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CRCS Outdoors students and faculty check the health of fish in local pond by netting and studying the fish that they catch and release.
CRCS Outdoors students and faculty check the health of fish in local pond by netting and studying the fish that they catch and release.
The Humpback Whales work collectively circling around underneath a school of fish blowing bubbles. The fish don't like the bubbles and won't swim through so are trapped. The the whales swim a a group vertically with mouths open and scoop them up then filter out the water through their baleen. The birds grab the leftovers.
OK, here's the story: last night as I was cleaning, the netting behind my bed fell to the floor. Crafty girl that I am, a new study was born. Funny thing is that I had such a crappy day yesterday and taking these photos turned out to be the best part of the day. This photo, in particular, seemed almost like a painting. I've got quite a few more interesting ones, which I'll post throughout the week......
CRCS Outdoors students and faculty check the health of fish in local pond by netting and studying the fish that they catch and release.
Spend 4 hours w/ me, learning a variety of knotless netting techniques, shapes, and designs. Beginners welcome.
Conservation and Wildlife Ecology students from SGU's School of Arts and Sciences participate in a bird netting workshop held with Grenada's Forestry Department at the La Sagesse Nature Center.
Those of you who have visited us or who have followed this album will recall that this east facing wall was once covered with bougainvillea, two varieties of lantana and honeysuckle from next door.
Yesterday morning I went out to find my neighbour below had beat me to it and removed the rest of the wire netting along with the plants that grew through it. It is all now lying in a big pile on his paving waiting to be chopped up.
All that is left in my garden are the remains of the bougainvillea waiting to be cut up and other debris from the plants.
It is kind of sad because this wall looked lovely when the plants were in flower but the weight of them was just to much for the netting.
Canon 5D MkII with Canon EF 17-40mm f/4L USM lens.
CRCS Outdoors students and faculty check the health of fish in local pond by netting and studying the fish that they catch and release.
CRCS Outdoors students and faculty check the health of fish in local pond by netting and studying the fish that they catch and release.
What does it take to train a dolphin?
It takes:
1. Removing a dolphin from the wild. In Taiji, this means that they also have to watch their "less attractive" family members be slaughtered. Only dolphins without scratches, scars and of a certain age and species get chosen for captivity.
Sites for more information :
Sea Shepherd Cove Guardians Page (official)
www.facebook.com/SeaShepherdCoveGuardiansOfficialPage
Cove Guardians
www.seashepherd.org/cove-guardians
Photo: Sea Shepherd
CRCS Outdoors students and faculty check the health of fish in local pond by netting and studying the fish that they catch and release.
CRCS Outdoors students and faculty check the health of fish in local pond by netting and studying the fish that they catch and release.
CRCS Outdoors students and faculty check the health of fish in local pond by netting and studying the fish that they catch and release.
We net the daylilies because the deer eat every flower, or part of a floer, they can reach. Here they have bitten one off at the net and if I don't tuck today's bud back it, too, will be eaten.
Used in Our Daily Challenge: No Words Photogame www.flickr.com/groups/ourdailychallenge/discuss/721576236...
I have a new toy; black plastic netting. Haven't quite figured out how to photograph it yet, but we tried.
When I saw the instructions for this awesome new stitch by Gwen Fisher in the latest (Aug 09) issue of Beadwork Mag, I knew I had to make it. It took much longer than I thought, but the result is well worth it. Not bad for my first crack at it!
The pattern calls for buttons or flat lampwork for the closure, but I didn't have anything on hand that matched, so I improvised with ribbon. I think I like the laced look better, anyway, and will probably stick with that.
Arnos Grove Underground railway station,
Built 1932, designed by Charles Holden
Arnos Grove station was built as part of the first section of the northward extension of the Piccadilly Line to Cockfosters. This seven-mile extension beyond the original terminus of Finsbury Park, to serve the enlarging suburban areas in north Middlesex, was authorised by a parliamentary Act of 4 June 1930, and was overseen by Frank Pick (1878-1941), the visionary administrator of the Underground Group and Chief Executive of the London Transport Passenger Board from 1933. The first section of the extension, from Finsbury Park to Arnos Grove, which included the stations at Manor House, Turnpike Lane, Wood Green and Bounds Green, was opened on 19 September 1932. Southgate and Enfield West (now Oakwood) followed in March 1933, and the terminus at Cockfosters opened on 31 July 1933.
Work on Arnos Grove started in 1931. Like most of the stations on both the east and west extensions of the Piccadilly Line, it was designed by Charles Henry Holden (1875-1960). However, much of the practical detail for Arnos Grove was undertaken within the practice of Adams, Holden, and Pearson by Holden's chief assistant at the time, Charles Hutton (1907-95). The first of Holden's stations with a circular ticket hall, its design of a cylinder within a square was, according to Hutton, based on a groundsman's lodge at Midhurst Sanatorium designed by Adams, Holden, and Pearson in 1904-6. Others have identified the Stockholm City Library (1920-28 by Erik Gunnar Asplund), which Pick and Holden had visited in 1930, as an influence. Following problems at Sudbury Town, and subsequently at Arnos Grove, with leaking shuttering for the concrete roof discolouring the brickwork, the construction methods were changed part way through the project and the load-bearing brick walls were replaced with a reinforced-concrete frame with brick infill. This necessitated changes to the design, carried out by Hutton, with the entrances repositioned to fit the sixteen concrete stanchions grouped in pairs between the windows and changes to the proportions. The Piccadilly Line stations of Charles Holden are among the first and most widely celebrated examples of modern architecture in Britain. They are significant for bringing this new idiom to the general public, and for imposing a brand image to buildings and design when this was still novel. The stations are perhaps unique in the admiration they attracted from more experienced foreign architects and critics, for Britain was elsewhere backward in modern architecture and design. Arnos Grove represents perhaps the single most powerful architectural composition by Charles Holden in his work for London Underground and as a single clear statement of the architect's classic early 1930s style it is unsurpassed. The station was listed at Grade II in 1971 and renovated in the late 1980s to a high standard.
[Historic England]
Taken during the Piccadilly Line Tour- Turnpike Lane to Cockfosters