP/WA : 0818-2040-55
ALAMAT : Jl. Srimanis No. 9 RT.06 RW.01 Kel. Cigereleng Kec. Regol Kota Bandung - Jawa Barat 40253
Keyword Joypolinse:
•Joypolinse Sidoarjo
•Joypolinse Sidrap
•Joypolinse Sleman
•Joypolinse Solo
•Joypolinse Sorong
•Joypolinse Sorowako
•Joypolinse Subang
•Joypolinse Sukabumi
•Joypolinse Surabaya
•Joypolinse Tangerang
0818-2040-55 (YOGIES), Cara Memutihkan Gigi Dengan Joypolinse, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Efektif, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Obat Alami, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Paling Efektif, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Secara Alami, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Untuk Pemakai Behel, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Untuk Pengguna Behel, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Untuk Perokok, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Untuk Pria, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Warna Kuning, Memutihkan Gigi Akibat Rokok Dan Kopi,
JOYPOLINSE PROPOLIS MOUTHWASH
Ribuan Orang Telah Merasakan Manfaat JOYPOLINSE Propolis Mouthwash… Sebagai Solusi Cerdas Mengatasi Bakteri Di Mulut Yang Membahayakan Kesehatan, Sekarang Giliran Anda!
Inovasi Baru Obat Kumur Spektakuler!
LIHATLAH HASILNYA BISA BIKIN KAMU SHOCK!
Hanya Butuh Waktu 30 Detik & 1 Kali Kumur Obat Kumur Joypolinse Dapat Mengikat Kotoran Mikro Yang Terakumulasi Di Dalam Rongga Mulut Dan Kemudian Membuangnya Keluar. Bahkan 99% Bakteri Berbahaya Yang Bersarang Di Dalam Mulut Anda Ikut Di Musnahkan.
Apa Itu Joypolinse?
Joypolinse Merupakan Obat Kumur Premium Tanpa Alkohol Yang Di Formulasi Secara Khusus Dan Seimbang Dari 7 Bahan Aktif Yang Sangat Kuat, Terutama Propolis Yang Di Hasilkan Dari Lebah Yang Dikenal Sebagai Antibiotik Alami Fungsinya Untuk Membunuh Kuman, Bakteri Yang Bersarang Dalam Rongga Mulut.
JoyPolinse JoyBiz Dengan Extrak Propolis dan Green Tea, Obat Kumur Higenis, HALAL dan Non Alkohol yang Hasilnya Langsung terlihat dengan cepat.
Kebanyakan orang belum menyadari bahayanya bakteri yang ada di dalam mulut. Bakteri-bakteri tersebut sebenarnya tak akan bermasalah jika jumlahnya seimbang dan hidup harmonis. Tapi, begitu muncul gangguan seperti karies (gigi berlubang), penyakit penyangga gigi (periodontal), atau terdapat infeksi, maka kondisi ini bisa menyebabkan gangguan kesehatan yang lebih serius.
Joypolinse Membantu Menyembuhkan Sariawan & Penyakit Mulut Lainnya
SHOCKING! SEE YOUR DIRTS AFTER GARGLE!
Benefit :
⁃ Menjaga kesehatan mulut secara menyeluruh.
⁃ Memperkuat gusi dan menghindari radang gusi
⁃ Membunuh bakteri sisa protein
⁃ Membunuh bakteri dan senyawa penyebab bau mulut
⁃ Membuat nafas tetap segar
⁃ Mengurangi penimbunan plak pada gigi, gingivitis, serta peradangan gusi tahap awal
⁃ Membantu mencegah karang gigi dan gigi berlubang.
⁃ Membantu mencegah kemunculan noda pada permukaan gigi dan membuat gigi bersih cemerlang
⁃ Membantu mengurangi risiko gigi berlubang akibat bakteri dan zat asam, serta menjadikan gigi lebih kuat
⁃ Bisa mengobati sariawan ringan pada mulut dan bakteri di tenggorokan Anda
⁃ Mengurangi pertumbuhan jamur dalam mulut
Joypolinse Membuat Nafas Selalu Segar Dan Terhindar Dari Bau Mulut
Kumur 20-30 detik setelah sikat gigi pagi hari dan malam hari, atau setelah makan, JoyPolinse dapat membantu menumpas bakteri di rongga mulut dalam waktu 30 detik.
– 30 Detik Kotoran di mulut Rontok
– 30 Detik 99% Kuman / Bakteri di Mulut Punah
– 30 Detik Menghilangkan Bau Mulut
– 30 Mulut Terasa Lebih Fresh dan Segar Sekali…
– Runtin di Gunakan dapat mencegah Karang Gigi, Merontokkan Tar Bagi anda Perokok Aktif
Itu Sebabnya Semua Orang Membutuhkan JOYPOLINSE Propolis Mouthwash, Karena JoyPolinse mengandung formula yang seimbang & efektif dengan kandungan:
⁃ PROPOLIS
⁃ XYLITOL
⁃ SODIUM FLOURIDE
⁃ ALANTOIN
⁃ GLYSERIN
⁃ GINSENG
⁃ GREEN TEA
Kumur JoyPolinse Setiap Hari Membuat Percaya Diri Setiap Saat......
Manfaat
Joypolinse membantu menjaga kesehatan mulut secara menyeluruh dengan mengurangi bakteri jahat dan sisa protein makanan. Membuat nafas segar, mengobati sariawan ringan, membantu mengurangi penimbunan plak, gingivitis dan peradangan gusi tahap awal. Membantu mecegah gigi berlubang dan munculnya noda pada permukaan gigi serta pertumbuhan jamur dalam mulut.
Cara Pakai
Gunakan minimal 2x sehari, pada pagi dan malam hari. Kumur dengan 20ml Joypolinse selama 30 detik.
Penyimpanan
Tutup rapat kemasan setelah digunakan. Pastikan kemasan tidak teruka dan cairan keluar kemasan.
HARGA JOYPOLINSE :
Harga Member : Rp. 150.000 (*Zona WIB)
Informasi Lebih Lengkap Hubungi:
HP/WA : 0818-2040-55
ALAMAT : Jl. Srimanis No. 9 RT.06 RW.01 Kel. Cigereleng Kec. Regol Kota Bandung - Jawa Barat 40253
Keyword Joypolinse:
•Joypolinse Palu
•Joypolinse Panajam Paser Utara
•Joypolinse Pandeglang
•Joypolinse Pangkalan Pinang
•Joypolinse Payakumbuh
•Joypolinse Penajam Paser Utara
•Joypolinse Pontianak
•Joypolinse Purwokerto
•Joypolinse Samarinda
•Joypolinse Serang
•
The De Chambeau Ranch was one of the largest ranches in the Mono Basin. It raised cattle, sheep, chickens, alfalfa, and vegetables to be sold in Bodie, Aurora, Lundy, and Lee Vining.
The 320-acre ranch contains the original buildings, some of the original barbed wire, ditches, roadways, fence lines, and wells.
Drawn to California by gold, Louis W. De Chambeau's father moved to Bodie from Ontario, Canada in 1878. Louis W. followed two years later when he was 18. In 1906 he purchased the ranch from Italian immigrant Nicholas Dondero, who sold it to fund exploration in Alaska.
The De Chambeau family was self-sufficient except for a few staples, such as sugar and salt. Their beds were stuffed with feathers frm Mono Lake ducks and if they had sore throats, they gargled with Mono Lake water.
Ranchers could handle many tasks: stack hay, shape horseshoes and nails from iron, grow vegetables in the sandy soil, butcher hogs and sheep. They also traded skills for goods. Louis W. De Chambeau crafted skis, for example, which he sold in Body, Lundy, and throughout the Mono Basin.
Norm De Chambeau:
“So my grandfather decided that when he moved here to the ranch that he would, uh, make skis from then on, (And, uh, he sold them, the men’s skis for $8 a pair plus 50 cents or a dollar for the pole. And that was huge money in them days. And he ended up estimating between 500 to 1000 skis that he’d built in Mono Basin, (and) sold to the different people in here.”
A pair of De Chambeau’s hand-carved skis is on display at the Mammoth Ski Museum and at Bodie State Historic Park.
Fonte Official Obituary FB Page :
Upon switching their name from Xecutioner to Obituary, the career of one of the most successful and influential Death Metal bands began. Hailing from Florida and featuring John Tardy (vocals), brother Donald Tardy (drums), Trevor Peres (guitar), Allen West (guitar), and Daniel Tucker (bass), the band signed to Roadracer Records, a now defunct division of Roadrunner, for the recording of their debut album—the immense and immeasurably heavy “Slowly We Rot” (1989). The album was engineered by the legendary Scott Burns at Morrisound Studio, which would come to be the most sought after facility for production of albums during 1990’s rise of the Death Metal genre. Unlike much death metal preceding it, the album had a sludgy feel and integrated devastatingly slow passages along with obliterating overtures that reached far beyond any point of mayhem that metal had yet to reach; the result was a carnal pleasure for doom, death and thrash fans alike coupling the adrenaline of a speedball with the slow, degrading measures of a sewer at dusk. Like them or not, Obituary was unlike anything anyone had heard before.
“Slowly We Rot” was chaotic, bass heavy mix of manic guitar solos and crashing drums, but it was undeniably characterized by vocalist John Tardy’s disarmingly horrific, gargling style, that created guttural chasms of dread which though often strived for, to date have been paralleled by none. The ability to augment tempo so drastically became the band’s trademark along with Tardy’s unique vocal style, which distinguished them clearly from the rest of the emerging Florida Death Metal bands; nowhere is this more apparent than on the prophetic title track of their debut. The fact that Obituary refrained from printing lyric sheets with their albums led people to believe that they didn't actually write any lyrics. Some may question the verbosity or absence of documented lyrics, however, any true fan has each grunt, growl and howling grimace committed to memory like an utterance from God in painstaking form—what does not exist can not be remembered, and an Obituary show is testimony to the re-creation of what your ears couldn't believe in the first place. Once again bringing augmentation to irony, Live and Dead worked quite well for the quintet, dividing your conscience yet leaving much to the imagination; not since birth have your senses been so graphically assaulted yet pleased at the same time. While such differing sensations once seemed incongruous, Obituary have proven the ability to merge unlikely dichotomies, from their slow-as-hell-yet-fast-as-fuck style to the non-evil, homegrown approach to what would largely become the satanized, bastardized, make-up wearing movement known as Death Metal.
The maturation of the musicians into songwriters taking more visionary and complex forms would soon be heard world wide as Obituary took metal by storm in 1990. Despite their youth upon release of their sophomore offering, “Cause of Death” embodied the confident swagger of the most fearsome pack-leading hound. From the insidious growls of John’s vocals to the barrage of Donald Tardy’s thunderously-metered explosions of double bass, “Cause of Death” was the intention and method as promised by the early threat of “Slowly We Rot”; for Obituary, Death was just the beginning. Accordingly, the title track alone (“Cause of Death”) would be heard, regurgitated, manipulated, complimented and collapsed—but never duplicated—on third and forth generation death metal albums for years to come. Lovecraftian imagery and aural morbidity aside, even a deaf man found fear when confronted by the formidable visage of guitarist Peres; entering Frank Watkins, the hulking henchman of a bassist from South Florida, finally provided long-needed and powerful rhythm stability to the line up. However, the grinding of the axes would not be complete until the return of Xecutioner veteran Allen West, who, along with Peres and Tardy, crafted the foundation for most of Obituary’s most primordial and historic moments. Attack now whole, Obituary had given birth—sight, sound and feel—to a true horror greater than metal had ever known.
The paradox herein lies that Obituary was anything but a summation to and end, but more an exploratory journey into the infinite dehumanization of all that is known, as confronted brazenly by their best selling release yet, “The End Complete” and later followed by the cynical and dark expedition of “World Demise”. Reunited with songwriter West, the band was conjoined like quintuplets sharing life and a name. Though finality was possibly inferred by these titles, Obituary was anything but finished. Ironically, the images conjured by songs such as “Don’t Care”, “Platonic Disease” and “World Demise” seemingly foretold of the millennium as can now be seen daily, displayed plainly across the screens of CNN and reality TV programs world wide; not bad for a bunch of rednecks from Florida with Budweiser dreams and bongwater nightmares.
2004 brings reason for Obituary fans to rejoice, the sunken eyes and heaving cries have all but abated. Obituary has only aspired to live up to the standard they have set for themselves, one that numerous bands have strived to duplicate, but never attained, falling short both creatively and in lack of the unique talent that each member contributes to the near indescribable Obituary sound. Like a forgotten corpse in the basement, Obituary are back to haunt, taunt and fully pollute your senses. Fermenting like waste in the hot Florida sun, Obituary return from hiatus with the voracity of a starven wretch. The forfeiture of time brings blessings of brutality, and assurance that the Dead shall indeed rise again. Such aural abrasion can only be heard on an Obituary album or the live circumcision of a thirty-year-old man, the choice is yours...
I must be run down, I have had a headache for a couple of days, I am tired and now my throat is killing me. It is like I have golf balls in my mouth when I swallow. I am gonna try some aspirin gargle and then go to bed.
I need to get well, I have a big job on Sunday.
Ref. IS 10_13
Iceland 2003
Fotografías tomadas a las 12 de la noche, bajo una ténue luz solar reflejada. Llegar a la explanada de Namaskard en plena noche, sin nadie alrededor, sobrepone, se oye respirar la Tierra. Ritmicamente los diversos pozuelos humeantes lanzan ruidos gorgogeantes, como de respiración pesada y lenta mientras se forman bulbos de agua que se hinchan y explotan para soltar los gases que salen de las entrañas. Cada expiración fotografiada ofrece formas distintas como en una danza ininterrumpida. Es la respiración de la tierra.
© Manel Armengol
Contact: armengol.manel@gmail.com
In architecture, a gargoyle is a carved stone grotesque with a spout designed to convey water from a roof and away from the side of a building. Preventing rainwater from running down masonry walls is important because running water erodes the mortar between the stone blocks.[1] Architects often used multiple gargoyles on buildings to divide the flow of rainwater off the roof to minimize the potential damage from a rainstorm. A trough is cut in the back of the gargoyle and rainwater typically exits through the open mouth. Gargoyles are usually an elongated fantastic animal because the length of the gargoyle determines how far water is thrown from the wall. When Gothic flying buttresses were used, aqueducts were sometimes cut into the buttress to divert water over the aisle walls.
The term originates from the French gargouille, originally "throat" or "gullet";[2] cf. Latin gurgulio, gula, gargula ("gullet" or "throat") and similar words derived from the root gar, "to swallow", which represented the gurgling sound of water (e.g., Spanish garganta, "throat"; Spanish gárgola, "gargoyle"). It is also connected to the French verb gargariser, which means "to gargle."[3] The Italian word for gargoyle is doccione o gronda sporgente, an architecturally precise phrase which means "protruding gutter." The German word for gargoyle is Wasserspeier, which means "water spitter." The Dutch word for gargoyle is waterspuwer, which means "water spitter" or "water vomiter." A building that has gargoyles on it is "gargoyled."
A grotesque figure is a sculpture that does not work as a waterspout and serves only an ornamental or artistic function. These are also usually called gargoyles in layman's terminology,[2] although the field of architecture usually preserves the distinction between gargoyles (functional waterspouts) and non-waterspout grotesques.
Gargoyles are said to scare off and protect from any evil or harmful spirits.
[wikipedia]
This image is copyrighted, please do not use on any media without written authorisation
Grootwaterhoender
(Gallinula angulata)
The common moorhen (Gallinula chloropus) (also known as the waterhen and as the swamp chicken) is a bird species in the family Rallidae. It is distributed across many parts of the Old World.
The common moorhen lives around well-vegetated marshes, ponds, canals and other wetlands. The species is not found in the polar regions or many tropical rainforests. Elsewhere it is likely the most common rail species, except for the Eurasian coot in some regions.
The closely related common gallinule of the New World has been recognized as a separate species by most authorities, starting with the American Ornithologists' Union and the International Ornithological Committee in 2011.
The name mor-hen has been recorded in English since the 13th century.[5] The word moor here is an old sense meaning marsh;[5] the species is not usually found in moorland. An older name, common waterhen, is more descriptive of the bird's habitat.
A "watercock" is not a male "waterhen" but the rail species Gallicrex cinerea, not closely related to the common moorhen. "Water rail" usually refers to Rallus aquaticus, again not closely related.
The scientific name Gallinula chloropus comes from the Latin Gallinula (a small hen or chicken) and the Greek chloropus (khloros χλωρός green or yellow, pous πούς foot).
The moorhen is a distinctive species, with dark plumage apart from the white undertail, yellow legs and a red frontal shield. The young are browner and lack the red shield. The frontal shield of the adult has a rounded top and fairly parallel sides; the tailward margin of the red unfeathered area is a smooth waving line. In the related common gallinule of the Americas, the frontal shield has a fairly straight top and is less wide towards the bill, giving a marked indentation to the back margin of the red area.
The common moorhen gives a wide range of gargling calls and will emit loud hisses when threatened. A midsized to large rail, it can range from 30 to 38 cm (12 to 15 in) in length and span 50 to 62 cm (20 to 24 in) across the wings. The body mass of this species can range from 192 to 500 g (6.8 to 17.6 oz).
Wikipedia
Dulce et Decorum Est
Bent double, like old beggars under sacks,
Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge,
Till on the haunting flares we turned our backs
And towards our distant rest began to trudge.
Men marched asleep. Many had lost their boots
But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame; all blind;
Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hoots
Of tired, outstripped Five-Nines that dropped behind.
Gas! Gas! Quick, boys!–An ecstasy of fumbling,
Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time;
But someone still was yelling out and stumbling
And flound'ring like a man in fire or lime...
Dim, through the misty panes and thick green light,
As under a green sea, I saw him drowning.
In all my dreams, before my helpless sight,
He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning.
If in some smothering dreams you too could pace
Behind the wagon that we flung him in,
And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,
His hanging face, like a devil's sick of sin;
If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,–
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori.
0818-2040-55 (YOGIES), Cara Memutihkan Gigi Dengan Joypolinse, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Efektif, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Obat Alami, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Paling Efektif, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Secara Alami, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Untuk Pemakai Behel, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Untuk Pengguna Behel, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Untuk Perokok, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Untuk Pria, Cara Memutihkan Gigi Warna Kuning, Memutihkan Gigi Akibat Rokok Dan Kopi,
JOYPOLINSE PROPOLIS MOUTHWASH
Ribuan Orang Telah Merasakan Manfaat JOYPOLINSE Propolis Mouthwash… Sebagai Solusi Cerdas Mengatasi Bakteri Di Mulut Yang Membahayakan Kesehatan, Sekarang Giliran Anda!
Inovasi Baru Obat Kumur Spektakuler!
LIHATLAH HASILNYA BISA BIKIN KAMU SHOCK!
Hanya Butuh Waktu 30 Detik & 1 Kali Kumur Obat Kumur Joypolinse Dapat Mengikat Kotoran Mikro Yang Terakumulasi Di Dalam Rongga Mulut Dan Kemudian Membuangnya Keluar. Bahkan 99% Bakteri Berbahaya Yang Bersarang Di Dalam Mulut Anda Ikut Di Musnahkan.
Apa Itu Joypolinse?
Joypolinse Merupakan Obat Kumur Premium Tanpa Alkohol Yang Di Formulasi Secara Khusus Dan Seimbang Dari 7 Bahan Aktif Yang Sangat Kuat, Terutama Propolis Yang Di Hasilkan Dari Lebah Yang Dikenal Sebagai Antibiotik Alami Fungsinya Untuk Membunuh Kuman, Bakteri Yang Bersarang Dalam Rongga Mulut.
JoyPolinse JoyBiz Dengan Extrak Propolis dan Green Tea, Obat Kumur Higenis, HALAL dan Non Alkohol yang Hasilnya Langsung terlihat dengan cepat.
Kebanyakan orang belum menyadari bahayanya bakteri yang ada di dalam mulut. Bakteri-bakteri tersebut sebenarnya tak akan bermasalah jika jumlahnya seimbang dan hidup harmonis. Tapi, begitu muncul gangguan seperti karies (gigi berlubang), penyakit penyangga gigi (periodontal), atau terdapat infeksi, maka kondisi ini bisa menyebabkan gangguan kesehatan yang lebih serius.
Joypolinse Membantu Menyembuhkan Sariawan & Penyakit Mulut Lainnya
SHOCKING! SEE YOUR DIRTS AFTER GARGLE!
Benefit :
⁃ Menjaga kesehatan mulut secara menyeluruh.
⁃ Memperkuat gusi dan menghindari radang gusi
⁃ Membunuh bakteri sisa protein
⁃ Membunuh bakteri dan senyawa penyebab bau mulut
⁃ Membuat nafas tetap segar
⁃ Mengurangi penimbunan plak pada gigi, gingivitis, serta peradangan gusi tahap awal
⁃ Membantu mencegah karang gigi dan gigi berlubang.
⁃ Membantu mencegah kemunculan noda pada permukaan gigi dan membuat gigi bersih cemerlang
⁃ Membantu mengurangi risiko gigi berlubang akibat bakteri dan zat asam, serta menjadikan gigi lebih kuat
⁃ Bisa mengobati sariawan ringan pada mulut dan bakteri di tenggorokan Anda
⁃ Mengurangi pertumbuhan jamur dalam mulut
Joypolinse Membuat Nafas Selalu Segar Dan Terhindar Dari Bau Mulut
Kumur 20-30 detik setelah sikat gigi pagi hari dan malam hari, atau setelah makan, JoyPolinse dapat membantu menumpas bakteri di rongga mulut dalam waktu 30 detik.
– 30 Detik Kotoran di mulut Rontok
– 30 Detik 99% Kuman / Bakteri di Mulut Punah
– 30 Detik Menghilangkan Bau Mulut
– 30 Mulut Terasa Lebih Fresh dan Segar Sekali…
– Runtin di Gunakan dapat mencegah Karang Gigi, Merontokkan Tar Bagi anda Perokok Aktif
Itu Sebabnya Semua Orang Membutuhkan JOYPOLINSE Propolis Mouthwash, Karena JoyPolinse mengandung formula yang seimbang & efektif dengan kandungan:
⁃ PROPOLIS
⁃ XYLITOL
⁃ SODIUM FLOURIDE
⁃ ALANTOIN
⁃ GLYSERIN
⁃ GINSENG
⁃ GREEN TEA
Kumur JoyPolinse Setiap Hari Membuat Percaya Diri Setiap Saat......
Manfaat
Joypolinse membantu menjaga kesehatan mulut secara menyeluruh dengan mengurangi bakteri jahat dan sisa protein makanan. Membuat nafas segar, mengobati sariawan ringan, membantu mengurangi penimbunan plak, gingivitis dan peradangan gusi tahap awal. Membantu mecegah gigi berlubang dan munculnya noda pada permukaan gigi serta pertumbuhan jamur dalam mulut.
Cara Pakai
Gunakan minimal 2x sehari, pada pagi dan malam hari. Kumur dengan 20ml Joypolinse selama 30 detik.
Penyimpanan
Tutup rapat kemasan setelah digunakan. Pastikan kemasan tidak teruka dan cairan keluar kemasan.
HARGA JOYPOLINSE :
Harga Member : Rp. 150.000 (*Zona WIB)
Informasi Lebih Lengkap Hubungi:
HP/WA : 0818-2040-55
ALAMAT : Jl. Srimanis No. 9 RT.06 RW.01 Kel. Cigereleng Kec. Regol Kota Bandung - Jawa Barat 40253
Keyword Joypolinse:
•Joypolinse Palu
•Joypolinse Panajam Paser Utara
•Joypolinse Pandeglang
•Joypolinse Pangkalan Pinang
•Joypolinse Payakumbuh
•Joypolinse Penajam Paser Utara
•Joypolinse Pontianak
•Joypolinse Purwokerto
•Joypolinse Samarinda
•Joypolinse Serang
•
Boca-de-leão, Boca-de-lobo ou Boca-de-peixe (Antirrhinum majus).
Origem: Wikipédia, a enciclopédia livre.
A boca-de-leão, boca-de-lobo[2] ou boca-de-peixe (Antirrhinum majus)[3] é uma espécie de flor.[4] Recebe este nome devido ao formato das flores.
A autoridade científica da espécie é L., tendo sido publicada em Species Plantarum 2: 617. 1753.[5]
Antirrhinum majus
Possui ciclo anual, e atinge entre 40 e 70 cm de altura. Apresenta floração em cores diversas como amarelo, branco, rosa, roxo, dentre outras. As flores surgem entre o final do inverno e o início da primavera. Aprecia mais o frio.
É uma planta de sol pleno, necessitando de pelo menos 4 horas diárias de luz direta.
Portugal
Trata-se de uma espécie presente no território português, nomeadamente no Arquipélago dos Açores e no Arquipélago da Madeira.
Em termos de naturalidade é introduzida nas duas regiões atrás referidas.
Protecção
Não se encontra protegida por legislação portuguesa ou da Comunidade Europeia.
Referências
Tank, David C. et. al. (2006). «Review of the systematics of Scrophulariaceae s.l. and their current disposition». Australian Systematic Botany. 19 (4): 289–307. doi:10.1071/SB05009
Pinto, B. (2010). Guia de campo – Dia B, 22 Maio de 2010, bioeventos.
«boca-de-leão». Michaelis Dicionário Brasileiro da Língua Portuguesa. Consultado em 21 de outubro de 2023
Revista Pesquisa FAPESP: O magnetismo das flores
Tropicos.org. Missouri Botanical Garden. 7 de Outubro de 2014
Bibliografia
Antirrhinum majus - Checklist da Flora de Portugal (Continental, Açores e Madeira) - Sociedade Lusitana de Fitossociologia
Checklist da Flora do Arquipélago da Madeira (Madeira, Porto Santo, Desertas e Selvagens) - Grupo de Botânica da Madeira
Antirrhinum majus - Portal da Biodiversidade dos Açores
Antirrhinum majus - The Plant List (2010). Version 1. Published on the Internet; www.theplantlist.org/ (consultado em 27 de outubro de 2014).
Antirrhinum majus - International Plant Names Index
Castroviejo, S. (coord. gen.). 1986-2012. Flora iberica 1-8, 10-15, 17-18, 21. Real Jardín Botánico, CSIC, Madrid.
Ligações externas
Antirrhinum majus - Flora Digital de Portugal. jb.utad.pt/flora.
Antirrhinum majus - Flora-on
Antirrhinum majus - The Euro+Med PlantBase
Antirrhinum majus - Flora Vascular
Antirrhinum majus - Biodiversity Heritage Library - Bibliografia
Antirrhinum majus - JSTOR Global Plants
Antirrhinum majus - Flora Europaea
Antirrhinum majus - NCBI Taxonomy Database
Antirrhinum majus - Global Biodiversity Information Facility
Antirrhinum majus - Encyclopedia of Life
Antirrhinum majus
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see Snapdragon (disambiguation).
Antirrhinum majus, the common snapdragon (often - especially in horticulture - simply "snapdragon"), is a species of flowering plant belonging to the genus Antirrhinum. The plant was placed in the family Plantaginaceae following a revision of its prior classical family, Scrophulariaceae.[1][2][3]
The common name "snapdragon", originates from the flowers' reaction to having their throats squeezed, which causes the "mouth" of the flower to snap open like a dragon's mouth. It is widely used as an ornamental plant in borders and as a cut flower. It is perennial but usually cultivated as an annual plant. The species has been in culture since the 15th century.[4]
Description
It is an herbaceous perennial plant, growing to 0.5–1 m tall, rarely up to 2 m. The leaves are spirally arranged, broadly lanceolate, 1–7 cm long and 2-2.5 cm broad. The upper glandular stalk is stalk-round, sometimes woody to the middle. The opposite leaves are simple, elliptic or ovate to broad-lanceolate, sometimes linear and usually bleak. Leaflets are missing.[6]
The flowers are produced on a tall spike, each flower is 3.5-4.5 cm long, zygomorphic, with two 'lips' closing the corolla tube lobed divided into three parts and is purple red, almost 5 cm long. Wild plants have pink to purple flowers, often with yellow lips. Most 8 to 30 short stalked flowers are in an inflorescence together; the inflorescence axis is glandular hairy. The crown is 25 to 45 (rarely to 70) millimeters long and in different colors (red, pink, orange, yellow, white). The "maw" of the crown is closed by protuberance of the lower lip, one speaks here of "masked", and everted baggy at the bottom. There is a circle with four stamens. The plants are pollinated by bumblebees, who are strong enough to gently and briefly open male flowers to enter and exit them without difficulty, collecting pollen in the process. A snapdragon's calyx is up to 8 mm long, with sepals of equal length, oblong to broad.
The ovary is supreme. The fruit is an ovoid capsule 10–14 mm diameter shaped like a skull,[7] containing numerous small seeds. [8]
Taxonomy
Four former subspecies are now considered as separate species:[9]
Antirrhinum majus subsp. cirrhigerum (Ficalho) Franco: now classified as Antirrhinum cirrhigerum (Welw. ex Ficalho)
Antirrhinum majus subsp. linkianum (Boiss. & Reut.) Rothm: now classified as Antirrhinum linkianum Boiss. & Reut.
Antirrhinum majus subsp. litigiosum (Pau) Rothm.: now synonymised with Antirrhinum barrelieri Boreau
Antirrhinum majus subsp. tortuosum (Bosc) Rouy: now classified as Antirrhinum tortuosum Bosc ex Lam.
Range
It is native to from southern-central France, and the eastern Pyrenees to north-eastern Spain and the Balearic Islands. They often grow in crevices and walls.[10]
Cultivation
Antirrhinum majus can survive a certain amount of frost, as well as higher temperatures, but does best at 17–25 °C (63–77 °F). Nighttime temperatures around 15–17 °C (59–63 °F) encourage growth in both the apical meristem and stem.[1] The species is able to grow well from seeds, flowering quickly in 3 to 4 months. It can also be grown from cuttings.[11]
Though perennial, the species is often cultivated as a biennial or annual plant, particularly in colder areas where it may not survive the winter. Numerous cultivars are available, including plants with lavender, orange, pink, yellow, or white flowers, and also plants with peloric flowers, where the normal flowering spike is topped with a single large, symmetrical flower.[8][12] The cultivars ’Floral Showers Deep Bronze’[13] and ‘Montego Pink’[14] have gained the Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit.
The trailing (creeping) variety is often referred to as A. majus pendula (syn. A. pendula, A. repens).
It often escapes from cultivation, and naturalised populations occur widely in Europe north of the native range,[8] and elsewhere in temperate regions of the world.[2]
Past common names for Antirrhinum majus include: great snapdragon, lion's-mouth, rabbit's mouth, bonny rabbits, calf-snout, toad's mouth, bulldogs, and lion's-snap.[15]
Model research organism
In the laboratory it is a model organism,[16] for example containing the gene DEFICIENS which provides the letter "D" in the acronym MADS-box for a family of genes which are important in plant development. Antirrhinum majus has been used as a model organism in biochemical and developmental genetics for nearly a century. Many of the characteristics of A. majus made it desirable as a model organism; these include its diploid inheritance, ease of cultivation (having a relatively short generation time of around 4 months), its ease of both self-pollination and cross-pollination, and A. majus's variation in morphology and flowering color. It also benefits from its divergence from Arabidopsis thaliana, with A. thaliana's use as a common eudicot model, it has been used to compare against A. majus in developmental studies.[1]
Studies in A. majus have also been used to suggest that, at high temperatures, DNA methylation is not vital in suppressing the Tam3 transposon. Previously, it was suggested that DNA methylation was important in this process, this theory coming from comparisons of the degrees of methylation when transposition is active and inactive. However, A. majus's Tam3 transposon process did not completely support this. Its permission of transposition at 15 °C and strong suppression of transposition at temperatures around 25 °C showed that suppression of the transposition state was unlikely to be caused by the methylation state.[17] It was shown that low temperature-dependent transposition was the cause of the methylation/demethylation of Tam3, not the other way around as previously believed. It was shown in a study that decreases in the methylation of Tam3 were found in tissue that was still developing at cooler temperatures, but not in tissue that was developed or grown in hotter temperatures.[18]
Antirrhinum majus has also been used to examine the relationship between pollinators and plants. With debate as to the evolutionary advantages the conical-papillate shape of flower petals, with arguments suggesting the shape either enhanced and intensified the color of the flower or aided in orienting pollinators through sight or touch. The benefit that A. majus brought was through an identification of a mutation at the MIXTA locus that prevented this conical petal shape from forming. This allowed testing of the pollination plants with and without conical petals as well as comparisons of the absorption of light between these two groups. With the MIXTA gene being necessary in the formation of conical cells, the use of the gene in breeding of Antirrhinum was crucial, and allowed for the tests which showed why many plants produced conical-papillate epidermal cells.[19]
Another role A. majus played in examining the relationship between pollinator and plant were in the studies of floral scents. Two of A. majus's enzymes, phenylpropanoids and isoprenoids, were used in the study of its floral scent production and the scent's effect on attracting pollinators.[1]
Chemistry
Antirrhinin is an anthocyanin found in A. majus.[20] It is the 3-rutinoside of cyanidin. Its active ingredients include mucilages, gallic acid, resins, pectin and bitters. It is a topical emollient, antiphlogistic, astringent, antiscorbutic, hepatic and diuretic. It is effective against inflammations, it is used for haemorrhoids. It has been used in gargles against ulcerations of the oral cavity. Internally, it can be used for colitis and heartburn. Externally, as poultices, on erythemas.
Pests and diseases
Antirrhinum majus may suffer from some pests and diseases.
Pests
Insects are the primary pests that affect A. majus.
Aphids: They target and consume the terminal growth and underside of leaves. Aphids consume the liquids in the plant and may cause a darkened or spotted appearance on the leaves.[21]
Frankliniella occidentalis: These insects affect even strong growing and healthy Antirrhinum; they are commonly seen in newly opened flowers. They will cause small lesions in the shoots and flower buds of A. majus as well as remove pollen from the anther. This case is difficult to treat, but may be kept manageable with the predatory mite Neoseiulus.[1]
Diseases
Antirrhinum majus suffers mostly from fungal infections.
Anthracnose: A disease caused by fungi of the genus Colletotrichum. This disease targets the leaves and stem causing them a yellow with a brownish border to the infected spot. It is recommended to destroy infected plants and space existing ones farther apart.[21]
Botrytis: Also known as Grey Mould, this infection occurs under the flower of A. majus. Botrytis causes wilting of the flower's spikes and causes a light browning of the stem below the cluster of flowers.[21] Botrytis causes quick and localized drying and browning in the flower, leaves, and shoots of A. majus. In warmer weather, Botrytis becomes more severe. Treatment of Botrytis involves cutting off the infected stock and clearing the surrounding area of A. majus from any of this debris.
Pythium: Wilting in the plant may be caused by a Pythium species fungal infection if the plant is receiving adequate water.[1]
Rust: Another fungal disease that A. majus is susceptible to is rust. It can first be seen on the plant as light-green circles, on the stem or underside of its leaves, that eventually turn brown and form pustules.[1] Rust may cause A. majus to bloom prematurely, sprout smaller flowers, and begin decomposition earlier.[21]
Stem rot: A fungal infection, it can be seen as a cottony growth on the stem, low, near the soil. If infected, it is suggested the plant be destroyed.[21]
References
Hudson, Andrew; Critchley, Joanna; Erasmus, Yvette (2008-10-01). "The Genus Antirrhinum (Snapdragon): A Flowering Plant Model for Evolution and Development". Cold Spring Harbor Protocols. 2008 (10): pdb.emo100. doi:10.1101/pdb.emo100. ISSN 1940-3402. PMID 21356683.
"Antirrhinum majus". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 24 December 2017.
Olmstead, R. G.; dePamphilis, C. W.; Wolfe, A. D.; Young, N. D.; Elisons, W. J.; Reeves, P.A. (2001). "Disintegration of the Scrophulariaceae". American Journal of Botany. 88 (2): 348–361. doi:10.2307/2657024. JSTOR 2657024. PMID 11222255.
Siegmund Seybold: Flora of Germany and neighboring countries. A book to identify wild and frequently cultivated vascular plants . Founded by Otto Schmeil , Jost Fitschen . 93. Completely revised and expanded edition. Quelle & Meyer, Wiebelsheim 2006, ISBN 3-494-01413-2
Neil A. Campbell, Jane B. Reece: Biologie. Spektrum-Verlag Heidelberg-Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-8274-1352-4, page 302.
Erich Oberdorfer: Plant sociology excursion flora for Germany and adjacent areas . In collaboration with Angelika Schwabe and Theo Müller. 8th, heavily revised and supplemented edition. Eugen Ulmer, Stuttgart (Hohenheim) 2001, ISBN 3-8001-3131-5 , p. 828 .
"The Dragon's Skull: The Macabre Appearance of Snapdragon Seed Pods". Kuriositas. 26 January 2019.
Blamey, M.; Grey-Wilson, C. (1989). Flora of Britain and Northern Europe. ISBN 978-0-340-40170-5.
"Antirrhinum majus L. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 2023-09-10.
Flora Europaea: Antirrhinum majus
David A. Sutton: A revision of the tribe Antirrhineae. Oxford University Press, London / Oxford 1988, ISBN 0-19-858520-9 , p. 90-96.
Huxley, A, ed. (1992). New RHS Dictionary of Gardening. ISBN 978-0-333-47494-5.
"RHS Plantfinder - Antirrhinum majus 'Floral Showers Deep Bronze'". Retrieved 12 January 2018.
"RHS Plantfinder - Antirrhinum majus ' Montego Pink'". Retrieved 13 January 2018.
Gentianaceae to Compositae; gentian to thistle. Dover Publications; 1970. ISBN 978-0-486-22644-6. p. 178.
Oyama, R. K.; Baum, D. A. (2004). "Phylogenetic relationships of North American Antirrhinum (Veronicaceae)". American Journal of Botany. 91 (6): 918–25. doi:10.3732/ajb.91.6.918. PMID 21653448.
Hashida, Shin-nosuke; Kishima, Yuji; Mikami, Tetsuo (2005-11-01). "DNA methylation is not necessary for the inactivation of the Tam3 transposon at non-permissive temperature in Antirrhinum" (PDF). Journal of Plant Physiology. 162 (11): 1292–1296. doi:10.1016/j.jplph.2005.03.003. hdl:2115/8374. ISSN 0176-1617. PMID 16323282. S2CID 7509877.
Hashida, Shin-Nosuke; Uchiyama, Takako; Martin, Cathie; Kishima, Yuji; Sano, Yoshio; Mikami, Tetsuo (2017-04-21). "The Temperature-Dependent Change in Methylation of the Antirrhinum Transposon Tam3 Is Controlled by the Activity of Its Transposase". The Plant Cell. 18 (1): 104–118. doi:10.1105/tpc.105.037655. ISSN 1040-4651. PMC 1323487. PMID 16326924.
Glover, Beverley J.; Martin, Cathie (1998-06-01). "The role of petal cell shape and pigmentation in pollination success in Antirrhinum majus". Heredity. 80 (6): 778–784. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2540.1998.00345.x. ISSN 0018-067X.
Scott-Moncrieff, R (1930). "Natural anthocyanin pigments: The magenta flower pigment of Antirrhinum majus". Biochemical Journal. 24 (3): 753–766. doi:10.1042/bj0240753. PMC 1254517. PMID 16744416.
Gilman, Edward F. (2015-05-18). "Antirrhinum majus Snapdragon". edis.ifas.ufl.edu. Retrieved 2017-04-17.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Antirrhinum majus.
Wikispecies has information related to Antirrhinum majus.
Taxon identifiers
Wikidata: Q156843Wikispecies: Antirrhinum majusAPA: 5336APDB: 150224APNI: 218644BioLib: 40824Calflora: 404CoL: F2W4Ecocrop: 12381EoL: 578449EPPO: ATHMMEUNIS: 183261FoIO: ANTMAJGBIF: 3172001GRIN: 3665iNaturalist: 48969IPNI: 799180-1IRMNG: 10202815ITIS: 33471MichiganFlora: 1928MoBotPF: 287001NatureServe: 2.136986NBN: NBNSYS0000004060NCBI: 4151NZOR: abe6f652-bdc8-4bcd-9fb1-f68a33980349NZPCN: 2443Open Tree of Life: 596457PalDat: Antirrhinum_majusPFI: 4796Plant List: kew-2642724PLANTS: ANMA3POWO: urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:799180-1RHS: 69565Tropicos: 29200250VASCAN: 7206WisFlora: 2557WoI: 99WFO: wfo-0000539365
Authority control databases: National Edit this at Wikidata
IsraelUnited States
Categories: AntirrhinumPlants described in 1753 Taxa named by Carl Linnaeus Ornamental plants Flora of Syria Flora of Portugal Flora of France Flora of Morocco Flora of Turkey
Nurburgring - Nordschleife. The flames due to excess fuel being burned under braking, accompanied by a nice gargly popping noise. The writing on the track - which litters most of the entire 13 or so miles of its route - I think must be a pretty faithful representation of each actual item of graffiti.
So, it would be no doubt strange for Mr Takashi - whoever he is - to see his handy-work rendered back to him through a web browser, via a USB key, PS2, various 3d modelling stages and some chap having taken a photo of the original.
I love the way changing focal length, aperture and shutter speed completely changes the look of each set-up. The kerbing in the foreground rocks.
Tolka River Valley Park (TRVP)
Finglas/Cabra/Ashtown
Dublin 08-05-2021
[group] Herons and egrets | [order] CICONIIFORMES | [family] Ardeidae | [latin] Egretta garzetta | [UK] Little Egret | [FR] Aigrette garzette | [DE] Seidenreiher | [ES] Garceta Comun | [NL] Kleine Zilverreiger | [IRL] Éigrit bheag
Measurements
spanwidth min.: 88 cm
spanwidth max.: 106 cm
size min.: 55 cm
size max.: 65 cm
Breeding
incubation min.: 21 days
incubation max.: 22 days
fledging min.: 40 days
fledging max.: 45 days
broods 1
eggs min.: 3
eggs max.: 5
Status: Resident along coasts and rivers throughout Ireland, but still scarce in the Midlands and north-west of the country. Little Egret was considered rare in Ireland until it first started breeding here in 1997. It has since expanded and now occurs in almost every coastal county, as well as at a number of inland sites.
Conservation Concern: Green-listed in Ireland. The European population is considered to be Secure.
Identification: Medium-sized white heron, with long black legs, yellow feet, black bill and blue-grey lores, and two elongated nape-feathers in breeding plumage.
Similar Species: Unmistakable in Ireland. Great White Egret is a rare visitor from Continental Europe, but is twice the size.
Call: Rook-like hoarse 'aaah' on alighting from the ground. At colonies, hoarse hard gargling 'gulla-gulla-gulla…' often heard.
Diet: Takes a wide variety of animals including small fish, frogs, snails and insects and forages across a range of wetland habitats from lakes to flooded grassland. Often forages alone; but maybe encountered in small groups.
Breeding: Clutch: 4-5 eggs (1 brood) Incubation: 21-22 days.Fledging: 40-45 days (Altrical). Age of first breeding: not known. Breeds in lakes, marshes, flooded fields & estuaries.
Wintering: Little Egrets use a variety of wetland habitats, including shallow lakes, riverbanks, lagoons, coastal estuaries and rocky shoreline.
The De Chambeau Ranch was one of the largest ranches in the Mono Basin. It raised cattle, sheep, chickens, alfalfa, and vegetables to be sold in Bodie, Aurora, Lundy, and Lee Vining.
The 320-acre ranch contains the original buildings, some of the original barbed wire, ditches, roadways, fence lines, and wells.
Drawn to California by gold, Louis W. De Chambeau's father moved to Bodie from Ontario, Canada in 1878. Louis W. followed two years later when he was 18. In 1906 he purchased the ranch from Italian immigrant Nicholas Dondero, who sold it to fund exploration in Alaska.
The De Chambeau family was self-sufficient except for a few staples, such as sugar and salt. Their beds were stuffed with feathers frm Mono Lake ducks and if they had sore throats, they gargled with Mono Lake water.
Ranchers could handle many tasks: stack hay, shape horseshoes and nails from iron, grow vegetables in the sandy soil, butcher hogs and sheep. They also traded skills for goods. Louis W. De Chambeau crafted skis, for example, which he sold in Body, Lundy, and throughout the Mono Basin.
Norm De Chambeau:
“So my grandfather decided that when he moved here to the ranch that he would, uh, make skis from then on, (And, uh, he sold them, the men’s skis for $8 a pair plus 50 cents or a dollar for the pole. And that was huge money in them days. And he ended up estimating between 500 to 1000 skis that he’d built in Mono Basin, (and) sold to the different people in here.”
A pair of De Chambeau’s hand-carved skis is on display at the Mammoth Ski Museum and at Bodie State Historic Park.
This photo is taken at Finnart on the south side of the Loch, which was leased from Col Wentworth's Dall estate as a junior school and shows the staff who looked after the 11 junior boys at Finnart Lodge.
Selby Martin (a pupil during the Rannoch Years) has written a memoir of these days.
He recalls that "General welfare was monitored with equal care and concern. We were, on the whole, a healthy lot. At Rannoch the severe Miss Vickers, who always wore her blue nurse's overall with starched cuffs which rattled frighteningly when she shook down the thermometer, kept a close check on us." Miss Vickers was a sister of Matron.
Coughs and colds were dealt with efficiently with Dettol gargling, throat swabs and doses of malt extract. More serious complaints and infections might lead to prolonged stays in the sickroom. There were no antibiotics and poultices would be applied under the supervision of Dr McLean who lived at the other end of the Loch, in the first house on the right just before the blacksmith's house where Donald kept the school bus.
Elizabeth Dunkley travelled to Loch Rannoch during the war with the school and afterwards became a junior mistress at North Foreland until it merged with Wellesley House in 1969. Thereafter she worked at Selywn House School until it closed in 1976.
Miss Ewen (who had joined in 1940) also gave drawing and painting lessons at Rannoch as well as being the school's secretary. There was no school magazine - paper was in short supply and the facilities for reproduction were confined to a laborious process operated by Miss Ewen involving purple ink on a tray of jelly over which each sheet had to be individually rolled.
Mr Lampen managed Finnart assisted by Miss Henderson and Miss Lyle (both of whom joined in 1940).
There was little music apart from piano lessons given to a few boys by Mr Escombe, the end of term concert and the singing at school assembly. The choir practised regularly and provided the soloists for concerts and Sunday services alike.
Read full post on www.unclespeedster.jimdo.com
Okay, now that fisheyed gargler Tor decided to make me take minimalistic photos with a bloody fisheye lens! Heck, I thought, now i have to remove Taj Mahal from my shots in post-processing again (the fisheye being so wide, it always captures Taj Mahal, regardless of your position on the globe). I tried to shoot some gateways and white walls, but it was impossible to not get some extremely irritating edges on the shots. I ended up with 2 photos which turned out very well, in fact. They are of the insides of some hugargantic cable reels (behind which i later peed). The first one actually had some details in the white spaces, but I decided to photoshop that away, as I'm sure you can see on the final result if you look closely on the edges. Not sure if the last photo really can pompously call itself minimalistic, but considering it's taken with a fisheye lens it can at least call itself fisheye-minimalistic. On both shots i put my lens inside the hole directly opposite on the reel from the small center-holes in the shots. The walls inside those holes is what's creating that nice vignetting effect.