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- Keefer Lake, Ontario, Canada

Is it weird we left our sim weeks ago but the people who own the rental sim loved it so much they didn't return our stuff?

 

Anywho It's still there to enjoy minus all our gatchas and a few builds lol

 

Last chance to check it out, Maybe? lol @Spring Cherishville

TAXI

Closed three weeks ago.........

We sim jumped. Summer sim next opens next week ;)

Hi all! Today i'm wearing Decoy's "Black Magic" dress which is out at Salem! I'm also wearing Ersch's "Aolis" boots which are at the mainstore! LMs below happy shopping!

  

☞ Taxi to Ersch

☞ Taxi to Salem

 

Female Mountain Bluebird picking up some more dry grass for her nearby nest.

bee on a pom-pom dahlia

Dance me to your beauty with a burning violin

Dance me through the panic till I'm gathered safely in

Lift me like an olive branch and be my homeward dove

Dance me to the end of love

Dance me to the end of love

www.youtube.com/watch?v=2zjLBWnZGTU

There is a place in Southwest Florida where the seabirds gather each winter. The result is a sight to behold.

A pair of maples challenge in a competition for early color dominance in the lakeshore landscape...

Find yourself a seat, grab a glass of cold sweet wine and get ready to enjoy your friends' company by the fire :) Isn't it the good stuff?

 

credits. //

 

FEATURED:

 

What Next Pacifica Set @ Access | What Next Mainstore

what next - Pacifica Firepit

what next - Pacifica Chairs

what next - Pacifica Appetizer Plate

what next - Pacifica Pergola Screen

what next - Pacifica Ice Chest

what next - Pacifica Wine Cooler

what next - Pacifica Wine Glass Decor

 

what next - Bird of Paradise Plant (rattan)

what next - Kentia Palm Plant (rattan)

 

what next - Palisades BBQ Grill

what next - Party Sparklers

 

KraftWork - Biarritz Garden - Drapes White

Soy - Pointy String Firefly Lights

dust bunny - spicy fiesta - tacos

HIDEKI - Acoustic Guitar

Ariskea - Lliara - Side Window Table

Freshly gathered raspberries photographed from above.

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Explore #12

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Foro Romano - Roma - Italia / Roman Forum - Rome - Italy

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de/from: Wikipedia

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es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foro_Romano

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Foro Romano

 

El Foro Romano (en latín, Forum Romanum, aunque los romanos se referían a él comúnmente como Forum Magnum o simplemente Forum) era el foro de la ciudad de Roma, es decir, la zona central —semejante a las plazas centrales en las ciudades actuales— donde se encuentran las instituciones de gobierno, de mercado y religiosas. Al igual que hoy en día, era donde tenían lugar el comercio, los negocios, la prostitución, la religión y la administración de justicia. En él se situaba el hogar comunal.

 

Series de restos de pavimento muestran que sedimentos erosionados desde las colinas circundantes ya estaban elevando el nivel del foro en la primera época de la República. Originalmente había sido un terreno pantanoso, que fue drenado por los Tarquinios mediante la Cloaca Máxima. Su pavimento de travertino definitivo, que aún puede verse, data del reinado de César Augusto.

 

Actualmente es famoso por sus restos, que muestran elocuentemente el uso de los espacios urbanos durante el Imperio romano. El Foro Romano incluye los siguientes monumentos, edificios y demás ruinas antiguas importantes:

 

Templo de Cástor y Pólux

Templo de Rómulo

Templo de Saturno

Templo de Vesta

Casa de las Vestales

Templo de Venus y Roma

Templo de César

Basílica Emilia

Basílica Julia

Arco de Septimio Severo

Arco de Tito

Rostra (plural de rostrum), la tribuna desde donde los políticos daban sus discursos a los ciudadanos romanos.

Curia Julia, sede del Senado.

Basílica de Majencio y Constantino

Tabulario

Templo de Antonino y Faustina

Regia

Templo de Vespasiano y Tito

Templo de la Concordia

Templo de Jano

Un camino procesional, la Vía Sacra, cruza el Foro Romano conectándolo con el Coliseo. Al final del Imperio perdió su uso cotidiano quedando como lugar sagrado.

 

El último monumento construido en el Foro fue la Columna de Focas. Durante la Edad Media, aunque la memoria del Foro Romano persistió, los edificios fueron en su mayor parte enterrados bajo escombros y su localización, la zona entre el monte Capitolino y el Coliseo, fue designada Campo Vaccinio o ‘campo bovino’. El regreso del papa Urbano V desde Aviñón en 1367 despertó un creciente interés por los monumentos antiguos, en parte por su lección moral y en parte como cantera para construir nuevos edificios. Se extrajo gran cantidad de mármol para construcciones papales (en el Vaticano principalmente) y para cocer en hornos creados en el mismo foro para hacer cal. Miguel Ángel expresó en muchas ocasiones su oposición a la destrucción de los restos. Artistas de finales del siglo XV dibujaron las ruinas del Foro, los anticuarios copiaron inscripciones desde el siglo XVI y se comenzó una excavación profesional a finales del siglo XVIII. Un cardenal tomó medidas para drenarlo de nuevo y construyó el barrio Alessadrine sobre él. No obstante, la excavación de Carlo Fea, quien empezó a retirar los escombros del Arco de Septimio Severo en 1803, y los arqueólogos del régimen napoleónico marcaron el comienzo de la limpieza del Foro, que no fue totalmente excavado hasta principios del siglo XX.

 

En su estado actual, se muestran juntos restos de varios siglos, debido a la práctica romana de construir sobre ruinas más antiguas.

 

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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Forum

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The Roman Forum

 

The Roman Forum, also known by its Latin name Forum Romanum (Italian: Foro Romano), is a rectangular forum (plaza) surrounded by the ruins of several important ancient government buildings at the center of the city of Rome. Citizens of the ancient city referred to this space, originally a marketplace, as the Forum Magnum, or simply the Forum.

 

For centuries the Forum was the center of day-to-day life in Rome: the site of triumphal processions and elections; the venue for public speeches, criminal trials, and gladiatorial matches; and the nucleus of commercial affairs. Here statues and monuments commemorated the city's great men. The teeming heart of ancient Rome, it has been called the most celebrated meeting place in the world, and in all history.Located in the small valley between the Palatine and Capitoline Hills, the Forum today is a sprawling ruin of architectural fragments and intermittent archaeological excavations attracting 4.5 million or more sightseers yearly.

 

Many of the oldest and most important structures of the ancient city were located on or near the Forum. The Roman Kingdom's earliest shrines and temples were located on the southeastern edge. These included the ancient former royal residence, the Regia (8th century BC), and the Temple of Vesta (7th century BC), as well as the surrounding complex of the Vestal Virgins, all of which were rebuilt after the rise of imperial Rome.

 

Other archaic shrines to the northwest, such as the Umbilicus Urbis and the Vulcanal (Shrine of Vulcan), developed into the Republic's formal Comitium (assembly area). This is where the Senate—as well as Republican government itself—began. The Senate House, government offices, tribunals, temples, memorials and statues gradually cluttered the area.

 

Over time the archaic Comitium was replaced by the larger adjacent Forum and the focus of judicial activity moved to the new Basilica Aemilia (179 BC). Some 130 years later, Julius Caesar built the Basilica Julia, along with the new Curia Julia, refocusing both the judicial offices and the Senate itself. This new Forum, in what proved to be its final form, then served as a revitalized city square where the people of Rome could gather for commercial, political, judicial and religious pursuits in ever greater numbers.

 

Eventually much economic and judicial business would transfer away from the Forum Romanum to the larger and more extravagant structures (Trajan's Forum and the Basilica Ulpia) to the north. The reign of Constantine the Great saw the construction of the last major expansion of the Forum complex—the Basilica of Maxentius (312 AD). This returned the political center to the Forum until the fall of the Western Roman Empire almost two centuries later.

Chesapeake Bay, North Point, Maryland

It's still quite hot and humid and as Linus hates heat he has shifted most of his activities into the night. That sounds like a good idea as long as you aren't the human who wakes up several times per night because Linus wants to tell you that he has caught a mosquito (again) or that the tomcat nextdoor has peed on the geraniums (again). During the days he naps indoors or somewhere in the shade and gathers energy for the next night.

Click here for more information and credits, thank you

 

❤️Junk Food ❤️ for @GachaGarden event

❤️ Infinite ❤️ for @TMD event

❤️ Sway's ❤️

and more...

 

Instagram: www.instagram.com/rosesternbergsl/

Twitter: twitter.com/RoseSternberg

Blog: quatrettocs.blogspot.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RosaSternberg

Pinterest: www.pinterest.es/roses1196/

Glendhu Bay on Lake Wanaka.

 

All rights reserved. Written permission required for usage.

Please do not use this photo on any websites or for personal use.

Thank you.

 

©2018 Fantommst

 

 

Gather ye rose-buds while ye may,

Old Time is still a-flying;

And this same flower that smiles today

Tomorrow will be dying.

 

The glorious lamp of heaven, the sun,

The higher he’s a-getting,

The sooner will his race be run,

And nearer he’s to setting.

 

That age is best which is the first,

When youth and blood are warmer;

But being spent, the worse, and worst

Times still succeed the former.

 

Then be not coy, but use your time,

And while ye may, go marry;

For having lost but once your prime,

You may forever tarry.

 

To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time

BY ROBERT HERRICK

A gannet tirelessly brining home nest materials on the face of the mighty Bempton Cliffs.

Sunrise at Loch Rusky

Pond Lily,s,adding color to a Pond.

Sandhill cranes (Antigone canadensis, previously Grus canadensis, Gruidae) gather on a farm field on the edge of the Uihlein Waterfowl Production Area.

 

About 100 cranes were gathered here (maybe 50 in the image).

 

Winnebago County, Wisconsin

 

JU301129m

Gathered Crop

 

Farming Seasons

 

Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/iainmerchant/

 

Photography: www.iainmerchant.com

 

Art: www.theartoflife.gallery

 

#IainMerchant #Photography #Beautiful #Leicestershire #PhotoOfTheDay #Art #TheArtofLife #ThinkingOutLoud

 

Photo by: Iain Merchant Photography (www.iainmerchant.com)

I shall telk you a story

Honey Bees are out early, just like me.

Osprey at Jackson Bottom Wetlands Preserve in Hillsboro, OR. Vacation a few weeks back

TT 125 Kreative People group

Thanks to Lemon~art for the source image which you can see in the first comment box below or here: flic.kr/p/FA8zDj

Waterhouse image: Public Domain.

- a flatlay for Saturday Self-Challenge: knolling

 

In 1987, in the quiet after-hours at Frank Gehry’s furniture shop, as a janitor named Andrew Kromelow cleared up, he would gather stray tools and experiment with arranging them in a grid-like pattern.

 

He called the practice “knolling,” after the hard angles of Knoll furniture, a popular brand that Gehry was designing for at the time.

 

Today, knolling more often refers to the art of spacing out objects on a flat surface at tidy angles to one another and photographing the arrangement from above.

 

many thanks for all visits, faves and comments

Photo taken for the group: Smile on Saturday

Theme: One Word

“For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them.”

Matthew 18:20

I think it's a Jazz Band

It would seem appropriate on Valentine's Day ;-)

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