View allAll Photos Tagged monitoring
This is another Merrimac artifact, a cannon whose muzzle was shot off by a Union ship the day before the Monitor arrived.
Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.
I love banks of monitors. But if they have leftover space they should increase font size rather than toss in ads.
Quite nonchalantly wandering through the temple ruins, this large monitor lizard (about 1.5 metres long) truly acted as if he owned the place.
TO VIEW sit back from your monitor 2 feet and place your index finger about 10 inches in front of your eyes and focus on your finger. This will cause your eyes to go comfortably cross eyed. Keep that same cross eyed focus and notice there are now 3 photos in the back ground. Do not let your eyes leave the cross eye as you look at the middle picture which has appeared. Now increase or decrease how much your eyes are cross eyed until the image pops into 3D. Your eyes will want to leave the cross eye, but fight that urge. This is an acquired skill and takes practice. Stop if it's uncomfortable.
I was on all my fours, creeping up to this beauty for a close up sun tan shoot.
Her tail was only inches from my face.
17 de agosto, 2016
Encontro de Monitores selecionados no Programa de Capacitação em Ensino Musical Coletivo.
Foto: Taylla de Paula
Thermal Image
Raven
Taken by Judith Reese
Sterling Alaska
Monitoring Injured Birds at the TLC Bird Care Facility
in Anchorage, Alaska
Once a young man wanted to marry a girl. The girl's father said: no, unless you get down that Monitor Lizard from that high tree. The boy was asking for a goat, a dog, ropes, hay and bones. After he tied out the goat to a tree and gave her the bones, and tied out the dog, and gave him the hay.
-Hey, it is wrong! – laughed the Monitor on the tree.
-Well, Lizard, show me, if you know better! – answered the lad.
The Monitor came down from the tree to give the bones for the dog and the hay for the goat. He was caught and eaten, and the boy married the girl.