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Name : Klara

Nationality : Swedish

Hometown : Nyköping, Sweden

For the half-marathon (21.1 km) results and photos...here are the local (Ottawa & area) participants -- sorted by cities and first name -- in the September 19, 2010, Canada Army Run held in Ottawa, Ontario.

 

Click here and enter the bib numbers for the full individual race results.

(5,452 runners in the 21.1 km race)

 

Thank-you to Sportstats.

 

Part A. Ottawa (bib numbers, see below; for photos, click here.)

Part B. Other Communities (Alexandria to Navan) (Click here.)

Part C. Other Communities (Nepean to Woodlawn) (Click here.)

 

Part A: (Ottawa photos click here.)

 

5993…Aaron Auyeung

812…Aaron Toner

462…Abigail Fyfe

6331…Abigail Hain

6169…Adam Lister

2897…Adam Martin

1569…Adam Phomin

2937…Adam Richardson

2295…Adam Sherk

2373…Adam Yaworski

15…Adrian Becklumb

3184…Adriana Ducic

4953…Adriana Zeleney

3225…Adwin Gallant

4118…Aideen Smith

5629…Aili Ignacy

592…Alain Dion

2979…Alain Vermette

5406…Alan Born

6058…Alan Dempsey

5753…Alan Mulawyshyn

75…Alan Tippett

3594…Alan Yeadon

4612…Alana McNamara-Uguccioni

114…Alan-John Sigouin

1675…Alastair Okroy

6377…Alastair Warwick

611…Alayne Crawford

4494…Alecks Zarama

5963…Alessandra Rosselli

2417…Alex Burnet

1106…Alex Peach

6292…Alexa Bernier Sylvestre

3296…Alexa Hutchinson

4884…Alexander Gomez

6605…Alexandra Averbeck

3892…Alexandra Brunette-D'souza

859…Alexandra Bushell

1876…Alexandra Gruca-Macaulay

2652…Alexis Lemmex

5926…Alia Waterfall

3000…Alice Adamo

892…Alison Cunningham

6322…Alison Dewar

3378…Alison McCray

5754…Alison Mulawyshyn

4569…Alison Sargent

1198…Alison Young

3227…Allan Gauci

1828…Allan White

710…Allie Wright

3500…Allison Seymour

6332…Allister Hain

509…Amanda Beaubien

851…Amanda Brown

3258…Amanda Haddad

5599…Amanda Halladay

336…Amanda Holmes

5755…Amanda Mulawyshyn

4281…Amanda Palmer

4628…Amanda Reurekas

2955…Amber Steeves

4701…Amber Tower

4946…Amin Mirzaee

797…Amir Mirzaei

530…Amy Dickson

3175…Amy Donaghey

5291…Amy Hiltz

5977…Amy Kingston

2167…Amy Plint

5824…Amy Rose

305…Amy Usher

769…Anali Stewart

1306…Andre Campeau

175…Andre Francois Giroux

5748…Andre Morency

3457…Andre Rancourt

1697…Andre St-Laurent

1711…Andrea Dupille

1708…Andrea English

4244…Andrea Hill

5715…Andrea Matthews

1192…Andrea Wenham

1561…Andree Deslauriers

1945…Andrei Stefan

6460…Andrew Burdeniuk

2296…Andrew Frank

3256…Andrew Ha

5605…Andrew Hawley

4795…Andrew Hepburn

6494…Andrew Higgerty

3320…Andrew Kelly

2027…Andrew Macdonald

4852…Andrew Mackinder

2158…Andrew Macneil

1051…Andrew Matwick

4996…Andrew Melchers

2922…Andrew Ng

5766…Andrew Norgaard

1872…Andrew Parker

4369…Andrew Patzer

2134…Andrew Plater

6416…Andrew Shiner

6412…Andrew Spurrell

1883…Andrew Van Dorsser

2648…Andy Boutet

2214…Andy Millette

1447…Andy Wilson

4431…Angela Lamb

1126…Angela Romany

5098…Angela Steele

3565…Angela Walter

2337…Angelo Fatoric

4589…Angie Lapointe

6055…Anick De Sousa

3113…Anika Clark

5382…Anita Barewal

5450…Anita Choquette

4466…Anita Portier

3980…Anka Crowe

4038…Ann Lanthier

1035…Ann Macdonald

3679…Ann McCaffrey

4196…Ann Moquin

1281…Ann Piche

5483…Anna Dabros

2102…Anna Hardy

4241…Anna Hoefnagels

6346…Anna Mattok

3659…Anna Shannette

3576…Anna Wilkinson

2840…Anna-Maria Frescura

3993…Anne Finn

1388…Anne Francis

1699…Anne Kavanagh

5024…Anne Menard

4955…Anne Overton

5130…Anne Pearce

4620…Anne Strangelove

659…Annette Brinkman

1358…Annie Plouffe

6095…Anthony Foster

5820…Anthony Robertson

5712…Antonia Marrs

536…Aprile Cadeau

10…Arif Aziz

1493…Arjun Vinodrai

4993…Arlene Doucette

2007…Arthur King

1361…Arthur Winnik

5366…Ashley Allott

5989…Ashley Atkins

740…Ashley Augstman

5209…Ashley Brennan

3265…Ashley Harrington

771…Ashley Sisco

5882…Audra Swinton

888…Audrey Corsi Caya

5087…Audrey Lajoie

6486…Audrey Lajoie

2501…Avdo Nalic

2302…Avril Patrick

4942…Aydin Mirzaee

4473…B Schmidt

858…Barbara Burkhard

1592…Barbara Campbell

3832…Barbara Hartley

1664…Barbara Koop

387…Barbara Logue

4456…Barbara Mingie

761…Barnabas Fung

227…Barry Walker

3453…Beate Pradel

4353…Beatrice Belanger

6337…Ben Howe

2377…Benjamin Butty

5203…Benjamin Kalish

2798…Ben-Zion Caspi

3105…Bernard Charlebois

5118…Bernie Car

3242…Berny Gordon

3073…Betty Bulman

2244…Betty-Jane Horton

3842…Beverley Davis

157…Beverley Wells

3970…Beverly Clarkson

3241…Bhaskar Gopalan

5959…Bill Aitken

1845…Bill Horne

2904…Bill McEachern

5354…Bing Cheung

609…Blair Bobyk

1701…Blair Johnston

2653…Bob Alexander

1959…Bob Chiasson

2155…Bob Cousineau

3841…Bob Fraser

2905…Bob McGillivray

4545…Bob Moquin

1161…Bonnie Stewart

2253…Brad Elliott

1848…Brad Fulton

1880…Brad Johnson

1674…Brad McAninch

1411…Brad Richard

5951…Brad Wood

1992…Bradley Conley

4749…Brandon Bailey

166…Brandon Malleck

209…Brandon McArthur

1999…Brandy Bursey

1071…Breanne Merklinger

6151…Breelyn Lancaster

2528…Brenda Cuggy

6178…Brenda Makowichuk

2657…Brenda Ross

4356…Brendan Hennigan

645…Brent Caverly

5738…Brent Miller

6204…Brent Neal

4702…Brent Tower

57…Brent Vandermeer

2001…Brian Chow

1288…Brian Harding

6413…Brian Kingston

6157…Brian Lawless

2615…Brian McNeill

167…Brian O'higgins

2723…Brian Ray

4634…Brian Sanford

3498…Brian Senecal

3529…Brian Storosko

4570…Brigitte Cossette

2863…Brigitte Jackstien

5064…Brigitte Joly

3275…Brittany Hinds

5199…Brittany Leblanc

1457…Brock Harrison

2732…Brooke Kelford

6397…Bruce Huff

2908…Bruce McLaurin

6198…Bruce Montgomery

4314…Bruce Muise

2671…Bruce Nichols

2947…Bruce Sheppard

3276…Bryan Hofmeister

6189…Bryon McConnell

2542…Bunny - Bob Plamondon

749…Bunny - Gary Banks

2540…Bunny - Ian Boyle

2535…Bunny - Max Reede

5258…Bunny - Rob Hughes

748…Bunny- Artur Stec

2537…Bunny- Mark Wigmore

5257…Bunny- Trish Conway

5259…Bunny-Andrew Costello

746…Bunny-Anne Hughes

2539…Bunny-James Sauve

2536…Bunny-Steph Ethier

747…Bunny-Sylvie King

3889…Bunny-Marybeth Reynolds (3:00)

2541…Bunny-Maurenia Lynds

1618…C Chung

3883…Caitlin Currie

213…Cal Mitchell

2728…Caleb Netting

4917…Calvin Mak

1847…Cameron Doyle

6513…Cameron Fairlie

928…Cameron Fraser

5194…Camil Giguere

1984…Candice Dandurand

5969…Candice Hilder

4647…Carie Horning

1291…Carl Marcotte

568…Carla Harding

4748…Carli Grady

1001…Carly Lachance

2961…Carmelle Sullivan

3559…Carmen Vierula

1795…Carol Bennett

4195…Carol Joly

3665…Carol White

4132…Caroline Tsien

4730…Carolyn Bertrand

3651…Carolyn Chalupka

4297…Carolyn Tapp

3882…Carrie Roussin

3740…Cassandra Lively

5208…Cassaundra Iwankow

3092…Catherine Caron

1884…Catherine Chubey

2677…Catherine Fletcher

5057…Catherine Macleod

3452…Catherine Pound

2982…Catherine Wallace

5047…Cathleen Difruscio

1924…Cathleen Kayser

1257…Cathlin Antonello

5592…Cathy Green

5868…Cathy St.Louis

3493…Chad Scarborough

229…Chad Wilson

5435…Chantal Campbell

1710…Chantal Fallows

3448…Chantal Pilon

1728…Chantal Vonschoenberg

5675…Chantelle Lalonde

2194…Chari Marple

3369…Charlene Mathias

4470…Charlene Ruberry

2628…Charles Pryce

5151…Charles-Antoine Dion

5761…Charlotte Newton

4174…Chelsea Macdonell

4065…Cherrie Meloche

5648…Cheryl Kardish-Levitan

1066…Cheryl McIntyre

4207…Cheryl Perry

5849…Cheryl Shore

3624…Chloe Macdonell

2307…Chris Bartholomew

3054…Chris Bowen

2714…Chris Bright

2815…Chris Dannehl

1269…Chris Hayes

4316…Chris Henry

3604…Chris Manuel

4860…Chris Middleton

5750…Chris Morris

6351…Chris Moule

1300…Chris Phelan

5142…Chris Picknell

3459…Chris Rath

1156…Chris Spiteri

4672…Chris Ward

1564…Chris Warren

4490…Chris Weicker

3589…Chris Woodcock

2341…Chris Wragg

6392…Christelle Desgranges

3098…Christian Cattan

5402…Christie Bitar

4703…Christina Aboukassim

5634…Christina Jensen

2920…Christina Mullally

5180…Christina Romanin

4330…Christine Bourbonniere

2585…Christine Conlin

3230…Christine Geraghty

5612…Christine Hodge

1049…Christine Marshall

4506…Christine Mayer

5731…Christine Meldrum

474…Christine Pham

4809…Christine Piche

5807…Christine Pratley-Moore

3460…Christine Rath

5859…Christine Smith

2284…Christine Turmaine

6406…Christopher Aranda

1670…Christopher Arksey

6439…Christopher Collmorgen

5148…Christopher Ferris

5040…Christopher Gifford

5653…Christopher Kelly

4055…Christopher Mallette

4989…Christopher Morin

5049…Christopher Stafford

2381…Christopher Yule

1739…Chuck Bordeleau

2340…Chunyu Zhang

3675…Cindy Almond

1882…Cindy De Cuypere

2336…Cindy Macdonald

539…Cindy Maraj

4656…Cindy Puddicombe

781…Cindy Qu

5821…Cindy Robinson

2479…Claire McAneney

1391…Claire Samson

1043…Clare Macrae

828…Claude Beland

3436…Claude Papineau

5415…Claudia Brown

1509…Claudia Rutherford

1182…Claudia Veas

2532…Claudine Simard

4674…Clifford Martin

5702…Clyde Maclellan

1758…Colette Kenney

3420…Colette Nault

2730…Colin Bradley

187…Colin Daniel

1605…Colin Langille

744…Colin Sinclair

4626…Colin Welburn

5398…Colleen Bigelow

6510…Colleen Crane

2161…Colleen Penttinen

5474…Constance Craig

1278…Corey Crosby

618…Corey Grant

1283…Cori Dinovitzer

2354…Corina Buettner

5384…Corri Barr

2423…Cory Bialowas

2874…Cory Kwasny

5181…Courtney Sendall

2767…Craig Blair

2603…Craig Kowalik

1977…Craig Owen

4878…Craig Roberts

5001…Craig Rosario

1981…Cristina Santostefano

1377…Crystal Beaulieu

6319…Crystal Culp

3748…Curtis McCaffrey

424…Cynthia Desnoyers

5520…Cynthia Elliott

4961…Cynthia Maceachern

4950…Dahui Xiong

1937…Dale Joynt

6020…Dan Burke

5747…Dan Moore

5204…Dan Pihlainen

4630…Dan Seekings

53…Dan Steeves

269…Dana Menard

1186…Dana Wall

2759…Daniel Barnes

3065…Daniel Brown

2106…Daniel Mallett

4801…Daniel Morgan

318…Daniel Mossman

3416…Daniel Munro

6208…Daniel Nugent-Bowman

3895…Daniel Pereira

5794…Daniel Pharand

5802…Daniel Pohl

2349…Daniel Vincent

3141…Daniele Crivello

2115…Danielle Clarkin

2850…Dara Hakimzadeh

2592…Darcie Sawilla

2960…Daria Strachan

3313…Darlene Joyce

5936…Darlene Whiting

3060…Darrell Bridge

5036…Darren Boomer

6122…Darryl Hirsch

2327…Dave Abboud

1518…Dave Allan

2289…Dave Dawson

1762…Dave Eggleton

5583…Dave Goods

980…Dave Johnston

2649…Dave Langlois

3367…Dave Marcotte

2633…Dave Morin-Pelletier

3449…Dave Poff

3506…Dave Silvester

5190…Dave Spagnolo

1801…Dave Villeneuve

49…Dave Yaeger

2228…Dave Yarwood

2749…David Aaltonen

275…David Austin

603…David Chow

2498…David Dawson

3158…David Delaney

6495…David Dunkerley

3213…David Fobert

195…David Gerrard

2848…David Gregory

3762…David Hannah

4346…David Harding

5664…David Kirk

1982…David Korpi

1018…David Lemieux

5689…David Liimatainen

2286…David Macquistan

4349…David Milligan

216…David Murray

1890…David Nash

5310…David Quick

2597…David Rain

104…David Saville

146…David Shantz

3528…David Stewart

5897…David Tischhauser

1716…David Tuck

2120…David Vessey

3992…Dawn Fallis

3408…Dawn Montgomery

3410…Dawn More

3315…Dean Justus

5758…Deanna Murray

5615…Deb Hogan

4404…Debby Duford

4460…Deborah Newhook

438…Deborah Potter

3167…Deidra Dionne

378…Delanie Fontaine

660…Delphine Moser

2406…Denis Thompson

1469…Denise Plaa

3499…Denise Senecal

1172…Denise Thibault

6277…Denise Villeneuve

3074…Dennis Bulman

1517…Dennis Smith

2688…Dennis Waite

1305…Derek Fildebrandt

5693…Derek Love

4969…Derek Schroeder

2952…Derek Spriet

1189…Derrick Ward

83…Devashish Paul

953…Diana Harrison

4736…Diana Norton

3044…Diane Boisvert

4444…Diane Mackinder

6417…Diane Pascoli

4537…Dick Gunstone

2792…Dj Butcher

2992…Djordje Zutkovic

3014…Dominique Au-Yeung

5333…Dominique Verdurmen

3007…Don Andersen

3129…Don Cooper

2534…Don Harrison

1090…Don Orr

6359…Don Plenderleith

962…Dona Hill

1113…Dona Pino

1775…Donald Taylor

5920…Donald Waldock

5221…Donna Davis

4026…Donna Justus

4056…Donna Manweiler

1076…Donna Moffatt

4208…Donna Perry

5200…Donnan McKenna

3348…Doreen Lipovski

1601…Dorothy Kessler

728…Doug Pritchard

3887…Douglas Ainslie

1956…Douglas Brunt

4958…Douglas Carles

2808…Douglas Cooper

1528…Douglas Hutchison

1878…Douglas Macaulay

1939…Douglas McGinn

6219…Douglas Petryk

1294…Douglas Thomas

6108…Drew Gragg

222…Duaine Simms

173…Duncan Shaw

5423…Dung Bui

2080…Dwaine Martin

1398…Dwayne Lemon

2206…Dwight Obst

6462…Earl Horuath

724…Ed Clouthier

5412…Eddy Bridge

3327…Edie Knight

4379…Edith Anderson

2826…Edith Duarte

5595…Edith Grienti

2461…Edmund Binggeli

3538…Edmund Thomas

6404…Edward Fox

2247…Edward Jun

4130…Eileen Tosky-McKinnon

647…Eileen Vincent

3361…Eira Macdonell

5829…Elaine Rufiange

1173…Eleanor Thomas

5207…Elen Mark

3317…Eleonora Karabatic

3218…Elisabeth Fowler

2207…Elizabeth Burges-Sims

4426…Elizabeth Jones

4069…Elizabeth Millaire

4867…Elizabeth Race

4909…Elizabeth Richards

5439…Ellen Carter

1091…Ellen O'halloran

798…Elsa Mirzaei

6496…Elysia Van Zeyl

5981…Emilia Alai

3953…Emilie Brouzes

5462…Emilie Comtois-Rousseau

4941…Emily Brunt

1538…Emily Gildner

4005…Emily Gusba

205…Emily Maclean

1046…Emily Mantha

6264…Emily Thuswaldner

5373…Emmanuelle Arnould-Lalonde

4446…Ena Malvern

37…Eric Albert

3012…Eric Arnold

58…Eric Arseneault

6011…Eric Bourlier

1380…Eric Charland

164…Eric Edora

3656…Eric Jackson

5086…Eric Sanchez

2332…Eric Singh

4306…Erica Braun

4689…Erica Dath

1512…Erika McEachran

635…Erin Enros

5131…Erin Ferraris

3825…Erin Langton

766…Erin Mutterback

5922…Erin Wall

2986…Erin White

6358…Estelle Perrault

5846…Esther Seto

6152…Eugene Lang

5426…Eva Burnett

4491…Evamarie Weicker

5718…Evan May

3677…Eve Desaulniers

5084…Eve Desmarais

5577…Evelyne Gionet

1275…Everett Rose

197…Falk Gottlob

5584…Fannie Gouault

4882…Farouk Rajan

6427…Fatin Halawah

4089…Felice Pleet

2234…Fiona Johnston

4915…France Laliberte

4548…Frances Enns

3996…Frances Furmankiewicz

677…Francesca Craig

1551…Francesca Macdonald

5736…Francine Millen

1562…Francis Bilodeau

1633…Francisco De Sousa

3189…Francois Dumaine

2930…Francois Pineau

1081…Francoise Mulligan

4484…Francoise Tobias

2442…Frank Brown

3193…Frank D'angelo

5166…Frank Gelinas

2729…Frank Maloney

2873…Franz Kropp

2299…Fred Pelletier

5682…Fuen Leal-Santiago

3097…Gabriel Castro

3025…Gabriela Balajova

5547…Gabriela Fonseca

4380…Gail Baker-Gregory

4914…Gareth Webb

178…Gary Bazdell

27…Gary Cooper

198…Gary Guymer

228…Gary Wilkes

1019…Gavin Lemoine

2896…Geb Marett

3314…Genesis Juane

3122…Geneva Collier

1348…Genevieve Pineau

3525…Gennifer Stainforth

3186…Geof Dudding

2809…Geoff Cooper

3190…Geoff Dunkley

1250…Geoff Miller

84…Geoff Riggs

1599…Geoff Roth

2491…Geoff White

1947…George Condrut

2833…George Ferrier

6436…Georgetto Demers

161…Gerald Aubry

3426…Gerald Nigra

4857…Gerry Clarke

3178…Gerry Doucette

4903…Gilles Beauchesne

3523…Gilles St-Pierre

3008…Gillian Andersen

6098…Gillian Frost

2574…Gillian Gresham

2877…Ginette Lalonde-Kontio

1689…Ginette Lavigne

3530…Ginny Strachan

2285…Gino Rinaldi

4720…Gisella Gagliardi

5449…Glen Chiasson

34…Glenn Cheney

2331…Glenn Poirier

1486…Gloria Baeza

1109…Golmain Percy

5381…Gord Baldwin

3134…Gord Coulson

2557…Gord Larose

4886…Gordon Josephson

4321…Grace Cameron

1262…Grace Harju

3567…Graeme Wardlaw

2034…Graham Acreman

6170…Graham Lister

2026…Graham Schuler

3536…Graham Thatcher

4421…Graig Halpin

799…Grant Armstrong

4977…Grant Macleod

2958…Grant Stewart

1096…Graziella Panuccio

1995…Greg Artichuk

429…Greg Brockmann

1810…Greg Carreau

3238…Greg Godsell

2366…Greg Macdougall

3906…Greg Molson

3411…Greg Morris

1587…Greg White

4876…Gregory Lemoyne

3106…Greta Chase

1152…Greta Smith

3512…Gurminder Singh

1743…Guy Boyd

684…Guy Gellatly

3234…Guy Giguere

4535…Guylaine Bernard

3666…Guylaine Gallant

47…Gyro Inman

3513…Hali Smith

5970…Harold Boudreau

2844…Harold Geller

163…Harold Walker

4238…Hazel Ullyatt

3929…Heather Baker

3041…Heather Bigelow

3282…Heather Hopkins

1355…Heather Martin

662…Heather Morse

4084…Heather Paulusse

3569…Heather Watts

1741…Heather Willett

5942…Heather Williams

925…Helen Francis

1197…Helen Yemensky

1021…Helene Lepine

4706…Helen-Marie Weeks

4796…Hieu Nguyen

3349…Hilary Little

1559…Hilary Mellor

4318…Holly Blair

5638…Holly Johnson

5962…Holly Kemp

1094…Hong Pang

1718…Howard Silver

5021…Hui Xu

6440…Iain Davidson

1552…Iain Macdonald

2765…Ian Beausoleil-Morrison

5588…Ian Graham

3261…Ian Hamilton

70…Ian Joiner

5704…Ian Macvicar

4565…Ian Malcolm

130…Ian Milne

2119…Ian Rosso

4792…Ian Shea

1414…Ian Whittal

2586…Ilona Montgomery

4849…Imran Choudhry

739…Ingrid Berljawsky

2871…Ingrid Koenig

5272…Ione Jayawardena

3169…Irene Dionne

4291…Iris Krajcarski

2899…Irv Marucelj

4269…Isabelle Periard-Boileau

1530…Ivan Stefanov

5335…Ivan Verdurmen

938…Iyad Ghazal

1703…J Darras

4772…J.F. Leduc

2865…Jack Jensen

342…Jackie Forman

5645…Jackie Kachuik

1491…Jacob Beumer

97…Jacob Smith

1643…Jacqueline Kinloch

1174…Jacqueline Thorne

3860…Jacquie Bushell

6228…Jade Puddington

3504…Jade Sillick

2254…Jag Soin

2481…Jaime Trick

2699…James Beaupre

688…James Bissonnette

244…James Bronson

3897…James Campbell

5554…James Fraser

941…James Godefroy

2103…James Harvey

6155…James Lascelle

6160…James Leacock

2326…James Malejczuk

5154…James Shepherd

5628…Jamie Hurst

6234…Jan Riopelle

3231…Jane Gibson

2368…Jane Hazel

1053…Jane Maxwell

5305…Jane Morris

5823…Jane Rooney

2046…Jane Rutherford

3520…Jane Spiteri

5927…Jane Waterfall

3130…Janet Cooper

3146…Janet Curran

3292…Janet Huffman

390…Janet Perkins

5862…Janet Sol

5250…Janet Yale

4514…Janice Morlidge

5817…Janice Richard

1277…Janus Cihlar

5090…Janusz Donat Gawlik

180…Jared Broughton

853…Jasmine Brown

5979…Jason Abramovitch

4622…Jason Ashton

2643…Jason Bussey

3222…Jason Frew

2608…Jason Gale

6158…Jason Lawton

567…Jason Lind

23…Jason Mah

1503…Jason Moodie

6362…Jason Rodriguez

5874…Jason Stewart

5723…Jay McIntosh

1119…Jay Rached

3501…Jay Shaw

3932…Jayne Barlow

1793…Jean Claude Blais

5124…Jean Denis Yelle

6149…Jean Lacroix

1431…Jean Lapointe

2263…Jean Rene Alarie

4648…Jean Wright

5273…Jean-Alexan Robillard-Cardinal

1292…Jeanna Chan

4625…Jeanne Percival

17…Jean-Philippe Pellerin

1772…Jean-Pierre Morin

5487…Jeff Daunt

957…Jeff Hausmann

5078…Jeff Koscik

1287…Jeff Macdonald

1284…Jeff Moore

1733…Jeff Shillington

1417…Jeff Smart

1190…Jeff Waterfall

2371…Jeff Wright

225…Jeffery Vanderploeg

2650…Jeffrey Dodds

2619…Jeffrey Johnston

214…Jeffrey Muller

96…Jeffrey Smith

2618…Jen Bowes

5740…Jen Milligan

2235…Jennifer Adams

3004…Jennifer Ajersch

1463…Jennifer Almond

3792…Jennifer Balao

827…Jennifer Baudin

3957…Jennifer Bucknall

3198…Jennifer Elliott

3220…Jennifer Fraser

2514…Jennifer Gardiner

1445…Jennifer Halfhide

2467…Jennifer Harris

5230…Jennifer Katsuno

2866…Jennifer Kaufman

1013…Jennifer Leblanc

3916…Jennifer McCabe

4949…Jennifer Miller

4587…Jennifer Moher

3412…Jennifer Morris

4574…Jennifer Payne

6229…Jennifer Rauscher

661…Jennifer Sarrasin

2125…Jenny Koumoutsidis

5968…Jeramy Rutley

5183…Jeremy Atherton

1851…Jeremy Mansfield

5739…Jessalynn Miller

2056…Jessica Aldred

854…Jessica Brown

6059…Jessica Dempsey

6431…Jessica Devries

4839…Jessica Devries

1008…Jessica Lanouette

5276…Jessica Pedersen

3455…Jessie Rai

3181…Jesula Drouillard

1776…Jetje Antonietti

401…Jez Fletcher

4532…Jie Qin

3003…Jill Ainsworth

5502…Jill Dickinson

931…Jill Frook

6343…Jill Kolisnek

3638…Jill Marsh

6512…Jillian Propp

1416…Jim Burgess

182…Jim Carter

87…Jim Fullarton

1724…Jim Ryan

4714…Jim Sourges

1222…Jim Turner

5924…Jim Walsh

4581…Jimmy Ha

2924…Jimmy Novak

6432…Joan Bard Miller

3700…Joan Craig

6075…Joan Duguid

511…Joan Kam Cheong

5034…Joan McManus

5563…Joann Garbig

5224…Joanna Hardwick

531…Joanna Simpson

674…Jo-Anne Beauchemin

1276…Joanne Bradley

4707…Jo-Anne Difruscio

5551…Joanne Fox

272…Jo-Anne Guimond

3397…Joanne Merrett

629…Joanne Schliebener

3494…Joanne Schmid

1434…Joanne Schofield

4606…Joanne Sim

5351…Joanne Stober

5201…Joanne Thompson

5590…Jocelyne Grandlouis

670…Jocelyne Lahaie

499…Jocelyne Riopelle

3013…Jodi Ashton

25…Jodi Wendland

3754…Jodie Hoffart

2215…Joe Lott

2369…Joe Paraskevas

55…Joe Ross

2351…Joe Tegano

5808…Joel Proulx

2222…Joel Weaver

2828…Joelle D'aoust

4266…Joelyn Ragan

2576…Johann Unterganschnigg

5633…Johanna Jennings

3943…Johanne Bertrand

737…John Balint

4816…John Bishop

2305…John Bowen

4834…John Downey

5524…John Emard

1657…John Hale

2463…John Hamilton

624…John Mahoney

5709…John Manwaring

6349…John Melanson

1089…John Oliver

1759…John Pallascio

283…John Swift

2076…John Timmermans

1594…John Trant

2985…John Welsh

3593…John-Paul Yaraskavitch

2853…Jolene Harvey

5839…Jolene Savoie

10573…Jolynn Kam Cheong

2107…Jon Neill

394…Jonah Losier

2617…Jonathan Carreiro

2801…Jonathan Charbonneau

2273…Jonathan Cox

6046…Jonathan Crozier

4328…Jonathan Hurn

5686…Jonathan Lemieux

1328…Jonathan Moore

755…Jonathan Pace

6401…Jonathan Sanchez

2018…Jonathan Taylor

169…Jonathan Woodman

2731…Joni Bradley

1087…Joni Ogawa

2892…Jordan Macdonald

6217…Jordan Payne

4711…Jordon Bickford

4578…Josee Picard

5878…Josee Surprenant

3910…Joseph Nash

1667…Joseph Smith

2817…Josette Day

4296…Josey Finley

2779…Josh Bowen

5332…Josh Lemoine

456…Joy Hackett

3259…Joy Halverson

4199…Joy Malcolm

5338…Judah Leung

5219…Judi McAlea

5271…Judith Atwood

4271…Judith Lamarche

3759…Judy Fentiman

1427…Julia Bernier

2784…Julia Brothers

3982…Julia De Ste Croix

5640…Julia Johnston

3963…Juliann Castell

4377…Juli-Ann Rowsell

6426…Julie Arseneau

5425…Julie Burke

3149…Julie Dale

920…Julie Farmer

1009…Julie Laplante

5685…Julie Lefebvre

4815…Julie Mackinnon

4971…Julie Maranger

632…Julie McGuire

1371…Julie Murdock

1133…Julie Rutberg

2432…Julien Leblanc

649…Justin Glinski

3374…Justin McAtamney

2529…Justine Ogle

4663…Justine Sider

371…Kaarina Stiff

6054…Kanina Dawson

3573…Kara Wheatley

4681…Karen Afghan

3078…Karen Burns

5464…Karen Cook

902…Karen Dillon

369…Karen Freake

2607…Karen Jardine

5184…Karen Oberthier

5252…Karen Pelletier

643…Karen Poirier

3491…Karen Sauve

155…Karen Zerr

4489…Karin Vogt

3289…Karina Tuyen Hua

5348…Karl McQuillan

5865…Karl St-Hilaire

2123…Karras Hagglund

5469…Kate Corsten

5287…Kate Duthie

503…Kate Rafter

4115…Kate Sherwood

338…Kate Steele

1166…Kate Swetnam

5908…Kate Truglia

6320…Katerina Daniel

326…Katharine McGowan

3005…Katherine Ann Aldred

1260…Katherine Halhed

1036…Katherine Macdonald

5832…Katherine Ryan

1461…Kathleen Foran

5573…Kathleen Gifford

1298…Kathleen Hart

2062…Kathleen Kealey

4635…Kathleen Raven

2559…Kathleen Seward

1170…Kathleen Talarico

5990…Kathryn Atkinson

2876…Kathryn Laflamme

1240…Kathy Fischer

4012…Kathy Heney

4043…Kathy Lewis

3383…Kathy McGilvray

5830…Kathy Rutledge

1754…Kathy Steegstra

3733…Katie Lemenchick

2473…Katie Macgregor

1858…Katie Mahoney

1696…Katie O'connell

5831…Katie Rutledge-Taylor

1920…Katrina Burgess

6205…Katrina Nelson

4696…Kaveh Rikhtegar

2923…Kazutoshi Nishizawa

6111…Keane Grimsrud

2712…Keith Hazelton

3307…Keith Johnson

2527…Keith Laughton

1082…Keith Mulligan

2412…Keith Pomakis

3492…Keith Savage

2043…Kel Doig

657…Kelley Blanchette

1580…Kelly Barnett

5391…Kelly Bell

3249…Kelly Gray

4009…Kelly Harrington

5222…Kelly Hewitt

2266…Kelly Legallais

4870…Kelly McFaul

4879…Kelly Roberts

6368…Kelly Steele

753…Kelly Whitty

6091…Ken Fong

3391…Ken McNair

5937…Ken Whiting

4070…Kendall Miller

1382…Kendra Ray

1396…Kendrah Allison

493…Kerri Chalmers

184…Kerri Cook

1607…Kerri Mullen

6411…Kevin Charles

3…Kevin De Snayer

6126…Kevin Huber

969…Kevin Hubich

4357…Kevin Kit

3394…Kevin Mercer

2927…Kevin O'brien

3497…Kevin Semeniuk

6499…Kevin Shaw

4623…Kevin Steele

5892…Kiley Thompson

830…Kim Benjamin

3806…Kim Donaldson

1405…Kim Douglas

5746…Kim Moir

4114…Kim Shelp

3353…Kimberley Low

1134…Kimberley Salisbury

1929…Kimberly Forkes

4752…Kimberly Matte

4657…Kimberly McMillan

574…Kimberly Rennie

689…Kimberly Sogge

4729…Kimberly Vo

1496…Kirk Munroe

1796…Kirsty Greig

4983…Kit E

3876…Kiza Francis

5100…Klara Lavoie

5023…Kp McNamara

6445…Kris Bulmer

2104…Krista Gifford

3358…Krista Macdonald

2050…Kristen Beausoleil

3788…Kristen Cairncross

3868…Kristen Cunningham

1617…Kristen Underwood

1792…Krister Partel

3885…Kristiana Stevens

1751…Kristin Rawley

4757…Kristine Joan Proudfoot

5851…Kristine Simpson

735…Kristy Belanger

299…Kristyn Berube

2802…Krysten Chase

1272…Kumar Saha

2747…Kurt Grabinsky

5655…Kyla Kelly

6060…Kyle Den Bak

4245…Kyle Ferguson

3401…Kyle Miersma

5724…Laco Kovac

4192…Lamar Mason

3443…Lambros Pezoulas

6340…Lara Kaplan

4649…Lara Wong

5443…Larry Chamney

880…Laura Cluney

2064…Laura Maclean

1153…Laura Smith

1185…Laura Walker-Ng

4627…Laure Kresz

935…Lauren Gamble

3926…Laurence Ahoussou

3481…Laurent Roy

526…Laurie Boulet

348…Laurie Cairns

196…Laurie Gorman

3264…Laurie Hardage

2394…Laurie Meaney-Tobin

2736…Lavoie Curtis

2989…Lawrence Wong

2763…Leah Beaudette

1665…Leah Skuce

5404…Lee Blue

520…Lee Merklinger

3285…Leigh Howe

3653…Leisha Moulton

4052…Lenore Macartney

3845…Leo Murphy

2220…Leon Sutherland

5525…Leona Emberson

586…Lesley Grignon

1757…Leslie McKay

2909…Leslie McLean

5378…Leslie-Anne Bailliu

706…Lexy Scott

4408…Lia Eichele

839…Lian Bleckmann

1005…Liliane Langevin

3735…Lillian Thibault

579…Lina Seto

3971…Linda Coleman

906…Linda Doyle

743…Linda Newton

648…Linda Scott

5587…Lindsay Grace

3749…Lindsay Grimster

1213…Linsey Hollett

1519…Lisa Allan

1610…Lisa Fischer

926…Lisa Francis

948…Lisa Grison

5601…Lisa Hans

5602…Lisa Hansen

5606…Lisa Headley

5616…Lisa Hogan

430…Lisa Hubers

5649…Lisa Kawaguchi

4549…Lisa Murphy

5202…Lisa-Jane McMahon

4877…Lise Bourgon

1507…Lise Patterson

5792…Lise Perrier

4235…Lissa Allaire

3729…Liz Bielajew

1863…Liza Rozina

3945…Lori Blais

4423…Lori Howell

1208…Lori Mockson Burcsik

284…Lori Swift

2626…Lori Timmins

111…Lori-Ann May

4451…Lorna McCrea

3660…Lorraine England

519…Lorraine Schofield

5800…Lorretta Pinder

44…Louis Lapointe

2306…Louise Hamelin

4075…Louise Morin

570…Louise Rachlis

5251…Louise Wylie

4872…Luc Joly

2378…Lucas Angeli

4717…Lucas Post

5860…Lucas Smith

3099…Lucien Cattrysse

1879…Lucille Roy

4093…Luis Ramirez

5917…Luis Villegas

4521…Lynda Bordeleau

4368…Lynda Morgan

1998…Lynda Robertson

3273…Lyndsey Hill

4905…Lynn Campbell

699…Lynn Champagne

3164…Lynn Diggins

5763…Lynn Nightingale

4110…Lynn Sewell

1162…Lynn Stewart

5923…Lynn Wallace

1571…Lynne Eisener

1006…Lyse Langevin

2040…M Guy

4354…M Henschel

4418…Madeleine Gravel

2133…Mae Johnson

3309…Magali Johnson

3578…Malcolm Williams

1408…Manas Dan

3514…Mandy Smith

3592…Maple Yap

6009…Marc Bjerring

2804…Marc Cholette

6093…Marc Fortier

2672…Marc Ostrowski

3437…Marc Patry

341…Marc Primeau

2178…Marc Rose

4847…Marc-Andre Blais

6148…Marcel Lachance

5769…Marcella Ost

5492…Marci Dearing

4440…Marg Macgillivray

893…Margaret Davidson

2321…Margaret Elliott

5003…Margaret Lerhe

1903…Margaret Meroni

3398…Margaret Michalski

1542…Margarita Gorbounova

6360…Maria Pooley

119…Marian Coke

1070…Marian McMahon

1497…Marie Cousineau

5000…Marie-Elaine Morency

4944…Marielle Lloyd

3568…Marilyn Warren

2980…Mario Villemaire

3793…Marion Brulot

3744…Marissa Turner

3948…Mark Boyle

2788…Mark Burchell

651…Mark Garland

2183…Mark Karssing

4060…Mark McGill

2324…Mark McKennirey

4335…Mark Nickerson

6410…Mark Perry

1634…Mark Seaby

4143…Mark Whiting

1770…Marketa Graham

4896…Marsha Stapleton

1556…Marta Monaghan

6347…Martha McGrath

5075…Martha Tobin

4956…Martin Cheliak

2823…Martin Dinan

3217…Martin Fournier

2513…Martin Plante

4482…Martin Sullivan

4923…Martina McGinn

5713…Martine Lalonde

2159…Marty Clement

1527…Marwan Dirani

1958…Mary Ann Tippett

5292…Mary Catherine Jack

1681…Mary Haller

6132…Mary Jarvis

1116…Mary Jean Price

5945…Mary Kate Williamson

1083…Mary Murphy

1891…Mary-Anne Doyle

3438…Mathew Pearson

5331…Mathieu Ansell

5195…Mathieu Perron

2681…Matin Fazelpour

3608…Matt Harris

2454…Matt Mulligan

2512…Matt Nicol

2928…Matt Parenteau

6455…Matt Peake

1914…Matt Woods

301…Matthew Beausoleil

5028…Matthew Bonneville

3104…Matthew Chan

5254…Matthew Gaudet

1265…Matthew Jackson

6188…Matthew McClare

2696…Matthew Parent

1105…Matthew Payne

4209…Matthew Pearce

1459…Matthew Perkins

2434…Matthew Russell

3738…Matthew Tate

5536…Maureen Feagan

3757…Maureen Kilpatrick

3488…Mauricio Salgado

1572…Max Ross

6429…Max Torque

6247…Maya Shrestha

6135…Mazen Kassis

3896…Meagan Campbell

1080…Meagan Morris

4396…Meaghan Curran

2186…Megan Cain

5012…Meghan Adams

716…Meghan Graham

4497…Meghan Joiner

2227…Meghan Verheyen

4800…Meghna Isloor

3100…Melanie Caulfield

5448…Melanie Chedore

4319…Melanie Hooper

5760…Melinda Neufeld

5600…Melissa Hammell

4616…Melissa Toupin

1194…Melissa White

6465…Michael Anstey

504…Michael Bassett

168…Michael Blois

3693…Michael Cathcart

3132…Michael Corneau

5518…Michael D'asti

1393…Michael Dawson

2181…Michael Dent

2438…Michael Eby

3836…Michael Gale

2845…Michael Gilligan

2631…Michael Hansen

6118…Michael Hay

1337…Michael Hewett

5617…Michael Hogan

4910…Michael Keleher

43…Michael Lau

6161…Michael Leahey

1313…Michael Lynch

5710…Michael Maranto

4376…Michael Maruca

4450…Michael McAuley

6408…Michael McCarthy

2912…Michael McNeill

551…Michael Nixon

1454…Michael Purcell

2000…Michael Reece

5163…Michael Roach

705…Michael Rueter

4751…Michael Skuce

5129…Michael Stomphorst

4621…Michael Strangelove

2991…Michael Yetman

3048…Michel Bouchard

1794…Michel Gagnon

1370…Michel Gallant

6425…Michel Pinault

5285…Michele Goshulak

1124…Michele Robertson

5676…Micheline Lalonde

4261…Micheline Mathon

3112…Michelle Cicalo

4617…Michelle Comeau

6463…Michelle Cowin

4256…Michelle Hart

990…Michelle Keough

267…Michelle Lacroix-Finnamore

3893…Michelle Legault

5719…Michelle McAuliffe

3490…Michelle Saunders

545…Michelle Swanson

6282…Michelle Wallace

3102…Mike Chambers

1233…Mike Corbett

3145…Mike Cummings

2830…Mike Elston

3271…Mike Henry

6472…Mike Herzog

3283…Mike Hopper

4818…Mike Jazzar

1590…Mike Johnstone

5668…Mike Kowal

1012…Mike Lavery

3373…Mike Mazerolle

2624…Mike McCluskie

2054…Mike McInerney

1108…Mike Peralta

1410…Mike Seufert

2165…Mike Todd

1838…Mike Vodden

3574…Mike White

752…Mike Whitty

2334…Mike Yates

1439…Mikhail Gorbounov

2552…Milko Rivera

4233…Millie Mirsky

4605…Miriam Harmon

19…Mitch Robinson

6342…Mitchell Kitagawa

6481…Mitchell Niles

4746…Molly Van Der Schee

3336…Mona Lamontagne

2898…Monica Martinez

1612…Monique Giroux

399…Monique Simon-Fletcher

2611…Morgan Williams

1045…M-Rosa Mangone-Laboccetta

4778…Mudita Srivastava

2279…Muneeba Adil Omar

3962…Murielle Cassidy

6251…Murray Smith

4928…Mylene Gagnon

782…Myra Gregor

3402…Nada Milosevic

5898…Nadine Tischhauser

2276…Nadir Masood

6089…Nahielly Fernandez

5368…Nancy Amos

3251…Nancy C Green

4392…Nancy Colton

3171…Nancy Dlouhy

532…Nancy Faraday-Smith

6447…Nancy Ferguson

5550…Nancy Fowler

3339…Nancy Lau

248…Nancy Macdonell

4222…Nancy Perron

4536…Naomi Atwood

3332…Nardine Kwasny

2353…Natalie Aucoin

384…Natalie Benischek

814…Natalie Clouthier

1406…Natalie Giroux

5811…Natalie Quimper

4947…Natalie Tomas

4249…Natalina L'orfano

2795…Natasha Carraro

4613…Natasha Kekre

88…Nathalie Gauthier

127…Nathan Aligizakis

5827…Nathan Rotman

2035…Neal Cody

6036…Neale Chisnall

1889…Negin Hatam

4475…Neiges Senechal

94…Neil Cachero

6379…Neil Wilson

4045…Nelson Lewis

3601…

3761…Nia Bruno-Gibson

4811…Nicholas Charney

1761…Nicholas Malboeuf

3955…Nick Brunette-D'souza

1942…Nick Jasperse

203…Nick Leswick

1505…Nick Neuheimer

5835…Nicky Saldanha

2686…Nicolas Renart

1419…Nicole Beumer

5431…Nicole Byrne

5104…Nicole Delaney

5511…Nicole Duguay

2085…Nicole Dupras

2055…Nicole Macdonald

2916…Nicole Mikhael

6461…Nicole Settimi

3760…Nikki Steele

4415…Nina Franchina

4210…Nina Marrello

4963…Nissa Hale

6484…No Name, See Sportstats

5541…No Name, See Sportstats

3862…No Name, See Sportstats

3688…Norman Yanofsky

1523…Normand Bellemare

2390…Omer Majeed

3080…Ondina Buttle

3787…Orit Fruchtman

4883…Osmani Gomez

2041…Owen Berringer

6162…Paddy Leahy

838…Pamela Biron

3219…Pamela Fralick

5988…Panchanadam Athmaraman

4618…Parastoo Badie

1308…Pascal Demers

1869…Pascal Ilboudo

5533…Pat Farley

1560…Patricia Auger

6420…Patricia Chartrand

950…Patricia Hachey

4786…Patricia Henry

4859…Patricia Lovett

5919…Patricia Wait

4756…Patrick Boyle

6013…Patrick Brean

5432…Patrick Byrne

3208…Patrick Finn

2687…Patrick Haggart

5311…Patrick Hill

9…Patrick Kirby

206…Patrick Marion

5744…Patrick Miron

6222…Patrick Pickering

2137…Patrick Sabourin

5561…Patti Gamble

285…Paul Alexander

5089…Paul Allen

5136…Paul Brennan

2571…Paul Buck

5270…Paul Cachia

4375…Paul Cameron

1529…Paul Coyle

1485…Paul Crabtree

3151…Paul Dalgleish

3160…Paul Denys

5288…Paul Dickson

100…Paul Foley

2882…Paul Lawless

1042…Paul Macneil

4447…Paul Malvern

2902…Paul Masson

133…Paul McAneney

5132…Paul McKeague

1365…Paul Robinson

4103…Paul Rosenberg

2957…Paul Steeves

2965…Paul Tessier

6274…Paul Verbrugge

5006…Paul Von Schoenberg

2058…Paula Burchat

5571…Paula Gherasim

6334…Paula Hall

1112…Paula Piilonen

1307…Paule Couet

3702…Paulette Schatz

2760…Peter Bayne

1896…Peter Cho-Wing

6078…Peter Dyer

2847…Peter Green

2852…Peter Hammond

1874…Peter Harrison

6139…Peter Kielstra

6156…Peter Laughton

2890…Peter Linkletter

1779…Peter Locke

2901…Peter Mason

5732…Peter Meneguzzi

2919…Peter Morel

4866…Peter Race

1972…Peter Way

2240…Peter Wismer

1626…Phat Nguyen

5196…Phay Mui

2308…Phil King

5343…Philip Cartwright

6029…Philip Chambers

807…Phillip Drouillard

3197…Phillip Edwards

1709…Phuc Duong

4571…Pierre C Tessier

4966…Pierre Michaud

6159…Pierrick Le Monnier

3753…Pradiv Sooriyadevan

2946…Prichya Sethchindapong

215…Quinn Murphy

3699…Quinn Russell

4873…Rachel Fahlman

3343…Rachelle Leblanc

3417…Rajkumar Nagarajan

2999…Ramy Abaskharoun

1628…Randy Bentham

836…Randy Biberdorf

14…Randy Fontaine

5721…Randy McElligott

6473…Randy Reilly

5854…Ratnesh Singh

3051…Raymond Boucher

4594…Raymond Lamarre

1007…Raymonde Langevin

3177…Rebecca Dorval

2382…Rebecca Fleming

3533…Rebekah Swatton

1050…Regan Mathurin

2398…Reginald Theriault

2778…Remi Bourlon

6293…Remy Boyer

1044…Renata Manchak

4496…Rene Danis

2182…Rene Gilbert

4252…Rene Yaraskavitch

4718…Renee Gobeil

4036…Renee Lamoureux

3549…Renee Maria Tremblay

3053…Rene-Louis Bourgeau

2900…Reza Mashkoori

5369…Rhiannon Andersen

226…Rhiannon Vogl

4997…Rhona Macinnis

6052…Ric Davey

1865…Ricahrd Leblanc

2894…Rich Manery

66…Richard Beare

4212…Richard Bolduc

2776…Richard Bourassa

868…Richard Cheng

30…Richard Durant

2994…Richard Gilbert

4008…Richard Hanson

4046…Richard Lewis

2204…Richard Schmidt

2954…Richard Starcevic

6369…Richard Tanguay

3563…Richard Wall

51…Rick Collard

3172…Rick Dobson

3756…Rick Leblanc

1092…Rick O'shaughnessy

4759…Riley Hennessey

3783…Rima M. Zabian

5239…Rob Blackler

1247…Rob Brooks

2813…Rob Criger

5643…Rob Joseph

5169…Rob Linke

2030…Rob Pitcher

115…Rob Thomas

431…Robert Adolfson

4164…Robert Balma

4595…Robert Bolduc

3066…Robert Brown

5452…Robert Christie

6039…Robert Coleman

1221…Robert Dupuis

2623…Robert Gallaher

6502…Robert Gibb

2524…Robert Kalbfleisch

143…Robert Knights

2884…Robert Lee

1062…Robert McGrath

3415…Robert Moulie

1799…Robert Reid

1465…Robert Schwartz

4112…Robert Shaw

2701…Robert Smith

2660…Roberto Renon

1473…Robin Cote

2358…Robin Lavigne

1144…Robin Sheedy

4247…Rockey Whitmore

4264…Rodney Bickford

4735…Roger Hunter

2879…Roger Langevin

3434…Roger Pankhurst

12…Roger Wyllie

232…Roger Zemek

3605…Romano Panopio

2316…Ron Folk

5632…Ron Jande

4068…Ron Mierau

142…Ron Schwartz

5437…Ronald Carnahan

1204…Rory Gibbons

2208…Rory Martin

4180…Rose Marie Jackson

5782…Rose Parent

1557…Rosina Mauro

4602…Ross Morrell

4683…Ross Osborne

4360…Roxanne Harper

4092…Rue Quizon

2416…Russell McDonnell

4992…Ruth Gmehlin

4393…Ruthanne Corley

6104…Ryan Gilchrist

3236…Ryan Gillies

5659…Ryan Kidman

1464…Ryan McEachran

2654…Ryan Smith

2162…Ryan Walker

1462…Sabrina Mehes

5095…Sabrina Quraeshi

2502…Safeta Nalic

1659…Samanta Jacques-Arsenault

4972…Samantha De Benedet

973…Samantha Hunter

6301…Samira Afrand

358…Samuel Galante

2020…Sander Post

634…Sandi Wright

3057…Sandra Boyko

873…Sandra Chong

4709…Sandra Macleod

3409…Sandra Moorman

3717…Sandra Nevill

62…Sandy Dale

4978…Sandy Macleod

3701…Sandy Whittaker

898…Sanja Denic

2640…Sara Krenosky

4771…Sara Leblond

3551…Sara Tubman

1460…Sarah Abrahams

3801…Sarah Carkner

518…Sarah Dolan

905…Sarah Dooley

4783…Sarah Murdoch

2196…Sarah Payne

508…Sarah Powers

4805…Sarah Rietschlin

5844…Sarah Scott

6488…Sarah Smith

6418…Sarah Spencer

1387…Sarah Taylor

5972…Sarah Wiles

6297…Saskia Meuffels

1372…Satvinder Bawa

2762…Scott Beauchamp

1540…Scott Bowen

5460…Scott Colvin

5508…Scott Doran

6077…Scott Duxbury

6474…Scott Ellis

3206…Scott Felman

5317…Scott Guenther

1468…Scott Rowland

6241…Scott Rudan

3547…Scott Townley

1063…Sean McGrath

4968…Sean Moore

5773…Sean O'Brien

2472…Sean O'Brien

1679…Sean O'Reilly

3847…Sean Spence

2301…Sebastian Citro

2963…Sebastien Taillefer

872…Sera Chiuchiarelli

2655…Sereena Trottier

3467…Serge Richard

6258…Serge Sylvestre

2680…Shane Leston

3639…Shannon Bush

5076…Shannon Fitzpatrick

316…Shannon Malcolm

4721…Shannon Olson

4469…Shannon Renaud

2281…Shannon Weatherhead

3240…Shari Goodfellow

3427…Shari Nurse

3967…Sharon Chomyn

2997…Sharon Johnston

5507…Shaun Dolter

4869…Shauna Devlin

5589…Shauna Graham

2679…Shawn Bardell

2569…Shawn Murphy

4459…Shawn Murray

5834…Shawn Rycroft

3846…Shawntel Burt

1853…Shehryar Sarwar

3031…Sheila Barth

4553…Sheila Currie

5091…Sheila Forward-Davis

4062…Sheila McIsaac

6353…Sheila Osborne-Brown

265…Sheila Reid

4298…Sheila Robertson

5177…Shelley Brown

3103…Shelley Chambers

4819…Shelley McDonald

4713…Shelley Sourges

4954…Shena Riff

4022…Shereen Ismael

2264…Sheri McCready

4925…Sherri Wilson

679…Sherry Strowbridge

2170…Sheryl Urie

1011…She-Yang Lau-Chapdelaine

3909…Shirley Trottier

3685…Shirley Ward

4719…Sian Williams

4181…Silvana Di Gaetano

1312…Silvia Zanon

6391…Simon Good

4887…Simon Hart

5107…Simon Keneford

1128…Simon Roussin

1310…Siobhan Jones

4643…Solita Pacheco

3360…Sondra Macdonald

4417…Sonia Granzer

4853…Sophie Amberg

5153…Sophie Breton

3248…Sophie Gravel

4072…Soraya Moghadam

1749…Sotero Ramirez

1420…Stacey Beumer

3951…Stacey Brennan

128…Stacey Lance

6283…Staci Walsh

2460…Stacie Carey

279…Stacy Kauk

1818…Stan Druskis

2689…Steeve Pratte

6356…Stefania Parnanzone

183…Stephane Castonguay

850…Stephanie Brodeur

726…Stephanie Dowling

5567…Stephanie Gauthier

2716…Stephanie Gordon

501…Stephanie Howard-Davies

3299…Stephanie Jack

2132…Stephanie Johnson

809…Stephanie Kinsella

1970…Stephanie Semeniuk

4744…Stephanie Vanderpool

6279…Stephanie Vivier

105…Stephen Anderson

6008…Stephen Bignucolo

1624…Stephen Bisson

2205…Stephen Jacobsen

5677…Stephen Laplante

2197…Stephen Lee

1520…Stephen Richards

3590…Stephen Woroszczuk

5376…Steve Astels

2282…Steve Duncan

6466…Steve Findlay

2837…Steve Forrest

109…Steve McCready

136…Steve Ross

729…Steven Dell

2217…Steven Graham

2554…Steven Guillemette

4938…Steven Hawken

3554…Steven Turner

20…Stuart Jolliffe

5680…Stuart Laubstein

2169…Stuart Ludwig

2531…Stuart Pursey

2074…Sue Haywood

4601…Sue Macpherson

6243…Suresh Sangarapillai

2193…Susan Atkinson

5377…Susan Atkinson

192…Susan Durrell

3205…Susan Farrell

4211…Susan Field

982…Susan Johnston

1002…Susan Lacosta

4994…Susan Lentini

3837…Susan Madden

5707…Susan Mak Chin

5818…Susan Richards

1444…Susan Thorne

5966…Susan Trimble

4248…Susan Whitmore

4449…Susie Mattson

3937…Suzanne Belzile

6116…Suzanne Harrison

4113…Suzanne Shaw

2859…Sylvain Huard

6182…Sylvain Marquis

3911…Sylvia Duffy

3680…Sylvia Manning

3800…Sylvie Chartrand

4820…Sylvie Gauthier

4304…Sylvie Lee

420…Sylvie Secours

2594…Sylvie Swim

6375…T Van Veen

3535…Takuya Tazawa

396…Tamara Marshall

3676…Tamara Sorley

3154…Tammey Degrandpre

3994…Tammy Frye

4728…Tan Vo

5092…Tania Willliams

3995…Tanya Frye

5393…Tara Benjamin

1207…Tara Lawrence

4542…Tara Tucker

3316…Tarjinder Kainth

2582…Taunia Curtis

1720…Taylor Bildstein

593…Ted Damen

6511…Ted Radstake

313…Teri Adamthwaite

6403…Terrence McDonald

3045…Terri Bolster

1015…Terri-Lee Lefebvre

5187…Terry Archer

5530…Terry Evans

1909…Terry Kruyk

3407…Terry Monger

5756…Terry Muldoon

1115…Terry Porter

349…Terry Vipond

6248…Terry-Lynn Sigouin

2383…Theresa Grant

2087…Thomas Benak

2675…Thomas Leung

4734…Thomas Norris

3475…Thomas Robinson

3486…Thomas Ryan

2209…Thomas Timlin

5905…Tiffanie Tri

3277…Tiffany Holland

4673…Tiffany Mullen

5997…Tim Barber

1737…Tim Hobbs

2862…Tim Irwin

3503…Tim Shreve

3344…Timon Ledain

607…Timothy Trant

6061…Tina Dennis

919…Tina Fallis

959…Tina Head

2298…Tj Sullivan

4822…Toby Fyfe

3668…Todd Coopee

1756…Todd Hicks

1641…Todd Saunders

2589…Todd Somerville

3052…Tom Boudreau

6096…Tom Fowler

5077…Tom Papai

1875…Tom Volk

1095…Tong Pang

3342…Tonja Leach

2257…Tony Redican

6268…Tony Tran

6330…Torri Gunn

323…Tracey Aker

1131…Tracie Royal

5467…Tracy Corneau

680…Tracy Gagnon

2435…Tracy Parker

4727…Tram Vo

6285…Travis Webb

344…Treena Grevatt

290…Trevor Beaudoin

6333…Trevor Hains

3310…Trevor Johnson

1206…Trey Hausmann

2786…Tricia Brown

5392…Trina Bender

4687…Trish Van Bolderen

1600…Tristyn Head

2042…Troy White

6421…Tudor Hera

901…Tyler Dickerson

400…Upendra Moholkar

2153…Vada Cavanagh

3333…Val Lafranchise

694…Valerie Kowal

5038…Valerie Lemieux

1623…Valerie Simon

3062…Vanessa Brochet

3956…Vanessa Buchanan

4901…Vanessa Evans

4066…Vanessa Mendoza

4255…Veleda Turner

3575…Vernon White

2202…Veronic Bezaire

391…Veronica S. Gerson

3043…Veronique Boily

309…Vi Ha

824…Vic Baker

5205…Vicki Plant

6145…Victor Krawczuk

321…Victoria Lemon

4731…Viet Nguyen

3958…Viola Caissy

2269…Wade Oldford

3519…Wade Smith

5780…Walter Pamic

3588…Walter Wood

5944…Wayne Williams

1407…Wendall Hughes

5139…Wendy Gutzman

4048…Wendy Low

4881…Wendy Page

552…Wendy Taylor

6280…Wendy Wagner

3789…Wilfred Gilchrist

3507…Will Simmering

3531…Will Summers

3596…Will Youngson

871…William Chisholm

5749…William Morley

4733…Wilma Berti

5537…Winter Fedyk

2548…Yan Xu

4146…Yan Zawisza

6352…Yoga Naraine

4116…Yolande Simoneau

6094…Yves Fortin

714…Yvon Carriere

211…Zach McKeown

5339…Zachary Leung

 

Another Agoodfella custom inspired figure. Those gold vambraces are getting harder to find!

Indian Trail Rd.

Mackinac County

Name: Grey-rumped treeswift

Scientific: Hemiprocne longipennis

Malay: Layang-layang Jambul Kelabu

Family: Hemiprocnidae

Gear: SONY a7RIV + SEL200600G + SEL14TC, shot in APSC mode.

 

#sony #sonymalaysia #a7RIV #SEL200600G #SEL14TC #alpha #NurIsmailPhotography #madebyluminar #skylum #skylummalaysia #luminar #topazlabs #urbanbirding

 

Copyright © 2019 Nur Ismail Photography. All rights reserved. Do not use or reproduce these images on websites, blogs or publications without expressed written permission from the photographer.

 

For any enquiries, please visit my website: www.nurismailphotography.com or email at nurismailphotography@gmail.com.

 

Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/nurismailphotography/

Strange place names: It may be just farming fields and trees but it has a cool Kentucky community name. From my vantage point of Monkeys Eyebrow Road, I see the farming fields and the bushy eyebrow of Monkeys Eyebrow, Kentucky.

Model: Julia

Makeup & Hair Artist: Marlen Watzl

Assistant: Steven

Name: Asian brown flycatcher

Scientific: Muscicapa dauurica

Malay: Sambar Asia / Sambar Coklat Asia / Sambar Dusun

Family: Muscicapidae

IUCN Red List (v3.1, 2017): Least Concern

Gear: SONY a7RIV + SEL200600G.

 

#FullFrameLife #MySONYLife #sony #sonymalaysia #a7RIV #SEL200600G #alpha #NurIsmailPhotography #madebyluminar #skylum #skylummalaysia #luminar #topazlabs #urbanbirding

 

Copyright © 2020 Nur Ismail Photography. All rights reserved. Do not use or reproduce these images on websites, blogs or publications without expressed written permission from the photographer.

 

For any enquiries, please visit my website: www.nurismailphotography.com or email at nurismailphotography@gmail.com.

 

Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/nurismailphotography/

This building has provided me many photo ops.

Today it delivered for this week's Flickr Lounge theme :)

Where The Streets Have No name

U2

 

I want to run

I want to hide

I want to tear down the walls

That hold me inside

I want to reach out

And touch the flame

Where the streets have no name

 

Went to help my mate Ian pick up a printer this morning, and on the way we stopped by Campsie in Sydney's South to grab a few shots of

Eight and First Ave's which are lined with Jacaranda Trees in bloom this time of the year. This little corner shop added nicely to this scene of Suburban Sydney. We also got there well after sunrise (6:30am) so I ended up being able to have a good lie in beforehand!! Ha! Sean met us there and we were getting a few strange looks from the handful of locals who were up and about at this hour on a Sunday morning. Hope you like "Where The Streets Have No Name". Cheers, Mike

   

+++ DISCLAIMER +++

Nothing you see here is real, even though the conversion or the presented background story might be based on historical facts. BEWARE!

  

Some Background:

The Ki-38 fighter was designed by the Tachikawa Aircraft Company Limited (立川飛行機株式会社, Tachikawa Hikōki Kabushiki Kaisha) near Tokyo, an aircraft manufacturer in the Empire of Japan, specializing primarily in aircraft for the Imperial Japanese Army Air Force. The Ki-38 prototype was produced in response to a December 1937 specification for a successor to the popular fixed-gear Nakajima Ki-27 Nate. The specification called for a top speed of 500 km/h (310 mph), a climb rate of 5,000 m (16,000 ft) in five minutes and a range of 800 km (500 mi). Maneuverability was to be at least as good as that of Ki-27.

 

When first flown in early January 1939, the Ki-38 prototype was a disappointment. Japanese test pilots complained that it was less maneuverable than the Ki-27 Nate and not much faster. Even though the competition was eventually won by the Ki-43, service trials determined the aircraft to hold sufficient promise to warrant further work, leading to the adoption of an expanded and strengthened wing and a more refined Mitsubishi Ha-102 (Army Type 100 1,050hp Air Cooled Radial) 14-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engine. During spring 1939, following the completion of further proving trials, an order for a pre-production batch of 25 aircraft was placed.

 

As a whole, the Ki-38 was an all-modern design consisting of all-metal skin and understructure construction with low-set monoplane wing appendages. The wings were straight in their general design with rounded tips and set well-forward of amidships. The engine was fitted to the extreme forward section of the fuselage in a traditional manner, powering a three-bladed propeller installation. Interestingly, the cockpit was also situated well-forward in the design, shortening the visual obstacle that was the engine compartment to some extent. However, views were still obstructed by the short engine housing to the front and the wings to the lower sides. The fuselage tapered at the rear to which a single vertical tail fin was affixed along with mid-mounted horizontal tailplanes. The undercarriage was retractable and of the "tail-dragger" arrangement consisting of two main single-wheeled landing gear legs and a fixed, diminutive tail wheel leg at the rear.

 

The series-production Ki-38-I was further modified to enhance its performance. These changes involved a major weight saving program, a slimmer and longer fuselage with bigger tail surfaces and a new, more streamlined bubble-style canopy that offered, even while bearing many struts, the pilot a very good all-round field of view.

 

In addition to good maneuverability, the Ki-38-I had a good top speed of more than 500 km/h (310 mph). The initial Ki-38 was armed with four 7.7 mm (0.303 in) Type 89 machine guns in the wings, but this soon turned out to be insufficient against armored Allied fighters and bombers. Quickly, the inner pair of weapons was, after just 50 aircraft, replaced with 12.7 mm (0.50 in) Ho-103 machine guns in the Ki-38-Ib (the initial version subsequently became the Ki-38-Ia), of which 75 were built. On board of the following Ki-38-Ic, the inner weapons were replaced with a pair of even heavier and more effective 20 mm (0.787 in) Ho-5 cannon, which required fairings for the ammunition under the wings and made this version easy to identify. The Ki-38-Ic became the most frequent variant, with 150 examples built.

 

All types also featured external hardpoints for a drop tank under the fuselage or a pair of bombs of up to 250 kg (550 lb) caliber under the wings. Late production aircraft were designated Ki-38-II. The pilot enjoyed a slightly taller canopy and a reflector gunsight in place of the earlier telescopic gunsight. The revised machines were also fitted with a 13 mm (0.51 in) armor plate for the pilot's head and back, and the aircraft's fuel tanks were coated in rubber to form a crude self-sealing tank. This was later replaced by a 3-layer rubber bladder, 8mm core construction, with 2mm oil-proof lamination. Some earlier aircraft were retrofitted with these elements, when available to the field workshops, and they dramatically improved the aircraft’s resilience to enemy fire. However, the bladder proved to be highly resistant only against light 7.7 mm (0.303 in) bullets but was not as effective against larger calibers. The Ki-38-II’s armament was the same as the Ki-38-Ic’s and 120 aircraft were built.

 

Ki-38 production started in November 1939 at the Tachikawa Hikoki KK and at the 1st Army Air Arsenal (Tachikawa Dai-Ichi Rikugun Kokusho) plants, also at Tachikawa. Although Tachikawa Hikoki successfully managed to enter into large-scale production of the Ki-38, the 1st Army Air Arsenal was less successful – hampered by a shortage of skilled workers, it was ordered to stop production after 49 Ki-38 were built, and Tachikawa ceased production of the Ki-38 altogether in favor of the Ki-43 in mid-1944.

 

Once it was identified and successfully distinguished from the IJA’s new Ki-43 “Oscar” and the IJN’s A6M “Zero” (Oscar), which both had very similar outlines, the Ki-38 received the Allied code name “Brad”. Even though it was not produced in the numbers of the Ki-43 or the A6M, the Ki-38 fought in China, Burma, the Malay Peninsula, New Guinea, the Philippines, South Pacific islands and the Japanese home islands. Like the Oscar and the Zero, the Ki-38 initially enjoyed air superiority in the skies of Malaya, Netherlands East Indies, Burma and New Guinea. This was partly due to the better performance of the Brad and partly due to the relatively small numbers of combat-ready Allied fighters, mostly the Curtiss P-36 Hawk, Curtiss P-40, Brewster Buffalo, Hawker Hurricane and Curtiss-Wright CW-21 in Asia and the Pacific during the first months of the war.

 

As the war progressed, however, the fighter suffered from the same weaknesses as its slower, fixed-gear Ki-27 "Nate" predecessor and the more advanced naval A6M Zero: light armor and less-than-effective self-sealing fuel tanks, which caused high casualties in combat. Its armament of four light machine guns also proved inadequate against the more heavily armored Allied aircraft. Both issues were more or less mended with improved versions, but the Ki-38 could never keep up with the enemy fighters’ development and potential. And as newer Allied aircraft were introduced, the Japanese were forced into a defensive war and most aircraft were flown by inexperienced pilots.

  

General characteristics:

Crew: 1

Length: 8.96 m (29 ft 4 in)

Wingspan: 10.54 m (34 ft 7 in)

Height: 3.03 m (9 ft 11 in)

Wing area: 17.32 m² (186.4 sq ft)

Empty weight: 2,158 kg (4,758 lb)

Gross weight: 2,693 kg (5,937 lb)

Max takeoff weight: 2,800 kg (6,173 lb)

 

Powerplant:

1× Mitsubishi Ha-102 14-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engine with 1,050hp (755 kW),

driving a 3-bladed variable-pitch propeller

 

Performance

Maximum speed: 509 km/h (316 mph, 275 kn)

Cruise speed: 450 km/h (280 mph, 240 kn)

Range: 600 km (370 mi, 320 nmi)

Service ceiling: 10,000 m (33,000 ft)

Time to altitude: 2,000 m (6,600 ft) in 3 minutes 24 seconds

Wing loading: 155.4 kg/m2 (31.8 lb/sq ft)

Power/mass: 0.182 hp/lb (0.299 kW/kg)

 

Armament:

2× 20 mm (0.787 in) Ho-5 cannon with 150 rpg

2× 7.7 mm (0.303 in) Type 89 machine guns with 500 rpg

2× underwing hardpoints for single 30 kg (66 lb) or 2 × 250 kg (550 lb) bombs

1× ventral hardpoint for a 200 l (53 US gal; 44 imp gal) drop tank

  

The kit and its assembly:

I always thought that the French Bloch MB 150 had some early WWII Japanese look to it, and with this idea I recently procured a relatively cheap Heller kit for this conversion project that would yield the purely fictional Tachikawa Ki-38 for the IJA – even though the Ki-38 existed as a Kawasaki project and eventually became the Ki-45, so that the 38 as kitai number was never actively used.

 

The Heller MB 150 is a vintage kit, and it is not a good one. You get raised panel lines, poor details (the engine is a joke) and mediocre fit. If you want a good MB 150 in 1:72, look IMHO elsewhere.

For the Ki-38 I wanted to retain most of the hull, the first basic change was the integration of a cowling from a Japanese Mitsubishi Ha-102 two-row radial (left over from an Airfix Ki-46 “Dinah”), which also received a new three-blade propeller with a different spinner on a metal axis inside. The engine also received some more interior details, even though the spinner blocks most sight.

 

The next, more radical move was to replace the MB 150’s spinal cockpit fairing with a bubble canopy and a lowered back – I found a very old and glue-tinted canopy from a Matchbox A6M in the spares box, and it turned out to be very suitable for the Ki-38. However, cleaning the clear piece was quite challenging, because all raised struts had to be sanded away to get rid of the old glue and paint residues, and re-polishing it back to a more or less translucent state took several turns with ever finer sandpaper, polishing paste and soft polishing mops on a mini drill. The spine was re-created with 2C-putty and the canopy was blended into it and into the fuselage with several PSR turns.

 

Inside, I used a different pilot figure (which would later be hard to see, though), added a fuel tank behind the seat with some supporting struts and inserted a piece of styrene sheet to separate the landing gear well from the cockpit – OOB it’s simply open.

The landing gear was basically taken OOB, I just replaced the original tail skid with a wheel and modified the wheels with hub covers, because the old kit wants you to push them onto long axis’ with knobs at their tips so that they remain turnable. Meh!

The fairings under the guns in the wings (barrels scratched from the MB 150’s OOB parts) are conformal underwing fuel tanks from a late Seafire (Special Hobby kit).

  

Painting and markings:

The initial plan was a simple green/grey IJA livery, but the model looked SO much like an A6M that I rather decided to give it a more elaborate paint scheme. I eventually found an interesting camouflage on a Mitsubishi Ki-51 “Sonia” attack plane, even though without indications concerning its unit, time frame or theater of operations (even though I assume that it was used in the China-Burma-India theater): an overall light grey base, onto which opaque green contrast fields/stripes had been added, and the remaining light grey upper areas were overpainted with thin sinuous lines of the same green. This was adapted onto the Ki-38 with a basis in Humbrol 167 (RAF Barley Grey) and FS 34102 (Humbrol 117) for the green cammo. I also wanted to weather the model considerably, as a measure to hide some hardware flaws, so that a partial “primer coat” with Aluminum (Revell 99) was added to several areas, to shine through later. The yellow ID markings on the wings’ leading edges were painted with Humbrol 69. The propeller blades were painted with Humbrol 180, the spinner in a slightly lighter mix of 180 and 160.

Interior surfaces were painted with a dull yellowish green, a mix of Revell 16 and 42, just the inside of the landing gear covers became grey as the outside, in a fashion very similar to early Ki-43s.

 

The decals came form various sources, including a Hasegawa Ki-61 sheet for the unit markings and some stencils and hinomaru in suitable sizes from a generic roundel sheet.

 

Some dry-brushing with light grey was done to emphasize edges and details, and some soot stains were added with graphite to the exhausts and the guns. Finally, the kit was sealed with matt acrylic varnish, some more dry-brushing with aluminum was done, esp. around the cockpit, and position lights were added with translucent paint.

  

An unexpected result – I was not prepared that the modified MB 150 looks THAT much like a Mitsubishi A6M or the Ki-43! There’s even an Fw 190-ish feel to it, from certain angles. O.K., the canopy actually comes from a Zero and the cowling looks very similar, too. But the overall similarity is baffling, just the tail is the most distinguishing feature! However, due to the poor basis and the almost blind canopy donor, the model is far from stellar or presentable – but some in-flight shots look pretty convincing, and even the camouflage appears to be quite effective over wooded terrain.

Name: Felica

Title: “The Bubbly Chronicler”

Gender: Female

Species: Dragon

Race: “Who knows?”

Occupation: Chronicler/Librarian

Prevailing Element: Water

Alignment: Lawful Neutral

Powers: Flight, Water Manipulation, Basic Mind Reading

Typical Tool(s): Sterling Trident

MOC Status: Assembled.

 

Felicia is one of many humanoid dragons from her home planet. She was always known to be a keen observer, always curious about the world around her. She was born with basic mind-reading powers, able to detect a general thought or phrase that someone is thinking. However, she is not the greatest at retaining her knowledge, always going back to previous locals and persons to try, and repeat the same situations. Often with failure. She has no fear when it comes to her curiosity, known to only see the tree from the forest around her.

 

Upon being sent to a new world without her knowing, she was disgustingly thrilled. So many new species that she could study and observe. However, despite her new setting, she still repeats all her previous mistakes. Always realizing it, shrugging her shoulders, and moving on. She too management over a local library to not only learn more about this new world, but also have a place for quick access to this knowledge lest she forget it again.

 

She became friends with a fellow lover of knowledge, Namaste, and often suggest books to each other. Many who stop in know not to spend too much time with her if you are in a rush or have something else on your mind because she will jump into a discussion of asking about your biology. Get what you need from the library and get out.

  

NASA image acquired: June 03, 2012

 

This scene is to the northwest of the recently named crater Magritte, in Mercury's south. The image is not map projected; the larger crater actually sits to the north of the two smaller ones. The shadowing helps define the striking "Mickey Mouse" resemblance, created by the accumulation of craters over Mercury's long geologic history.

 

This image was acquired as part of MDIS's high-incidence-angle base map. The high-incidence-angle base map is a major mapping activity in MESSENGER's extended mission and complements the surface morphology base map of MESSENGER's primary mission that was acquired under generally more moderate incidence angles. High incidence angles, achieved when the Sun is near the horizon, result in long shadows that accentuate the small-scale topography of geologic features. The high-incidence-angle base map is being acquired with an average resolution of 200 meters/pixel.

 

The MESSENGER spacecraft is the first ever to orbit the planet Mercury, and the spacecraft's seven scientific instruments and radio science investigation are unraveling the history and evolution of the Solar System's innermost planet. Visit the Why Mercury? section of this website to learn more about the key science questions that the MESSENGER mission is addressing. During the one-year primary mission, MESSENGER acquired 88,746 images and extensive other data sets. MESSENGER is now in a yearlong extended mission, during which plans call for the acquisition of more than 80,000 additional images to support MESSENGER's science goals.

 

Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington

 

NASA image use policy.

 

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.

 

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For other ships named "Caronia", see Caronia (disambiguation).

RMS Caronia (ca. 1956) (cropped).jpg

RMS Caronia c. 1956, in the Trondheim fjord

History

Name

 

1948-1968: Caronia

1968: Columbia

1968-1974: Caribia

 

Port of registry

 

1948-1968, Liverpool, United Kingdom

1968-1974, Panama Panama

 

Ordered1946

BuilderJohn Brown and Company, Clydebank, Scotland

Yard number635

Laid down13 February 1946

Launched30 October 1947 by The Princess Elizabeth (Now Queen Elizabeth II)

CompletedDecember 1948

Maiden voyage4 January 1949

Out of service27 November 1967

FateWrecked in Apra Harbour, Guam, 1974. Subsequently scrapped.

General characteristics

Tonnage

 

As built, 34,183 GRT

1956, 34,172 GRT

1965, 34,274 GRT

1968, 25,794 GRT (Panamanian rules)

 

Length217.90 m (714.90 ft)

Beam27.80 m (91.21 ft)

Draught9.66 m (31.69 ft)

Installed power35,000 shp

PropulsionGeared turbines, H.P. double reduction, I.P. and L.P. single reduction, twin propellers

Speed22 knots (41 km/h; 25 mph)

Capacity932 passengers (581 first class, 351 tourist class)

 

RMS Caronia was a 34,183 gross register tons (GRT) passenger ship of the Cunard Line (then Cunard White Star Line). Launched on 30 October 1947, she served with Cunard until 1967. She was initially nicknamed the "Green Goddess" [1] after Liverpool's green and white "Green Goddess" trams, and the nickname stuck. She was one of the first "dual-purpose" ships, built both for 2-class transatlantic crossings and all 1st-class cruising. After leaving Cunard she briefly served as SS Caribia in 1969, after which she was laid up in New York until 1974 when she was sold for scrap. While being towed to Taiwan for scrapping, she was caught in a storm on 12 August. After her tow lines were cut, she repeatedly crashed on the rocky breakwater outside Apra Harbor, Guam and broke into three sections.

Contents

 

1 History

1.1 1949-1959: A ship ahead of her time

1.2 1959-1967: Competition catches up

1.3 1968-1974: Final Years

2 References

3 Further reading

4 External links

5 Further reading

 

History

 

After World War II, the Cunard White Star Line operated three ships on the Southampton—New York run. The famous RMS Queen Mary and RMS Queen Elizabeth operated a weekly express service, with the smaller and slower RMS Mauretania sailing as the third ship on the route. The company placed an order for a running mate to the Mauretania, a ship of similar speed and proportions for the transatlantic run. Ultimately this was not to be the role of the new ship, as Cunard White Star's executives decided that the new ship would be built primarily for cruising.

 

With that in mind, the new ship — soon to be named Caronia by Princess Elizabeth — received many different features from her Cunard White Star fleetmates. An outdoor swimming pool was a new thing, as was having bathroom / shower facilities in every cabin. However, unlike modern cruise ships her accommodation was divided into two classes on transatlantic voyages; First and Cabin.

 

On cruises all accommodation was sold as one class although many staterooms, both on A deck and R deck were usually allocated to Cabin Class. Even some cabins on B deck were sold on cruises. Both restaurants served the same menu in just one sitting and passengers were allocated to a restaurant dependent upon the locations of their staterooms. On short cruises to the Caribbean and South America, every cabin was offered for occupation and often, as on transatlantic crossings, there would be two sittings for luncheon and dinner.

 

To distinguish her from Cunard White Star's liners, the company decided to give her a different colour scheme. Instead of going for the then typical black hull with a white superstructure, Caronia received a unique livery of four different shades of "Cruising Green", making her a highly attractive and instantly recognizable vessel.

 

Another striking feature of the ship was her large single funnel, one of the largest ever installed aboard a ship. Similar to those of the later SS United States, this funnel easily caught the wind, making the ship somewhat difficult to handle.[2] Caronia was the largest passenger ship to be built in Scotland after World War 2 until Queen Elizabeth 2 twenty years later.

1949-1959: A ship ahead of her time

 

The brand new RMS Caronia made her maiden voyage on 4 January 1949 between Southampton and New York.[3] Two more transatlantic crossings followed before the ship embarked on her first cruises from New York to the Caribbean. During her first years she spent most of the year on transatlantic crossings; only during the winter was she engaged in cruising. In 1951 she made her first world cruise. From 1952 onwards she made transatlantic crossings only in August and September, with the rest of the year dedicated to cruising; during one such cruise, she ran aground in Egypt on 12 March 1952 while transiting the Suez Canal.[4] In May 1953 the Caronia made what was perhaps her most famous cruise, associated with the coronation ceremony of Queen Elizabeth II (who had christened the Caronia six years earlier). The ship was used as a hotel, as most of the accommodation in the United Kingdom was fully booked.

 

Caronia ran aground at Messina, Sicily, Italy, on 31 May 1956,[5] but was refloated the next day.[6] Her annual refit in November 1956 saw Caronia modernised for southern cruising with air-conditioning outfitted through the entire ship.[7] Her world cruise of 1958 saw her suffer the most serious accident of her career. Sailing slowly out of Yokohama harbour to avoid collision with a United States Navy vessel, she was driven by high winds against the harbor′s breakwater, causing serious damage to her bow and demolishing a harbor lighthouse in the process. Fortunately the United States Navy allowed Cunard to use their drydock at the Yokosuka yard for repairs to the Caronia. That same year Caronia's autumn cruise in the Mediterranean had to be cancelled due to political tensions in the Middle East.

1959-1967: Competition catches up

 

1959 saw Caronia making regular transatlantic crossings for the last time. Competition from the jet airliner meant there weren't enough passengers for her in the North Atlantic trade. From here her transatlantic crossings were repositioning voyages. The first each year being a Sterling Cruise,[8] so called because all other Caronia cruises were paid for only in US Dollars, and taking a southerly route via the Bahamas instead of the usual direct route. Decreased passenger numbers in the North Atlantic also meant that more of Cunard's liners were rebuilt into cruise use and received a similar green colour scheme to that of the Caronia, which in 1962 were established as the line's official cruise colours when RMS Mauretania was repainted for cruising (though not otherwise significantly adapted for the role). In 1963 the heavily rebuilt and renamed RMS Franconia and RMS Carmania followed suit. By this time the Caronia's itineraries had settled into a yearly pattern, each cruise having found its ideal individual place in the calendar.

 

By the early 1960s other shipping companies were catching up with Cunard and building their own purpose-built cruiseships, which in addition to being better equipped than the Caronia were better suited for cruising than she had ever been. To keep up with her newer competitors, Cunard decided that in November 1965 Caronia would be drydocked for ten weeks,[7] new suites and a lido deck built, and her interior brought up to date. 1966 brought with it a seamen's strike in Britain, which upset the Caronia's itineraries badly. As a result of climbing operating costs, 1967 was the first year when the Caronia didn't profit her owners. Due to increased competition, Cunard decided to withdraw her from service at the end of the year. Fittingly, Caronia's last voyage for Cunard was a transatlantic crossing from New York to Southampton.

1968-1974: Final Years

SS Caribia breaks up in Apra Harbor, Guam, August 1974

 

In early 1968 the Caronia was sold to Star Shipping,[9][10] a company owned by US and Panamian interests. Renamed SS Columbia, she sailed to Greece for refitting. Cunard had allowed Caronia to fall behind her maintenance schedule, and her engines needed a major overhaul. Replacement parts were ordered from a Greek company rather than from the original manufacturer. Whilst she was being rebuilt Andrew Konstaninidis took control of Columbia, buying out the other owners of Star Line and renaming her the SS Caribia. Her refitting was completed and she was given a new all-white colour scheme. She was registered in Panama, with her tonnage reduced to 25,794 GRT under Panamanian rules (which saved dock dues). February 1969 saw the Caribia embark on her first cruise from New York to the Caribbean. The voyage was hindered by a malfunction in her waste system. Things turned for the worse on her second cruise, when an explosion in the engine room resulted in the death of one crew member and the severe scalding of another. In addition the ship lost all electrical power for twenty hours before repairs allowed her to return to port. The incident undermined public confidence in the vessel. The Caribia limped back to New York, never to make a commercial voyage again.[10]

 

Plans to revive the Caribia were considered for the next five years,[11] but she remained docked in New York and her berthing debts continued to accumulate. Finally in July 1974 her owners gave in and sold the once great ship for scrap. German ocean tug Hamburg was entrusted with the task of towing the Caribia to a breaker's yard in Taiwan. Whilst near Honolulu the ship was in danger of capsizing; but repairs were made and they continued on. The two ships sailed into Typhoon Mary near Guam.[12] On August 12th, 1974, the Hamburg's generators failed and her crew were forced to cut the Caribia loose to save their own vessel. The storm's winds drove the lifeless ship against Apra Harbour's breakwater, where she was wrecked.[13]

 

Being a danger to local shipping, the wrecked Caribia was swiftly cut up. Before that can took place, it was discovered that she had come to rest beside a Korean War era landing craft sunk in that same location. The landing craft was loaded with tons of munitions including 22mm, 40mm, 5", and 8" shells. This required the careful removal of all of these materials over 5 months before removal of the Caribia could even continue. Her removal was all the more urgent because the Caribia's hulk blocked Apra harbor's entrance. As Apra is the only deep water harbor on Guam, this made resupply of many vital commodities (e.g., petroleum products) impossible or difficult. No commercial or military vessels could leave or enter the harbor until significant portions of her stern had first been removed. By January 1975, most of Cariba's stern had been removed, thus restoring access to and from the harbor. Afterwards, scrapping continued normally on her bow. What was left of her wreck was removed by late 1975. Her life ended just 25 years after she was commissioned. Despite being probably the most forward-looking ship of her time, she was in active service for only 19 years.[14]

Bangalow. Population 1,700.

This town was named after the local Bangalow palm. After the cedar timber cutters left a few farmers moved into the district in 1881. A school opened in 1884 and the Post Office and general store began servicing the locals in 1891. The town became better established when the Casino to Murwillumbah railway reached the area in 1894. The station was named Bangaloe but this was changed to Bangalow in 1907. In 1901 a Catholic convent school opened and a local farmer added 100 town blocks to the settlement in 1903. Most of the town buildings were wooden and fires ravaged the town in 1907 and again in 1911 and in 1930 and in 1939. After 1939 more buildings were constructed in brick. Between the fires the town was flooded several times. Bangalow is basically a one street town and most significant buildings are in this main street. On the way into the town we will see on the left the terracotta roofed Anglican Church; on the right is the old timber framed Police Station; next corner on the right is the Presbyterian Church; next on right is the red brick primary school; over the main intersection on the left is the red brick Post Office and on the right a series of fine wooden two storey commercial buildings; at the top of the street is the Bangalow Hotel and some red brick banks. If you turn left at the roundabout beyond the hotel you will see St Kevin’s Catholic Church in red brick. In the side street at the main intersection (Station Street) is the impressive Masonic Hall, the quaint little RSL and the Uniting Church

 

Name unknown. Seen in Paloma Gardens in Wanganui - New Zealand

Free download under CC Attribution (CC BY 2.0). Please credit the artist and rawpixel.com

 

Born in Livorno in 1875, Leonetto Cappiello was an Italian-French poster art designer and painter. Cappiello made his name in Paris by employing bold figures and vivid caricatures in his Art Nouveau artworks.

 

Higher resolutions with no attribution required can be downloaded: rawpixel

 

Name: VICTORIA C (WILSON POLICE)

IMO: 9373539

MMSI: 257765000

Call Sign: LAOB8

Vessel Type - Generic: Cargo

Vessel Type - Detailed: General Cargo

Navigational Status: Active

Gross Tonnage: 2990

Summer DWT: 5000 t

Length Overall x Breadth Extreme: 89.9 x 14.5 m

Year Built: 2007

Holy Name Cathedral in Chicago, IL

Their twins.

 

Their names are *drum* London and Paris!

I had no idea what this was as I approached it.

Interior view of a historic (150+ year old) Cleveland church restored to it's original splendor.

 

Cleveland, OH USA

 

Very small.

Ipstones Edge Staffordshire UK

Group fungus Foray 29th September 2024

Name: Rufous-collared kingfisher (female)

Scientific: Actenoides concretus

Malay: Pekaka Rimba Besar / Pekaka Tengkuk Perang

Family: Alcedinidae

IUCN Red List (v3.1, 2016): Near Threatened

Gear: SONY a9II + SEL200600G + SEL14TC.

 

#FullFrameLife #MySONYLife #sony #sonymalaysia #a9II #SEL200600G #SEL14TC #alpha #AlphaGuru #SAG #NurIsmailPhotography #madebyluminar #skylum #skylummalaysia #luminar #topazlabs #rmco #leofoto #pg1 #Fight4ourPlanet

 

Copyright © 2020 Nur Ismail Photography. All rights reserved. Do not use or reproduce these images on websites, blogs or publications without expressed written permission from the photographer.

 

For any enquiries, please visit my website: www.nurismailphotography.com or email at nurismailphotography@gmail.com.

 

Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/nurismailphotography/

 

Name: Cecilia

Designer: Ekaterina Lukasheva

Parts: 30

Paper's size: 10,0 х 5,0 cm

Final height: ~ 11.5 cm

 

The screenprinted details all come from the wedding invitations/programs.

Anyone care to venture a guess? I'm thinking it won't take long...

 

Fujifilm X100

The venerable Polaroid looked out sadly from his spot on the bench, surveying the beautiful park. Not long ago, he would have been snapping away, capturing all those flowers, butterflies, and trees. He reminisced poignantly on the days when he used to provide almost instant happiness to the hands of the humans that held him and his creations so lovingly. Now they had digital, he sighed. They didn't need him anymore. And now to buy film for him, only 8 exposures, costs over $20! What an injustice!

 

Hey guys! Can you think of a good name for this little guy? I came up with a few obvious ones (Polly, Paulie, Paula) but I think you all might be able to do better! So leave a comment...whatcha got? I plan to start a series featuring him and all of his adventures, so we need something good!

From the "Get Your Neon" shoot with the Richmond Photography Meetup Group

■Age:27

■Sex: ♀

■Race: Pani

■Trait: Heterochromatic-Eyes.

■Status: Ex-Matron of the Shimizu Clan.

■Job: 薬屋 (Kusuriya)Apothecary-/-漢方医 (Kanpō-i)Herbalist

 

General Mythrog looked down the length of the crossbow impatiently. He had been laying in this position, on this extremely uncomfortable branch, for hours, keeping the crossbow trained on the small patch of Cheese-Blossom flowers, colonizing a branch on the opposite tree. Cheese-Blossom was an endangered species of flower, named after it’s dark-yellow color……and the fact that it tastes like moldy cheese. It’s petals, are poisonous to all but a few creatures.

Mythrog was just about to change his position again, when there was a quiet flapping sound, and the Leafed Peacock landed on the branch, and began to eat the cheese-blossom. Like the cheese-blossom, it was endangered, but for a different reason. It was extremely healthy and delicious to predators such as the Swamp Wyvern, and when cooked properly, to humans and trolls. It lived only in the Sinking Basin. Finally, Mythrog thought, aiming the crossbow. As he looked down it’s length, he smirked. There where many in Roawia, who would try to capture it, rather than kill it, so they could increase its numbers. Mythrog shook his head. I’d rather kill and eat it after all the work it took to get here. And it had taken a lot of work. After hearing from one of his scouts, that a Leafed Peacock was in the area, Mythrog and his to closest companions, Carnox and Endrol, immediately began the hunt. After two fruitless weeks, they had stumbled

across the trail of a Moss-Squirrel, another creature that eats Cheese-Blossom, and they followed the tracks. The night before the tracks had led to the tree with the patch of Cheese-Blossom, Endrol shot the Moss-Squirrel, and they ate well that night. The next morning, they broke camp, and, after finding proper hiding spots, Carnox and Endrol hid, and Mythrog threw a rock into the patch of Cheese-Blossom. The patch of flowers was actually connected by thin roots, and when one flower was disrupted they all would release a noxious smell. Though it chased away most predators, it attracted the Leafed Peacock.

After throwing the rock, Mythrog climbed up a fallen tree trunk, found a strong branch, and hid. Now, after hours of waiting, the Leafed Peacock had finally arrived. Mythrog leveled his crossbow on the birds head and…….. was just about to pull the trigger when, “BRRRAFFFFFEEEEEeee” the call of a extremely annoying horn sounded. The Leafed Peacock froze, turned and flapped away. Mythrog stared at the spot where it had been in growing anger.

“Mythrog? General Mythrog, where are you?” Called out a loud and obnoxious voice. Mythrog turned and looked down to see who had called out. He spotted a Queen’s scout running through the trees. The scout stopped beneath the tree that Mythrog was hiding in, and was about to continue running, when Endrol stepped out from his hiding spot, with a arrow nocked to his bowstring, and pointed it between the scout’s eyes. Carnox stepped out from the bush he had hid behind.

“State your name and business.” he growled in a dangerously low voice.

“My name is Loudre, and I am here because Her Majesty, the great Queen Galainir, would like to make a alliance with General Mythrog.”

Mythrog glanced around, to make sure that it was not a assassination attempt, jumped out of his hiding spot, and slid down the fallen log.

“You will address me as High General Mythrog, and how dare you come walking out here blasting on that horn, scaring away my prey! ”

“Uh sorry,” Loudre quickly regained his composure, “what prey? I didn’t see anything.”

“Just because you didn’t see anything doesn’t mean that there wasn’t something there.” Mythrog said coldly.

Loudre cleared his throat. “Could you please have your troll remove his arrow from between my eyes?”

Mythrog nodded, reluctantly, to Endrol who lowered his bow, but kept the arrow nocked.

“How did you find us?” He asked.

“I ran into a fortune-teller who is a supporter of the Queen, and she told me that you were out here hunting some kind of rare creature. Did you get it?”

“What did you think you scared away?!” Mythrog replied shocked at Loudre’s stupidity.

“Uhh sorry, the great Queen Galai—” Loudre begin again,

“I heard. Tell me more about this so-called alliance the queen wishes to make.”

“Well, the great Queen Galainir has sent a small squad, led by Sir Flork. You are to meet with them at the ruins of Fort Stinking Tree three days from now to discuss the alliance. Oh and you can’t bring more than two men with you.” said Loudre.

“It’s Sinking Tree, you moron. Give us a moment to talk about it.” He watched Loudre take several steps back, than turned around to his companions. “Well do you think we should go?”

“It could be a trap” Carnox advised.

“I know, I don’t trust Galainir, but I want to hear what her men have to say, and we can always set up a ambush.” Mythrog replied.

“Its your choice Mythrog.” Endrol said.

Mythrog thought for a moment, “here’s what were going to do. Carnox and I are going to the nearest outpost. Endrol, you are going to go find that fortune-teller, kill that traitor, take any money you find, but nothing else, burn her hut to the ground, make sure her dead body is in it, and put a troll flag in the ashes. I want anyone who finds it to know who did it. After that, meet me, and Carnox at the outpost, than the three of us, and loud-mouth here, will go to Fort Sinking Tree. A small squad of Blood Legion will go with us, on the lie that their going somewhere else. Their going to take a short-cut, and get there before the queen’s soldiers do, and hide. That way we have back-up. Do not be surprised if I decide to kill the soldiers, and declare war with Galainir.”

“I’d rather it that way. It sounds like a plan.” Carnox replied.

Endrol nodded, “I agree with Carnox.”

Mythrog nodded, and called Loudre back over.

“I agree with your terms. Carnox and I will go to Fort Sinking Tree, and discuss an alliance with Sir Flork. Hopefully we will part as friends.” he lied.

Loudre smiled “Tha….” he never got to finish his sentence, as Mythrog lunged forward, and grabbed a fist-full of the scout’s armer-studded shirt, lifting him off his feet, one handed.

“But if this is an ambush you will not live long enough to see it fail.”

He dropped Loudre on the ground, and stepped back. Loudre jumped to his feet and was about to say something, when Endrol suddenly stepped between and held up his hand.

“Its back.” He whispered.

Mythrog did not need to ask to know what ‘it’ was. He slowly turned around and looked up at the patch of Cheese-Blossom. His assumption proved correct, as the Leafed Peacock had come back to the Cheese-Blossom.

He slowly raised his crossbow, and realized that he could not take the shot from his current position. The angle was all wrong, and he wanted a head shot so’s not to damage the meat and feathers, the former because he wanted it, the latter because he could fetch a good price for them. He waved Endrol over and silently whispered, “I can’t get the shot with my crossbow, you’re going to have to take it with your bow.” Endrol nodded, and silently stepped away, pulled back his bowstring, and was about to fire, when Loudre loudly called out from behind them,

“where is it? I can’t see anything, COME OUT WHAT-EVER-YOU-ARE!”

The Leafed Peacock froze and silently flapped away, and this time, Mythrog knew it was not coming back. A shocked silence descended, as all three trolls stared at the spot were it had been, longingly. Then, as one, they turned and glared at Loudre, who was completely oblivious. “Wow I feel like a great bird-watcher, seeing such a beautiful creat….” he never got to finish, as Mythrog drove his fist into the unsuspecting gut, hard enough to send him flying several feet.

“HOW DARE YOU CHEAT ME OUT OF MY PREY…..TWICE!!!!” he bellowed, loud enough to scare away every bird for hundreds of yards.

Mythrog took several deep breaths, hauled the still wheezing Loudre to his feet, and growled, “Come on, we have a meeting to keep.”

GB Railfreight Class 92, 92020 - formerly named "Milton" - pauses at Crewe on its way to Edinburgh with the Caledonian Sleeper Down Highlander (1S25).

 

It'd then run directly to Mossend Yard for its naming the following day at the Low Carbon Logistics event. The name was applied at Wembley InterCity Depot the previous Friday, but covered up ready for the big reveal.

 

The team at Wembley had done an excellent job of polishing up 92020 for its big day out - just look at that bogie piping!

 

The Dyson's new name was unveiled the following day as "Billy Stirling" after the former MD of PD Stirling who established the railfreight side of the family transport business, including the railhead at Mossend.

Folkestone, Kent, England.

This iconic cathedral in downtown Chicao was designed in Gothic Revival style and opened in 1875. It is the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago. Over the years it has survived structural issues, a major fire, and some pretty unfortunate "modern" decor revisions in the 1960s. It's not the city's most spectacular cathedral, but is still a beautiful space to visit. The upper/ceiling area and the pipe organ are magnificent.

Your name is the one thing that defines you to most. Always redefine yourself, always change.

[a work in progress]

Margolies, John,, photographer.

 

Valentine (mfgr.'s name), Washington Avenue, Magnolia, Arkansas

 

1979.

 

1 photograph : color transparency ; 35 mm (slide format).

 

Notes:

Title, date and keywords based on information provided by the photographer.

Margolies categories: Diners; Eating & drinking establishments.

Purchase; John Margolies 2008 (DLC/PP-2008:109-2).

Credit line: John Margolies Roadside America photograph archive (1972-2008), Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.

Please use digital image: original slide is kept in cold storage for preservation.

Forms part of: John Margolies Roadside America photograph archive (1972-2008).

 

Subjects:

Diners (Restaurants)--1970-1980.

United States--Arkansas--Magnolia.

 

Format: Slides--1970-1980.--Color

 

Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication. For more information, see "John Margolies Roadside America Photograph Archive - Rights and Restrictions Information" www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/723_marg.html

 

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

 

Part Of: Margolies, John John Margolies Roadside America photograph archive (DLC) 2010650110

 

General information about the John Margolies Roadside America photograph archive is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.mrg

 

Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/mrg.01255

 

Call Number: LC-MA05- 1255

 

Victoria Avenue. Trefresa House. This Cornish name was used as Trefresa Farm in Cornwall was where his father John Legoe was born. His father was a sea Captain and captained many passenger ships to Australia from the 1850s to the 1870. He captained the maiden voyage of the Yalata to Adelaide, his visit to SA, in 1865. His last voyage to SA was in 1877 when he bought his family with him to settle here. His son Glen became a director of G & R Wills Company and later W Moffin & Co and George Wilcox and Co. He was mainly an importer with these companies and an exporter of meat, wool, hides but also had a pastoral estate at Binnum in the South East. Glen bought his land in Victoria Avenue in 1902 with a house standing on it erected by a previous owner. In 1919 he engaged architects Woods, Bagot, Jory and Laybourne-Smith to prepare drawings for major alterations to the value of around £5000. This work transformed the look and style of the original house. The “new’ residence was built in the English style with a steep tiled roof, wide verandas, round columns, and attic windows. It has the appearance of a British colonial house from hill country in India. The unique appearance of the house includes dormer windows beside a central chimney which softens the massive bulk of the steep roof. Glen Legoe’s Trefresa House was subdivided into 11 properties in 1922 when Glen Avenue was created. Glen Avenue opened up land back to the railway line. The house of 14 main rooms and with over two acres of gardens was sold in 1938 and by 1941 it was owned by Clive Langdon Bonython a member of one of SA’s wealthiest and best known family through investments and ownership of the Advertiser. Clive was a mere accountant and business director. His directorships included Wiles manufacturing Company and Mumzone products etc. The property has superb cast iron gates. The steep roof looks as if designed to cope with tropical downpours or massive winter snows.

Stencil on Wood 30/40 cm

 

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Brief History of Maryborough.

This fertile area of Queensland was the fifth area to be settled when it was still part of NSW. The first settlement in QLD was at Redcliffe (and later Moreton Bay) as a convict colony in 1824. This was followed by white settlement at Ipswich in 1842 and further inland in the mountains at Warwick in 1847. The NSW government sent explorers to the Mary River area in 1842 which was when the river was named. Then in 1847 inland from the Mary River a town was surveyed but not gazetted until 1849. It was Gayndah which now claims to be the oldest town in QLD. The establishment of Gayndah is remarkable given transport difficulties. Near the coast Maryborough was the site of a wharf for pastoralists in 1847 and later a small town was created in 1850 making Maryborough the fifth settlement in what is now QLD. The first land sales at Maryborough were in 1852 although a general store had opened before this time on leased land in 1848. The new town of Maryborough was sited on the Mary River which rises near the Glasshouse Mountains inland from the Sunshine Coast. It generally flows northwards to enter the sea a few miles downstream from the town of Maryborough. The Mary River was named after Lady Mary Lennox the wife of the Governor of NSW Charles Fitzroy. The little town struggled to establish itself but once QLD got independence from NSW in 1859 Maryborough began to grow more quickly as free white settlers spread around the new colony. The delays in growth were partly caused by local Aboriginal resistance to the white pastoralists. Between 1847 and 1853 twenty eight white settlers were killed by Aboriginal people. A white massacre of around 100 Aboriginal people in the early 1850s brought some calm to the area and broke the resistance of the Gubbi Gubbi people. The Gubbi Gubbi people were called the Gin Gins by white settlers hence the name for that town north of Maryborough. Like so many Australian towns Maryborough’s growth was fuelled by mining discoveries. Maryborough was declared an official QLD port in 1859 and the first ship load of immigrants disembarked directly at Maryborough in 1860. Most were female and instead of obtaining work as servants immediately accepted offers of marriage from the men of the district. Maryborough became a municipality in 1861. It soon had a Customs House, a Courthouse and School of Arts but it really grew with the discovery of gold inland at Gympie. Maryborough served as the pot for goods going to and from Gympie from 1867 onwards. The QLD Land Acts of 1867 also opened up the pastoral leasehold lands to farmers for the first time. The main crops grown were maize and sugar. At about the same time as the Gympie gold rush Maryborough got its first sugar mill, a timber mill and John Walker of Ballarat opened a foundry and engineering works to produce mining equipment just as he had done previously in Ballarat. The port expanded and the town grew. A new Post Office (1869), hotels and general stores opened to cater for the miners and the townspeople. By 1871 Maryborough had 3,500 residents with its own newspaper’s, churches and schools. The wider district population was 9,000 people. By 1876 the population had swelled to 5,700 people. The first railway opened in Maryborough in 1881 when a line connected the port with Gympie gold fields.

 

Maryborough South Sea Islander Hospital. The Kanaka indentured labour system was introduced to QLD in 1863. The Polynesian Hawaiians called themselves kanakas. This was the term used in the 19th century to cover the South Sea Islander indentured labourers. Most who came to the Maryborough region (and Bundaberg too) were from the Solomon Islands and the New Hebrides (now Vanuatu). Some Islanders were also taken as indentured labourers to Chile, to Canada, to California and to Fiji. The arrival of the first indentured islanders coincided with the beginnings of

the sugar industry in the Maryborough region. Sugar is a very intense labour crop and in the USA, the Caribbean and

South America African slaves were used for such work until the mid-19th century. The Americans had their tragic Civil War to end slavery there. British colonies were not allowed to have slaves by the 1830s century including all of the Australia colonies. African slaves were gradually freed in the Caribbean and elsewhere in the mid-19th century. South America had its slaves all freed by the 1870s. Although descendants of the South Sea Islanders like to refer to themselves as the Sugar Slaves this term would be highly offensive to all descendants of African slaves of the Americas and Caribbean. Indentured labour was a common labour system in the 19th century and continued into the 20th century. In Australia the Commonwealth government ran a similar indentured labour scheme for young British men who wanted to be farm labourers. They served a three year term, with no pay until they had completed their indenture, and they needed government permission to buy work boots or any other item. In SA this scheme was known as the Barwell Boys (Barwell was the SA premier at the time) scheme but it operated in WA and other states too. This indentured labour system ended in 1925.

 

So when the indentured South Sea Islander trade was established in Queensland in 1863 the first labourers were covered by the 1861 Masters and Servants Acts. (All colonies – and later states- had such acts which controlled labour relations right through to the 1980 and 1990s when anti-discrimination and equal opportunity acts watered them down.) Queensland acted quickly after 1863 and introduced the Polynesian Labourers Act in 1868. Amongst the many clauses of the act was the establishment of inspectors of conditions on plantations where South Sea Islanders were indentured. They weighed food rations, inspected housing and clothing. The act was also designed to protect the Islanders’ basic rights and to stop the “kidnapping” of Islanders. All ships captains had to ensure that there was no coercion and that the Islander’s recruitment was consistent with the QLD Polynesian Labourers Act. Although white settlers and Islanders died of fevers and tropical diseases frequently in the Maryborough area it had one of four Islander Hospitals erected by the QLD government in the early 1880s to help alleviate disease and death among the Islander populations in QLD. The first inspector for the health conditions of the Islanders began work in Maryborough in 1875.Their complaints about the conditions under which Islanders lived led to the opening of the 50 bed Maryborough Pacific Islander Hospital and doctor’s residence. Islanders had a higher death rate from disease than whites and extra health care was needed. Thus the Maryborough Hospital opened in 1883 to improve health conditions but it closed just five years later. Like other Islander hospitals it was funded from the wages due to dead Islanders. These wages were diverted to state government coffers. Attached to the hospital was an Islander cemetery which was formally established in 1891 but was used for interments whilst the hospital existed. A total of 363 Islander patients died at the hospital and were presumably all buried in the cemetery. The Maryborough Pacific Islander Hospital buildings were removed in 1892 and some equipment moved to the Maryborough Hospital which established a separate Kanaka ward. The site of the Pacific Island Hospital and cemetery was left vacant until sold off as vacant land in 1911. A controversy arose a couple of years when the Maryborough Council was considering allowing building on the former site. Action were than taken to have the site declared a heritage area. The outcome for this has not yet been decided. If building approval were to happen one can only hope that a suitable memorial and monument is placed there to remind everyone of Maryborough’s role in the South Sea Islander traffic. The site is near Tinana 5 kms west of Maryborough.

 

The first South Sea Islander labourers arrived at the port of Maryborough in 1867 on the schooner Mary Smith. All were male and found employed straight away with the Maryborough Sugar Company. They were paid £6 per year (paid at the end for the three year contract) compared with a white labourers who would have received up to £30 a year. The Islanders also were fed and housed which the white labourers were not. The Maryborough Sugar Company also paid for the voyage to and from the South Sea Islands. When the Mary borough Pacific Islander Hospital closed in 1888 it was partially because the number for South Sea Islanders was declining in the district. Numbers continued to fall in the 1890s as sugar profits declined. Then all South Sea Islanders were covered by the “White Australia Acts” of the new Federal Government in 1901. At that time the Islander population in Queensland was at its peak with around 9,000 Islanders. Commonwealth legislation banned recruitment from 1904 and started deportation in 1906. By 1908 7,000 Islanders had been deported and about 2,000 were allowed to stay on in Australia because of marriage or health or other issues. Over the life time of the South Sea Islander trade around 60,000 Islanders had been brought into Queensland and of those about a quarter were employed in the Maryborough district.

 

The Port of Maryborough.

The town actually began with a wharf as once prospective settlers learned that the River Mary was navigable white pastoralist and cotton and maize farmers moved into the district upstream from around 1848. Then in 1859 as the colony of Queensland was created from New South Wales a new international port was created at Maryborough. The town had moved from West Maryborough to the present site. Consequently the first Customs House was erected in 1861. In 1860 the first vessels arrived at the port of Maryborough direct from Europe with a load of immigrants. In 1869 nearly 7,000 immigrants had landed in Maryborough and by 1878 nearly 16,000 had landed here. In fact between 1860 and 1900 around 22,000 immigrants arrived directly in Maryborough from England and Europe. Maryborough also had a coastal steamer service to Brisbane and Rockhampton. From 1867 it also handled all the goods going into and the gold coming out of the goldfields at Gympie. In the last quarter of the 19th century the port of Maryborough handled saw timber, sugar, wool, meat, gold, maize, etc. Before the end of the 19th century when river ports like Maryborough were about to be forgotten because they could not handle larger steamers its imports and exports were roughly in balance in terms of value. The most valuable exports were: gold, silver, copper, fruit, hides and skins, sugar and wool. Of these the most valuable were sugar £50,000, raw and refined, followed by silver/lead £33,000, gold/silver £9,000 and skin/hides £8,000.

 

Among the early immigrants were shiploads of German settlers from 1860. As the numbers grew the first Lutheran pastor arrived in 1864 followed by a second in 1867. These and later pastors came from Germany or Denmark, mainly the Schleswig district, which was occupied by Germany from 1864 after it defeated the Danes. Between 1860 and 1891 around 180,000 immigrants arrived in Queensland with an assisted government passage and some rights to lease land. Around 16,000 were non British mainly Germans, Danes, Norwegians and Swedes. Other Australian colonies only gave assisted passages to British immigrants except for Tasmania and Queensland. Most of the non-British immigrants were German but the QLD government’s agent I Germany also recruited Scandinavians, Swiss etc. Queensland became the colony with the greatest number of Danes and it had almost as many Norwegians and Swedes as NSW. Some of these non-British immigrant’s landed in Maryborough with the first ship load arriving in March 1871 on the Reichstag from Hamburg. The Scandinavians especially settled at Tiaro and Tinana near Maryborough, around Bundaberg, Pialba at Hervey Bay and in other places like Kingaroy where Sir Jo Bjelke-Petersen lived. The town of Eidsvold, near Gayndah is a Norwegian name and it was established by the Archer brothers from Larvik in Norway. As most of the Scandinavians were Lutheran (but some were Catholic), Danish, Norwegian and Swedish names are often linked to the Lutheran churches of the Maryborough district. Some Scandinavian names (mainly Danish) of Maryborough early settlers include the Jocumsen, Claussen,Madsen, Kehlet, Weinberg, Okeden, Boge, Möller, etc. Many Danish and other Scandinavian names can also be found in the Polson cemetery at Pialba Hervey Bay such as Christensen, Hansen, Mortensen, Nielsen, Petersen, Thomsen etc.

 

Dunfermline was awarded city status as part of Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee celebrations in 2022. Sadly, Her Majesty The Queen died on 08 September 2022 and it was her son, by now King Charles III who visited the city on 03 October 2022 to hand over the official documents confirming city status. Around the same time, ScotRail announced that Dunfermline Town station would be renamed Dunfermline City. This station had been opened in March 1890 by the North British Railway as Dunfermline Lower replacing the nearby earlier Comely Park station of 1877. The ‘Lower’ suffix was to distinguish it from the NBR’s Upper Station on the ex Stirling and Dunfermline line. Dunfermline Upper would eventually be closed in October 1968, so the Lower station then became plain Dunfermline. When Railtrack opened a new Dunfermline Queen Margaret station on the eastern outskirts in January 2000, the 1890 station was renamed Dunfermline Town. It held that name until the suffix was changed in 2022. It takes time to change the name of a station with so many databases to be amended so the older name may still appear in some situations for a while. The new signs at the station were erected on 23 November 2022 although on my visit I did notice one Dunfermline Town sign had been ignored on the out of use and overgrown western end of the down platform.

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