View allAll Photos Tagged homogenizer

The new main street USA.

 

Being from a suburb north of Seattle, I in a lot of ways grow up inside the mall. Two in fact. The closer yet smaller Everett Mall, and the large yet slightly farther away Alderwood Mall. Much of my childhood was spent trying to get my parents or a friends parents to drive us there. Once there we’d see a movie, spend our allowance money, and then sit around waiting to be picked up. Once I was of working age, I got a job at Baskin Robbins and then later American Eagle, both of course located within the mall.

 

I no longer feel such pull towards shopping malls. As I moved away to college and to Seattle upon graduating my tastes have changed. The homogenized feel of the mall has been replaced with the charm of main streets and micro-neighborhoods of the city. Truth is I have grown fearful of the day when I might have to move out of the city and loss access to walkable neighborhoods and again must rely on strip and shopping malls.

Brown-headed Cowbird, juvenile, Arroyo Laguna, Highway One, San Luis Obispo County, CA

 

www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Brown-headed_Cowbird

 

birdsna-org.cuesta.idm.oclc.org/Species-Account/bna/speci...

 

The Brown-headed Cowbird is North America’s most common “brood parasite.”

 

Females forgo building nests and instead put all their energy into producing eggs, sometimes more than three dozen a summer. These they lay in the nests of other birds, abandoning their young to foster parents, usually at the expense of at least some of the host’s own chicks.

 

Over 220 hosts species have been reported as being parasitized (= cowbird “victims”); 144 species have actually reared cowbird young (= cowbird hosts).

 

Recent genetic analyses have shown that most individual females specialize on one particular host species.

 

The top 17 (with over 100 records each) include, in order: Yellow Warbler, Song Sparrow (Melospiza melodia), Red-eyed Vireo (Vireo olivaceus), Chipping Sparrow (Spizella passerina), Eastern Phoebe (Sayornis phoebe), Rufous-sided Towhee (Pipilo erythrophthalmus), Ovenbird (Seiurus aurocapilla), Common Yellowthroat (Geothlypis trichas), American Redstart (Setophaga ruticilla), Indigo Bunting (Passerina cyanea), Yellow-breasted Chat (Icteria virens), Red-winged Blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus), Kentucky Warbler (Oporornis formosus), Willow [Traill's] Flycatcher (Empidonax traillii), Bell's Vireo (Vireo bellii), Yellow-throated Vireo (Vireo flavifrons), and Field Sparrow (Spizella pusilla).

 

Some birds, such as the Yellow Warbler, can recognize cowbird eggs but are too small to get the eggs out of their nests. Instead, they build a new nest over the top of the old one and hope cowbirds don’t come back. Some larger species puncture or grab cowbird eggs and throw them out of the nest. But the majority of hosts don’t recognize cowbird eggs at all.

 

Cowbird eggs hatch faster than other species eggs, giving cowbird nestlings a head start in getting food from the parents. Young cowbirds also develop at a faster pace than their nest mates, and they sometimes toss out eggs and young nestlings or smother them in the bottom of the nest.

 

Originally these "Buffalo Birds" were limited to short-grass plains, where they followed herds of North American Bison (Bison bison) and fed on the insects stirred up by their movement. Once confined to the open grasslands of middle North America, the Brown-headed Cowbird has since dispersed widely as European settlement in North America opened forests and homogenized the environment into the agricultural and suburban landscapes of today.

 

The expansion of the Brown headed Cowbird has exposed new species and naive populations to brood parasitism, and the pressure on such host populations can be substantial. During the breeding season, female Brown-headed Cowbirds wander widely, overlap the home ranges of other females, and may lay 40 eggs per season.

 

Brown-headed Cowbird, juvenile, Arroyo Laguna, Highway One, San Luis Obispo County, CA

 

www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Brown-headed_Cowbird

 

birdsna-org.cuesta.idm.oclc.org/Species-Account/bna/speci...

 

The Brown-headed Cowbird is North America’s most common “brood parasite.”

 

Females forgo building nests and instead put all their energy into producing eggs, sometimes more than three dozen a summer. These they lay in the nests of other birds, abandoning their young to foster parents, usually at the expense of at least some of the host’s own chicks.

 

Over 220 hosts species have been reported as being parasitized (= cowbird “victims”); 144 species have actually reared cowbird young (= cowbird hosts).

 

Recent genetic analyses have shown that most individual females specialize on one particular host species.

 

The top 17 (with over 100 records each) include, in order: Yellow Warbler, Song Sparrow (Melospiza melodia), Red-eyed Vireo (Vireo olivaceus), Chipping Sparrow (Spizella passerina), Eastern Phoebe (Sayornis phoebe), Rufous-sided Towhee (Pipilo erythrophthalmus), Ovenbird (Seiurus aurocapilla), Common Yellowthroat (Geothlypis trichas), American Redstart (Setophaga ruticilla), Indigo Bunting (Passerina cyanea), Yellow-breasted Chat (Icteria virens), Red-winged Blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus), Kentucky Warbler (Oporornis formosus), Willow [Traill's] Flycatcher (Empidonax traillii), Bell's Vireo (Vireo bellii), Yellow-throated Vireo (Vireo flavifrons), and Field Sparrow (Spizella pusilla).

 

Some birds, such as the Yellow Warbler, can recognize cowbird eggs but are too small to get the eggs out of their nests. Instead, they build a new nest over the top of the old one and hope cowbirds don’t come back. Some larger species puncture or grab cowbird eggs and throw them out of the nest. But the majority of hosts don’t recognize cowbird eggs at all.

 

Cowbird eggs hatch faster than other species eggs, giving cowbird nestlings a head start in getting food from the parents. Young cowbirds also develop at a faster pace than their nest mates, and they sometimes toss out eggs and young nestlings or smother them in the bottom of the nest.

 

Originally these "Buffalo Birds" were limited to short-grass plains, where they followed herds of North American Bison (Bison bison) and fed on the insects stirred up by their movement. Once confined to the open grasslands of middle North America, the Brown-headed Cowbird has since dispersed widely as European settlement in North America opened forests and homogenized the environment into the agricultural and suburban landscapes of today.

 

The expansion of the Brown headed Cowbird has exposed new species and naive populations to brood parasitism, and the pressure on such host populations can be substantial. During the breeding season, female Brown-headed Cowbirds wander widely, overlap the home ranges of other females, and may lay 40 eggs per season.

 

02.02.02 Nicaragua.

 

Rain forest near Siuna in the province of Atlantico Norte. Subsistence farming, woman makes tortillas

 

the ingredients

 

If you were truly to begin from scratch, you'd get some white corn grain and set it to low boil in a covered pot with some slaked lime or wood ashes. You can get this in Mexican open-air markets by asking for "cal," or "tequisquite." Much of the language employed to talk about corn, tortillas, and the process of making tortillas, is based on the Aztec language, Nahuatl, and I'll mention these terms as we go along. The process described above will loosen the "skins" (pericarp) of the kernels, and you'd find most of these skins floating at the top of the steep liquor next morning. This alkaline solution has the side effect of making bound niacin in the corn endosperm soluble, and therefore available as a nutrient (this is important to folks who depend on corn as their staple source of nutrients; in Mexico annual per capita consumption of tortillas is about 410 lb., or as you can see, a little over 1 lb. per day, and in rural areas it is estimated that tortillas provide about 70% of the caloric intake). You would discard the supernate and the steep liquor itself (called "nejayote"), then wash the remaining "naked" kernels (consisting mostly of pure starch) and embryos ("germs," where most of the oil is concentrated). However, if you wanted to avoid this whole process and start from this point on, you could look for 'hominy' in your local grocery store, since this is precisely what hominy is.

 

Next, you'd get hold of a grinding stone utensil (known in Mexico as 'metate,') and you'd begin slaving over the corn grain with a pestle and a jug of water by your side. In the course of grinding the grain you're homogenizing and gelatinizing the starch, protein and germ, and also somewhat dehydrating it; however, you must add water continuously to make the resulting mixture pliable. When you are done, you'll have a dough that you will work

From Trey Ratcliff:

 

www.flickr.com/photos/stuckincustoms/5434209854/in/set-72...

 

I feel like I'm in a hurry to take photos of all these ancient places before they become homogenized. I worry that in 10 years that every place will look like a typical street corner in Plano, Texas. Know what I mean? There's nothing horrible about having a Home Depot and an Applebee's within every five mile pod of super-structure, but it can lose a bit of charm after a while.

 

This is a famous old village in China where the legend tells of two phoenixes hovered endlessly, transfixed by the beauty they saw below. It's located in the western part of central China's Hunan Province. It's called Feng Huang Cheng ("feng huang" being the Chinese name for the phoenix), and I'm happy I got to spend a few days wandering around its mysterious bits. This is a good overview of the city, and I'll have many more from the insides coming soon enough.

 

from the blog www.stuckincustoms.com

Symbolizing a complete and total takeover of The E82 Project by ENCOM International, the entire design philosophy was changed to more closely resemble the homogenized look of other ENCOM products.

 

For more information please visit

The New E82

 

www.EpcotLegacy.com

 

The angels on the ceiling of the chapel began to flow and homogenize.

Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram

 

This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.

 

1.) How long have you been actively writing for?

I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.

 

2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?

My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.

 

3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?

My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.

  

4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?

Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009

  

5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.

My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.

 

You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com

 

He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.

 

Oral Liquid Manufacturing Plant,Automatic Liquid syrup Manufacturing Plant,Liquid Syrup Manufacturing Plant,Oral Syrup Manufacturing Plant,Liquid Syrup Preparation vessels-Prism Pharma Machinery,Ahmedabad,Gujarat,India.

For more detail visit us at : www.liquidsyrupmanufacturingplant.com

Syrup Manufacturing Plant,Liquid Syrup Plant,Manufacturing Plant, Pharmaceutical syrup manufacturing process,Sugar syrup manufacturing plant-Prism Pharma Machinery,Ahmedabad,Gujarat,India.

For more detail visit us at : www.liquidsyrupmanufacturingplant.com

Axial Screw Powder Extruder, Basket Extruder, spheronizer, Pellets Making Machine, Tray Dryer

No one seemed to want to eat the imperfect one.

Mixing Emulation and Homogenizing Solution for Emulsions,Inline Homogenizer,Pharma Machinery,Pharma Machine Manufacturer in India,Pharmaceuticals Machinery- Prism Pharma Machinery,Ahmedabad,Gujarat,India.

For more detail visit us at : www.liquidsyrupmanufacturingplant.com

The opening reception for our "Tiffany Shin: Microbial Speculation of Our Gut Feelings" featured a food-based performance entitled, "Perfect Fruit"–which mapped the degradation of biodiversity and homogenization of microbiota in our food systems.

Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram

 

This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.

 

1.) How long have you been actively writing for?

I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.

 

2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?

My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.

 

3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?

My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.

  

4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?

Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009

  

5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.

My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.

 

You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com

 

He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.

 

Syrup Manufacturing Plant,Liquid Syrup Plant,Manufacturing Plant, Pharmaceutical syrup manufacturing process,Sugar syrup manufacturing plant-Prism Pharma Machinery,Ahmedabad,Gujarat,India.

For more detail visit us at : www.liquidsyrupmanufacturingplant.com

The opening reception for our "Tiffany Shin: Microbial Speculation of Our Gut Feelings" featured a food-based performance entitled, "Perfect Fruit"–which mapped the degradation of biodiversity and homogenization of microbiota in our food systems.

I liked the colors and textures of the railbed and iron tracks. It looks like a sub, hero, Italian, grinder ... whatever you call those good sandwiches they sell at Subway chains these days and have homogenized the titles :>l

***

 

The school system, custodian of print culture, has no place for the rugged individual. It is, indeed, the homogenizing hopper into which we toss our integral tots for processing.

 

Marshall McLuhan

 

***

 

PRINTS is the topic for Thursday 13th December 2012

 

ODC3

   

55 of 72

"If theme parks, with their pasteboard main streets, reek of a bland, safe, homogenized, whitebread America, the Renaissance Faire is at the other end of the social spectrum, a whiff of the occult, a flash of danger and a hint of the erotic. Here, they let you throw axes. Here are more beer and bosoms than you'll find in all of Disney World." - Neil Steinberg

Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram

 

This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.

 

1.) How long have you been actively writing for?

I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.

 

2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?

My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.

 

3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?

My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.

  

4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?

Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009

  

5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.

My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.

 

You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com

 

He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.

 

02.02.02 Nicaragua.

 

Rain forest near Siuna in the province of Atlantico Norte. Subsistence farming, woman makes tortillas

 

the daughters

 

If you were truly to begin from scratch, you'd get some white corn grain and set it to low boil in a covered pot with some slaked lime or wood ashes. You can get this in Mexican open-air markets by asking for "cal," or "tequisquite." Much of the language employed to talk about corn, tortillas, and the process of making tortillas, is based on the Aztec language, Nahuatl, and I'll mention these terms as we go along. The process described above will loosen the "skins" (pericarp) of the kernels, and you'd find most of these skins floating at the top of the steep liquor next morning. This alkaline solution has the side effect of making bound niacin in the corn endosperm soluble, and therefore available as a nutrient (this is important to folks who depend on corn as their staple source of nutrients; in Mexico annual per capita consumption of tortillas is about 410 lb., or as you can see, a little over 1 lb. per day, and in rural areas it is estimated that tortillas provide about 70% of the caloric intake). You would discard the supernate and the steep liquor itself (called "nejayote"), then wash the remaining "naked" kernels (consisting mostly of pure starch) and embryos ("germs," where most of the oil is concentrated). However, if you wanted to avoid this whole process and start from this point on, you could look for 'hominy' in your local grocery store, since this is precisely what hominy is.

 

Next, you'd get hold of a grinding stone utensil (known in Mexico as 'metate,') and you'd begin slaving over the corn grain with a pestle and a jug of water by your side. In the course of grinding the grain you're homogenizing and gelatinizing the starch, protein and germ, and also somewhat dehydrating it; however, you must add water continuously to make the resulting mixture pliable. When you are done, you'll have a dough that you will work i

Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram

 

This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.

 

1.) How long have you been actively writing for?

I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.

 

2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?

My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.

 

3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?

My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.

  

4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?

Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009

  

5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.

My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.

 

You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com

 

He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.

 

Brown-headed Cowbird, juvenile, Arroyo Laguna, Highway One, San Luis Obispo County, CA

 

With adult Song Sparrow

 

www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Brown-headed_Cowbird

 

birdsna-org.cuesta.idm.oclc.org/Species-Account/bna/speci...

 

The Brown-headed Cowbird is North America’s most common “brood parasite.”

 

Females forgo building nests and instead put all their energy into producing eggs, sometimes more than three dozen a summer. These they lay in the nests of other birds, abandoning their young to foster parents, usually at the expense of at least some of the host’s own chicks.

 

Over 220 hosts species have been reported as being parasitized (= cowbird “victims”); 144 species have actually reared cowbird young (= cowbird hosts).

 

Recent genetic analyses have shown that most individual females specialize on one particular host species.

 

The top 17 (with over 100 records each) include, in order: Yellow Warbler, Song Sparrow (Melospiza melodia), Red-eyed Vireo (Vireo olivaceus), Chipping Sparrow (Spizella passerina), Eastern Phoebe (Sayornis phoebe), Rufous-sided Towhee (Pipilo erythrophthalmus), Ovenbird (Seiurus aurocapilla), Common Yellowthroat (Geothlypis trichas), American Redstart (Setophaga ruticilla), Indigo Bunting (Passerina cyanea), Yellow-breasted Chat (Icteria virens), Red-winged Blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus), Kentucky Warbler (Oporornis formosus), Willow [Traill's] Flycatcher (Empidonax traillii), Bell's Vireo (Vireo bellii), Yellow-throated Vireo (Vireo flavifrons), and Field Sparrow (Spizella pusilla).

 

Some birds, such as the Yellow Warbler, can recognize cowbird eggs but are too small to get the eggs out of their nests. Instead, they build a new nest over the top of the old one and hope cowbirds don’t come back. Some larger species puncture or grab cowbird eggs and throw them out of the nest. But the majority of hosts don’t recognize cowbird eggs at all.

 

Cowbird eggs hatch faster than other species eggs, giving cowbird nestlings a head start in getting food from the parents. Young cowbirds also develop at a faster pace than their nest mates, and they sometimes toss out eggs and young nestlings or smother them in the bottom of the nest.

 

Originally these "Buffalo Birds" were limited to short-grass plains, where they followed herds of North American Bison (Bison bison) and fed on the insects stirred up by their movement. Once confined to the open grasslands of middle North America, the Brown-headed Cowbird has since dispersed widely as European settlement in North America opened forests and homogenized the environment into the agricultural and suburban landscapes of today.

 

The expansion of the Brown headed Cowbird has exposed new species and naive populations to brood parasitism, and the pressure on such host populations can be substantial. During the breeding season, female Brown-headed Cowbirds wander widely, overlap the home ranges of other females, and may lay 40 eggs per season.

 

Dry Compaction, Tablet Press, High Speed Rotary Tablet Press, Single Sided Rotary Tablet Press, Double Sided Rotary Tablet Press

The girls are indulging in the goodies of nature. Raw milk sale is fully legal in Montenegro and we get it moments after it has been milked. One of mom's neighbours has four goats and the other one has a cow.

Comminuting Mill, Cone Mill, Oscillating Granulator, Vibro Sifter, Roll Compactor

 

"If theme parks, with their pasteboard main streets, reek of a bland, safe, homogenized, whitebread America, the Renaissance Faire is at the other end of the social spectrum, a whiff of the occult, a flash of danger and a hint of the erotic. Here, they let you throw axes. Here are more beer and bosoms than you'll find in all of Disney World." - Neil Steinberg

Oral Liquid Manufacturing Plant,Automatic Liquid syrup Manufacturing Plant,Liquid Syrup Manufacturing Plant,Oral Syrup Manufacturing Plant,Liquid Syrup Preparation vessels-Prism Pharma Machinery,Ahmedabad,Gujarat,India.

For more detail visit us at : www.liquidsyrupmanufacturingplant.com

It's difficult to make butter from goat's milk (unless you have a fancy separator) because it's naturally homogenized and not much cream rises to the top, but I scooped spoonfuls from the jars before making cheese and got enough to make this lump of butter! Goat butter is pure white. I've been cooking with it, yum!

Do you know SkyderAlert’s Third Party Administrators/Organizations?

Who are the 'extra organizers of the organizers'?

¤ SkyderALERT shares some of your personal information with affiliated groups, such as sister organization Skyanalysis.org Political.

¤Affiliated Third Parties, which include database administrators or organizations that provide extra organizers.

¤Third Party Administrators, such as organizations we engage to facilitate large distribution of messages

 

SkyderAlert software is marketed as an “award winning and patented mobile app” that “puts the power of democracy in your hands” In his words: “SkyderALERT 2.0 uses patented technology to geolocate and petition appropriate government officials.” It uses Twitter to contact legislators, and FaceBook to share petitions.

 

George Barnes is a talented guy and he works really hard, but he is not a software developer.

For more information about George Barnes and Brant's connection to ZelnickMedia: The Take2s irisphant.wordpress.com/2014/02/11/homogenized-medium-geo...

 

Skyderalert is one of many apps designed to identify, track, and subject the user to advanced transhumanistic re-programming using a combination of geo-location capabilities, nano technology, and EMF control through cellphone transmission.

To find out more look for: Trans-Humanism – Genetic Modification – Nano-Technology – HAARP – Geoengineering

Brown-headed Cowbird, juvenile, Arroyo Laguna, Highway One, San Luis Obispo County, CA

 

www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Brown-headed_Cowbird

 

birdsna-org.cuesta.idm.oclc.org/Species-Account/bna/speci...

 

The Brown-headed Cowbird is North America’s most common “brood parasite.”

 

Females forgo building nests and instead put all their energy into producing eggs, sometimes more than three dozen a summer. These they lay in the nests of other birds, abandoning their young to foster parents, usually at the expense of at least some of the host’s own chicks.

 

Over 220 hosts species have been reported as being parasitized (= cowbird “victims”); 144 species have actually reared cowbird young (= cowbird hosts).

 

Recent genetic analyses have shown that most individual females specialize on one particular host species.

 

The top 17 (with over 100 records each) include, in order: Yellow Warbler, Song Sparrow (Melospiza melodia), Red-eyed Vireo (Vireo olivaceus), Chipping Sparrow (Spizella passerina), Eastern Phoebe (Sayornis phoebe), Rufous-sided Towhee (Pipilo erythrophthalmus), Ovenbird (Seiurus aurocapilla), Common Yellowthroat (Geothlypis trichas), American Redstart (Setophaga ruticilla), Indigo Bunting (Passerina cyanea), Yellow-breasted Chat (Icteria virens), Red-winged Blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus), Kentucky Warbler (Oporornis formosus), Willow [Traill's] Flycatcher (Empidonax traillii), Bell's Vireo (Vireo bellii), Yellow-throated Vireo (Vireo flavifrons), and Field Sparrow (Spizella pusilla).

 

Some birds, such as the Yellow Warbler, can recognize cowbird eggs but are too small to get the eggs out of their nests. Instead, they build a new nest over the top of the old one and hope cowbirds don’t come back. Some larger species puncture or grab cowbird eggs and throw them out of the nest. But the majority of hosts don’t recognize cowbird eggs at all.

 

Cowbird eggs hatch faster than other species eggs, giving cowbird nestlings a head start in getting food from the parents. Young cowbirds also develop at a faster pace than their nest mates, and they sometimes toss out eggs and young nestlings or smother them in the bottom of the nest.

 

Originally these "Buffalo Birds" were limited to short-grass plains, where they followed herds of North American Bison (Bison bison) and fed on the insects stirred up by their movement. Once confined to the open grasslands of middle North America, the Brown-headed Cowbird has since dispersed widely as European settlement in North America opened forests and homogenized the environment into the agricultural and suburban landscapes of today.

 

The expansion of the Brown headed Cowbird has exposed new species and naive populations to brood parasitism, and the pressure on such host populations can be substantial. During the breeding season, female Brown-headed Cowbirds wander widely, overlap the home ranges of other females, and may lay 40 eggs per season.

 

spiced tea. so cozy and good on a january morning.

www.gcequipment.com

GlobeCore KLM series Colloid Mills are specially designed for the production of highly stable colloidal solutions, fine suspensions, mixtures and emulsions. Wet grinding technique is used, as rotor and stator cone gap is wider at the inlet and narrower at the outlet.

 

Additionaly, the complex relief of the generator(stator) surface creates increased turbulence, shearing the particles.

 

The product is crashed between the rotating rotor and stationary stator in the mill. Under the influence of centrifugal force and high velocity of the rotor relative to the stator, liquid and semi-liquid substances are finely dispersed and homogenized.

 

The mill can simultaniousely disperse and homogenise the product.

 

It is equiped with a heating jacket

 

KLM features allow to produce highly stable emulsions as well as colloid suspensions and ensure high degree of homogenization with particles size down to 0.5 micron.

 

GlobeCore offers a range of Bitumen Emulsion Plants, Colloid Mills, Polymer Modified Bitumen Plants and auxiliary equipment for production of bitumen emulsions and modified bitumen.

 

For more details please contact Mr Stanislav Sukhar via skype: stan_globecore or by phone:+380500131317; +38 (05322) 41211 or email: sales@gcequipment.com

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Pharmaceuticals Machine Manufacturer in India,Liquid Manufacturing Plant-Prism Pharma Machinery,Ahmedabad,Gujarat,India.

For more detail visit us at : www.liquidsyrupmanufacturingplant.com

Fluid Bed Equipments, Pellets Coater, Wurster Coater, Bottom Spray Coater, Pellets Extruder-Prism Pharma Machinery,Ahmedabad,Gujarat,India.

 

Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram

 

This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.

 

1.) How long have you been actively writing for?

I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.

 

2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?

My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.

 

3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?

My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.

  

4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?

Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009

  

5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.

My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.

 

You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com

 

He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.

 

Portfolio || Flickr Archive || Instagram

 

This Case feature is extra special for me because he was one of the first writers I met in '95 when I didn't know anybody and we were still in high school. Case has been famous twice, both as a writer and as Video director when he won an Juno for a video with Arcade Fire.

 

1.) How long have you been actively writing for?

I started writing in '92. I slowed down in 2002 to a couple pieces a year, but I never stopped writing. So it's been 28 years.

 

2.) How has your work changed or evolved since you started, and what made it change?

My work has gotten better since I started... First couple years were pretty toy. But at my peak, my work was known worldwide, I got the chance to paint with Daim, Loomit, Seen, Duster, Tats Cru and many other international writers. Also in the big magazines like The Source, 12oz Prophet, etc. All these experiences improved my style and made me look at pushing graffiti further.

 

3.) Tell me about your approach to street art?

My approach comes from a freestyle frame of mind. I like to paint to the wall instead of to the sketch. I sketch to practice but when I paint I rarely use sketch's. I find them to constricting. I do all aspects from 2d to 3d to characters and backgrounds.

  

4.) Any other interests you have apart from painting/art?

Apart from art, Im interested in film making and have directed and animated many music videos for a variety of recording artist from 2001-2009

  

5.) How do you see the further evolution of your work? The city, and scene at large? Seems to have changed alot in the last decade.

My work has evolved onto canvases using Spray paint in a different way. Portraits, scenics and abstracts that adhere to the traditional rules of graffiti - no stencils, no brushes, just pure freehand spray painting. The scene really changed with the advent of the internet. Regional styles started disappearing and a more homogenized style replaced it. Street cred was easier to fake and the real street culture turned into legal walls and sponsored jams. Its great to see many writers from the pre-internet era coming back and still kings. Shout out to the graffiti grandpa's keeping it real and my crews Kwota, TDV, AFC and BIF.

 

You can see more of Case's art here: casemackeen.com

 

He also has a show coming up at Run Gallery in Toronto opening Dec 12, 2020.

 

Homogenizing and mixing plants,Mixing Plant for Pharmaceuticals,Homogenizing, Mixing/Dispersing Unit,Homogenizer Mixing Tank- Prism Pharma Machinery,Ahmedabad,Gujarat,India.

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We discovered this milk at Farmer's Market here in Nashville a couple of weeks ago. It comes from a Mennonite farm in Russelville, KY. It's all organic, not homogenize (not to be confused with pasteurized) which is much healthier for our digestive system and our heart, and they sell it only in glass bottles. It is without a doubt, the best damn milk we've ever had!

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I drive past this Motel twice every day and twice every day I'm struck by how beautiful and full of character it is. In a world where everything is becoming corporate and homogenized, little family run places like this are becoming scarce. I decided that tonight was the night I was going to pull over and take a few pictures. I think I gave the owners a scare but hopefully they understand that I'm really just honoring them and their establishment and appreciating that they're keeping it up the way it is instead of modernizing it or selling it to Best Western or something.

fun food face! fried food cafe! not much to say about this except it looks like a picture out of a catalog or something. also, that it's taken in my hometown. i got a few good shots at the fair, which happened to be set up outside the plaza where eric and i went browsing last night. plazas! gross! living in new york, i definitely don't miss all the strip malls and plazas that really homogenize american cities and suburbs. i have some pictures of plazas, and i can't even process them to interestingness.

 

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