View allAll Photos Tagged hook
Haymaker was a decent if thin ale straw in colour with a slight hint of malt and caramel though at 5% i wanted more
Common name: Butterfly tree, Pink butterfly tree, Purple bauhinia, Purple butterfly tree, Purple orchid tree, Kaniar कनियार (Hindi), நீலத்திருவத்தி Nilattiruvatti (Tamil), Koiral (Bengali), Og-yok (Assamese), Rakta chandan (Marathi), Devakanchan (Kannada)
Botanical name: Bauhinia purpurea Family: Fabaceae/Leguminosae (pea family)
The Purple Orchid Tree is an exotic tropical tree that blooms over a long period of time. The beautiful & fragrant, classic, Orchid-like flowers of Bauhinia purpurea makes this small tree, native to India, a favourite of many plant lovers. In fall, before the leaves drop, Orchid-Tree is festooned with many showy and delightfully fragrant, five-inch-wide blossoms, the narrow purple, pink, and lavender petals arranged to closely resemble an orchid. These flowers appear on the trees from September through November and are a beautiful sight to see, creating a vivid splash of color in the autumn landscape. Purple orchid tree can be easily distinguished from Orchid Tree (Bauhinia variegata) in that the petals of Purple orchid tree are narrower and do not overlap. On the other hand, the petals of Bauhinia variegata are broad and overlap - it never open fully flat. The flowers are followed by 12-inch-long, slender, brown, flat seedpods which usually persist on the tree throughout the winter. The foliage light green and deeply notched at the tip. Bauhinia purpurea can reach up to 20 feet tall and have a 25 foot crown
Found this little hook and line while on my latest winter walk through a wooded area. kinda funny to find it here around a tree. I want to know the story behind how it got stuck here.
With nothing else to do, Soon sorted out these wall hooks with Tom picking up a few for claws. Time on hands a big number with the last hours remaining before the move into the new shop location proper.
Lucky shoppers at intu Potteries bagged themselves some of this seasons hottest armcandy playing our fun twist on the classic Hook a duck game!
I wonder how it came to be that this hook was placed on this windowsill. The place was abandoned and there was no reason for anyone to care about such a small detail, yet the hook was there. I imagine a small motion placing it there, a resigned gesture, an intention to be respectful of this lonely place.
Foi descrita em 1837 por Hooker como Maxillaria pumila. Nas décadas seguintes, foram sendo sucessivamente descritas espécies que hoje são consideradas suas sinonímias heterotípicas: em 1842, LIndley descreveu Maxillaria funerea; em 1859, Reichenbach publicou Maxillaria plebeja; em 1895, foi a vez de Rolfe descrever Maxillaria parva; em 1904, COgniaux publicou Maxillaria minuta; em 1908, novamente Rolfe, desta vez descrevendo Maxillaria pusilla; e em 1930, finalmente, Frederico Hoehne descreveu Maxillaria spannagelii.
This kite is uncommon in Ecuador and feeds primarily on land snails. I felt fortunate to see it, and even more fortunate when I found one in south Texas a few years after seeing this one.
Lucky shoppers at intu Potteries bagged themselves some of this seasons hottest armcandy playing our fun twist on the classic Hook a duck game!
Robert caught 2 fishes back to back. Father's day special for him. Thanks for the fantastic pose Robert!
PS: Please excuse from group invites. Thanks!
Read about my PL25 experience here
l-r: Rich Fleischer (owner, Hook and Ladder Brewing);
Chris Hancq (brewer, Yards Brewing).
The 6th annual Chesapeake Real Ale Festival. 17 October 2009. 40 casks.
Organized by the SPBW (Society for the Preservation of Beer From the Wood, Chesapeake Chapter). Hosted by the Pratt Street Alehouse (née Wharf Rat Brewpub). On Day 10 (!) of the 1st ever Baltimore Beer Week.
Photos by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.
Last time I was here, the station was under hoarding. The restoration looks great! And there are a few extras.
South aisle, east window - Resurrection of our Lord, WW1 memorial window, designed by John Henry Dearle, Morris and Co, 1922 (first use 1911, Tonbridge, but tomb omitted here) : detail
My friend Rachel's show at Pratt opens tonight. I helped hang these gigantic counterbalanced walls from hardware she built. It's impressive, if only because my back held up. See the photoset for details of where and when.
The Hook Lighthouse is a building situated at the tip of the Hook Peninsula in County Wexford, in Ireland. It is the oldest working lighthouse in the world