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June 1, 2018 - Iowa Arts Festival

This is Villa Comunale in Sorrento. It has nice views of Marina San Francesco below including the beaches and the port.

 

It is a small park / garden.

 

Signs near the gated entrance to the park.

 

No cycling, no dogs, no football.

CCTV.

Olympus XA, Ilford FP4+ 125

 

Have a great weekend folks, and make sure to follow all insurance regulations!

No Dogs on Grass sign near the Titanic Memorial in southwest Washington, DC.

 

Blogged:

www.princeofpetworth.com/2012/10/dear-popville-advice-on-...

RABIES PREVENTION

No animals from abroad may be landed

 

FYRIBYRGJAN MÓTI HUNDAØÐI

Djóra-innflytan er bannað

 

FARE FOR RABIES (HUNDEGALSKAP)

Det er forbudt å bringe dyr i land

 

HUNDAÆDISVARNADUR

Ekki má færa skepnur utanlands frá til landsins

 

MEPbl ПPOTИB БEШEHCTBA

 

...and, as noted by James Morrison, another message for the natives: G'un smokadh. (Though I would certainly suspect both Faroese and Russians of smoking, too.)

www.lapressegratuite.com/2010/09/no-dogs-un-gratuit-de-pl...

No Dogs est un magazine trimestriel, papier, distribué gratuitement sur Lyon à 10 000 exemplaires et diffusé partout ailleurs via le Web. No Dogs est né grâce au soutien de l’Association pour la Fondation Étudiante de la Ville, l'Afev, une association de lutte contre les inégalités qui agit dans les quartiers sensibles dans quelques 180 villes en mobilisant des étudiants bénévoles. No Dogs présentait la démarche de vouloir être un journal qui entendait créer du lien en traitant notamment de la vie culturelle et associative de Lyon. On peut dire que le pari est réussi.

 

Mais qu'est-ce qu'un magazine urbain d'expression libre ? La recette et le mode d'emploi paraissent des plus simples : à chaque numéro, un thème est lancé lors d'un appel à projet ouvert à tous :

Si vous avez une passion pour l’écriture journalistique, pour l’infographie ou envie de collaborer à l’aspect commercial du journal, n’hésitez pas à nous contacter pour participer à l’aventure No Dogs. "Paraît des plus simples", car No Dogs, c'est aussi une équipe de bénévoles qui, réunie en comité de rédaction, sélectionne les meilleures propositions, fabrique le journal, le distribue sur l'agglomération lyonnaise, recherche des financements, organise des événements.... Chacun peut faire partie de l'aventure.

Pour le numéro 7 de l'été 2009 et dont le thème était "Gourbi", ce sont ainsi une cinquantaine de journalistes, professionnels et amateurs, graphistes, illustrateurs et photographes qui se sont coordonnés autour de Estelle Duquesnois et Nico Juret, respectivement aux manettes de la rédaction et de l'artistique. La qualité de certains articles, comme cette interview de Nora Aceval en page 6, rend intemporel leur lecture et leur 8 premiers numéros sont à dévorer ici.

Notre but n’est pas de débattre d’une actu dont tout le monde parle ! Notre principe : autour d’un thème général à chaque numéro, nous écrivons des articles sur des débats de notre société actuelle. Nous voulons avoir une approche ludique et décalée sans avoir la prétention d’être une parole unique. La diversité des auteurs permet des regards différents au fil des articles, forcément influencés par la personnalité de chacun. Mais, cette subjectivité n’empêche pas la sincérité de nos écrits qui entendent parler au plus grand nombre.

Le sujet du n°9 de cette année est était "Présomption d’Egalite", projet effectué en partenariat avec Radio Pluriel et Raï Mag, dans le cadre d’un travail collectif des médias associatifs lyonnais sur les discriminations. L'intro de la charte rédactionnelle de ce numéro donnait ceci :

L’égalité en droit de tous les êtres humains est reconnue par la déclaration universelle des droits de l’homme. La loi française identifie 18 critères de discriminations et protège leurs victimes. Mais l’actualité montre chaque jour qu’il ne suffit pas d’encourager cette égalité des droits et d’adopter des législations visant à les promouvoir et à les protéger pour que dans la pratique toute discrimination disparaisse.

NoDogs ouvre la parole sur cette question, avec une approche tant sociétale que sémantique. Le but sera en effet, au-delà de penser les discriminations aujourd’hui, de réfléchir au poids des mots, quand on traite de concept complexes tels que l’égalité en droit, des chances, de traitement... On sait la force rhétorique que revêt ce concept d’Egalité, qui dépasse les clivages politiques, on sait la montée actuelle des notions d’égalité des chances et de discrimination positive, postulant que la valeur n’est produite que dans la mesure où les individus poursuivent activement les chances qui leur sont offertes, et le déclin corrélatif des revendications d’égalité de résultats.

NoDogs vous ouvre donc la parole sur toutes ces notions.

On attend avec impatience de pouvoir le lire.

A modern development in central Bristol with lots of restrictions. No dogs is a strange one, are people who live there allowed to keep dogs I wonder? The ban on things like skateboards suggests it may be elderly residents who live there but I am baffled by the ban on sunbathing! Do some people try for an all over tan there?

The island of Hvar in Croatia.

 

Based on other signs I saw in the area, the fourth rule is "No urination."

People free too, in fact. It was slightly windy and New Yorkers have very (objectively) inconsisent interpretaions of "bad weather" across the seasons.

One of Sydney's more interesting public spaces - but far from accessible to all. This sea pool at North Curl Curl is the least easily accessed of the ocean pools on Sydney's Northern Beaches. But it still hosted a winter swimming club, despite having a small island of rock in the pool.

 

In high seas, it would be wise to swim at a different sea pool, but riskiness and the access difficulties help give this pool a sense of being both a secret space and a public place. Even here you encounter signs telling you what you can't do - collecting certain types of intertidal wildlife is not permitted and no dogs are allowed in the area. Not sure how effective the anti-dog sign is for dogs not accompanied by humans.

 

For more information on this pool or other ocean baths along the NSW coast, check out the NSW Ocean Baths website www.nswoceanbaths.info

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

...a Decree From Catman of the Lawngreen Realm...

After leaving Anne Hathaway's Cottage behind, I went into Jubilee Walk.

 

Signs near the footbridge.

 

To the left was the Shottery Brook Walk. To the right Stratford Town Centre (1 mile away - my destination by foot).

 

In the middle was a No dogs sign.

 

It was built by The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, opened in 1977 during the Queen's Silver Jubillee.

04/04/12. Tsing Yi, Hong Kong.

After leaving Anne Hathaway's Cottage behind, I went into Jubilee Walk.

 

Signs near the footbridge.

 

In the middle was a No dogs sign.

 

It was built by The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, opened in 1977 during the Queen's Silver Jubillee.

From 2004. This had a back fill tank (instead of underneath), and aluminum billet side panels.

New Haven from Sandy Point

Guts on the left side. Notice the rear reservoir tank

Where all the champs train!

Mount Pleasant Cemetery. A sign on the other side of the entrance advertised "Cemetery Tours" which presumably include guides pointing out the open graves you're not supposed to fall into.

At Kingston Lacy Estate, a National Trust run property with extensive gardens in Dorset. To the west of the town of Wimborne Minster.

 

It was home of the Bankes family, who's original seat was at Corfe Castle until it's destruction during the English Civil War. A new site was chosen by Sir John Bankes, but the house was eventually built by his son Ralph Bankes.

 

The last owner of Kingston Lacy - Henry John Ralph Bankes gave the estate to the National Trust after his death in 1981 (a seven times great grandson of original creator Sir Ralph Bankes).

  

The gardens at Kingston Lacy.

  

Thatched gated entrance to the woodland walk to the Kitchen Garden and Japanese Garden.

Palm Beach, made famous by Home and Away

No walking on water.

 

Cal Anderson Park, Seattle, Washington.

Going around the outskirts of Yardley Crematorium and Cemetery (I didn't go into the grounds, just walked along the paths outside the fences of the grounds.

 

From Clay Lane in South Yardley.

 

Saw this No dogs sign in the cemetery.

Maybe dogs can't read pictographs

The formal park in the Park Estate, Nottingham – the photo taken from Nottingham Circus. The Park lies west of the Castle Rock and was developed from a royal hunting ground to become a suburban estate. From 1854 T.C Hine designed nearly 200 houses, mostly in brick.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Park_Estate

"Hope you've got your things together

Hope you are quite prepared to die

Looks like we're in for nasty weather

One eye is taken for an eye"

 

"Don't go round tonight

Bound to take your life

There's a bad moon on the rise."

--Creedence

 

"There was a desert wind blowing that night. It was one of those hot dry Santa Anas that come down through the mountain passes and curl your hair and make your nerves jump and your skin itch. On nights like that every booze party ends in a fight. Meek little wives feel the edge of the carving knife and study their husbands' necks. Anything can happen. You can even get a full glass of beer at a cocktail lounge."

--Raymond Chandler, "Red Wind" (1938)

 

A very modest amount of Photoshopping, but most of the really weird processing (including the duplicate moons) was done by a dirty window screen and an atmosphere rendered very dysfunctional by L.A.'s ill wind.

 

The sign in the background says: "Warning Pesticides Applied".

At Kingston Lacy Estate, a National Trust run property with extensive gardens in Dorset. To the west of the town of Wimborne Minster.

 

It was home of the Bankes family, who's original seat was at Corfe Castle until it's destruction during the English Civil War. A new site was chosen by Sir John Bankes, but the house was eventually built by his son Ralph Bankes.

 

The last owner of Kingston Lacy - Henry John Ralph Bankes gave the estate to the National Trust after his death in 1981 (a seven times great grandson of original creator Sir Ralph Bankes).

  

The gardens at Kingston Lacy.

 

The lime walk.

I'm thinking that if I do something really weird and obnoxious, I'll get my own "NO" sign.

It's nice to know, as a cyclist, that we are lumped in with dogs! An older 1960s style prohibition sign surmounts a more recent Housing Association admonition.

Sign post beside the River Test in Hampshire.

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