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This monk seal was swimming around when it turned and smiled for the camera. Photo captured off of Niihau.
The name in Seinfeld is Monk's Cafe, or 'the coffee shop'. It's actual name is Tom's Resturant, and it is located on the upper west side at Broadway, and 113th. Maybe 112th, somewhere around there.
These Monk Parakeets (Myiopsitta Monachus) can be seen in several Spanish cities including Barcelona, Madrid, Tarragona and on the Canary Islands and Balearic Islands. They generally only live in urban areas and you can find hundreds of them in Barcelona where this photo was taken whilst they were having a wash in a pavement puddle in Placa de Tetuan. Sunglasses are being issued to Barcelona's Monk parakeets as part of a new EU initiative to keep Barcelona as Catalonia's bastion of urban cool
Taken on 12 April 2009 at Kushalnagar Tibetan monastery. This monk was quite happy to pose for the photo.
While it's not that rare to see buddhist monks around these parts, it is quite rare to see them with a fancy kungfu movie straw hat, and the contrast with the gaudy loud painting on the bridge was too much to resist.
I literally jumped from my table where I was having lunch with a friend and chased after him for this shot.
Saw this monk while visiting The Great Buddha of Kamakura. He was murmuring some sort of religious words and stepping one step probably every 30 seconds. People took blessings from him.
April 10, 2005--Monk Parakeet eating buds (near nest in Turó Park, Barcelona, Spain). ©2005 Earl Berkson
At St. Joseph Abbey in St. Benedict, Louisiana, where I was a Benedictine scholastic in 2003.
From L to R: Br. Kieran Landry OSB, Juan Antonio Lanz, and yours truly. Blurry, but you can blame Br. Anselm for that. :)
Site of Monk Moors halt, between Bootle and Eskmeals, Cumbrian Coast line. Tuesday 24 July 2018
In 1897 Naval Construction & Armament Ltd, the then operators of Barrow Shipyard established a gun testing range on the shoreline near Eskmeals. A railway siding was laid for the delivery of heavy naval gun mountings; this line ran in south-westerly direction from the Cumbrian coast railway between Bootle and Eskmeals and was connected to the northbound track (towards Workington).
In 1900 immediately south of the junction two short wooden platforms were erected on the main line embankment for the use of workers employed on the range. This halt was named Monk Moors and was used only by authorised staff. Access to both platforms was from a lane immediately east of the railway bridge that it ran under. You went up a sloped path to the south end of the southbound platform where pedestrian access was also provided across the main line for the northbound platform. There was also a signal box on the east side of the railway, north of the junction.
The halt and branch line have long since disappeared; the firing range is now a well secured MOD site.
Photograph copyright: Ian 10B.
This monk would bless you by hitting you on the head with a wet broom. Taken at Wat Panan Choeng, and yes I was blessed. He was chewing tobacco and hummed a lot.
Novice monks are always playing and having fun, just like kids outside the monastery. We imagine them to be very quiet and relaxed but these guys are always play fighting, running around and playing football like other children.
The Picture of "Monks Alms-round or receive food offerings moment"
ตัวอย่างรูปในหัวข้อ "บิณฑบาต" ใน Vintage-Cinema Tone
This monk was checking out the ruin at Prasat Muang Tam - a Khmer site near Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand.