View allAll Photos Tagged minor
A Minor in a quick gesture
On the Record Store Day yesterday my local vinyl dealer day organized a small concert in his shop.
This is the guitar of Bracks, an good oldfashioned punkband.
Leica M6, Carl Zeiss Biogon 35mm f2
Kodak TriX @1600, 2 hours in Rodinal 1+100, Standdevelopment
Negative captured with a DSLR and developed in LR5.7
Together with the small Aero cyclecars, the Minor was the most affordable car before WWII. The small engine limited the maximum speed, and the body was rather primitive, but the price was equal to a good motorcycle.
It's kinda a shame but I don't mind tbh, I noticed it in the shop but she was the only one there so I got her, I really wanted her and it's was one of those situations of now or never, so I grabbed her and I don't regret it at all.
Linospadix minor. Common Names - Walking Stick Palm ; Minor Walking Stick Palm. Arecaceae
The fruit look like a string of tiny firecrackers. They can range in colour from yellowish orange to red.
It is a small (1-2 metres) understory clustering palm which occurs in Cape York and north eastern Queensland. It is a refreshing change from the climbing palms which infest much of the rainforest around Kuranda.
The minor planet Vesta.
The only way to verify that I actually found it was to take two sets of exposures separated in time. I knew I had it when Vesta moved against the star background.
Taken with a DSLR through an 8" newtonian telescope. Two sets of 10x30 second exposures.
You'll need to be quick to spot this and enarge the screen, but watch the lawnmower in the top right of the screen in the first few seconds of the footage before the van turns in.
Not sure what he did, but it seemed to take him by surprise when the mower surged forward. As we passed across the junction the driver of the Corsa was out and a full-on argument seemed to be starting...
Tomocerus minor
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomocerus_minor
Tomocerus minor is species of springtail in the family Tomoceridae. It is widespread from the Arctic to Europe, Western and Central Asia down to the Sino-Japanese, Northern and Pacific North America, Hawaii, the Caribbean mainland and New Zealand.[1]
Tomocerus minor can be up to 4.5 millimetres (0.18 in) long,[2] with antennae that are shorter than the body and a characteristic uniform bluish iridisation.
from street view
this one is still registered on D.V.L.A Computer but it has been Unlicensed since 01/07/2013
Introduced, warm-season to yearlong-green, perennial herb; aerial stems annual, to 1 m tall.
Leaves are pinnate, 8–20 cm long and form a rosette; leaflets number 9–21, and are ovate, toothed and hairless; stipules are leafy, stem-clasping and toothed. Flowerheads are globose to ovoid spikes, 10–15 mm long. Flowers are unisexual; sepals 4, petals 0. Female flowers are borne above the male flowers. Male flowers have 4 stamens, sometimes with 1 or 2 stigmas. Female flowers have 2 carpels and sometimes 1 or 2 stamens.
Fruiting hypanthium are 3–4 mm long, 4-ribbed and strongly pitted between the ribs. A native of Europe, it is common on the Tablelands, especially along roadsides. A minor environmental weed. Easily mistaken for native Acaena species when not in flower; fruits of these species are spiny.