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A boy playing in the White Lady Waterfall at Lydford Gorge in North Devon. Lydford Gorge is a National Trust property that we visited in August 2017.

 

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They moved the roos into the habitat with the wallabies so the roos would be a little farther from the construction that's about to start. There will soon be a "Madagascar" building, showcasing mongoose lemurs.

 

Not only is the wallaby yard a little farther from sounds that might worry the roos, but it lends itself well to photography. I may be increasing my kangaroo images in the coming weeks!

I am not an expert on Dragonfly identification but I believe this is a Saddlebag. Please feel free to correct me if I'm wrong, thanks

 

Enjoy large on black!!

please click on the note to find the poem... thanks...

Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial Hall, Taipei, Taiwan

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Assemblage I did last autumn. It kind of fits with some of the embroidery I'm doing at the moment.

- Bitte ziehen ! - Please pull ! -

 

Another funny and cute dog collar. Red soft leather collar lined with black leather. D-Ring in front, buckle closure and don't forget the "please pull" tag in front :)

Female Ruby-throated Hummingbird ready to dine.

 

Common.

A gang of geese approaching in the late afternoon.

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Please click on it!

 

Bergstrasse,

Heppenheim,

Germany

 

Zeiss Batis Distagon 2/40CF

Sony Alpha A7RII

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This was my look for a Friday night out in Hull, quite happy with my look.

 

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Dulwich Hill Cafe for afternoon milkshakes :)

Please view in large

please notice :

 

Our pictures are NOT a religious statement.

 

We just like the Look ;)

16.365

This is our new home.

Thank you Caitlin for taking me to this mystical place! And for helping me take this photo!

Models: Caitlin O'Brien and I.

CarlZeiss Y/Contax Sonnar T*2.8/85

Portraits @ Tokyo, Japan

 

Copyright © Takashi.M(ai3310X) All rights reserved.

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Sign warns that the fence is electrified.

please forgive me.

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While no doubt the most well known lighthouse in Canada and one of the most photographed lighthouses in the world, the history of the light at Peggy's Cove is little known. Various versions account for the name. Peggy is the nickname for Margaret and the community may have acquired the name from nearby Saint Margaret's Bay, especially as the point marks the eastern entrance to the bay. Other accounts suggest Peggy was an early settler. A popular romantic version says a woman named Peggy was the only survivor of a shipwreck and there are even American families that even claim descent from the shipwrecked Peggy.

 

In any case, it was decided to erect a light to mark the eastern entrance to St. Margaret's Bay in 1868. While best known as "the Peggy's Cove Lighthouse", it was and remains, officially know as the Peggy's Point Lighthouse as its purpose is to mark the point, not the cove. The cove has its own small light on the government wharf. The first lighthouse was a wooden tower, built atop a keeper's dwelling at the point. It was a red light and used a catoptric reflector (a round silver-plated mirror) to magnify the kerosene oil lamp. The wooden tower, built atop a keeper's dwelling was replaced by the present tower in 1915, a pleasing and stout concrete octagon 50 feet west of the original light. The keeper's dwelling remained for many years nearby as did a tall flagpole displaying coded black cones and balls to warn of bad weather approaching. The new lighthouse showed a white light from a dioptric lens, a series of glass prisms, to magnify the light. Several colour and character changes followed, the most recent being the change from white to green in 1979 and red in 2009. Another very visible change (which helps date earlier colour photos) was in 1969 when the iron lantern on top of the tower was changed from white paint to red paint.

 

Body of Water: St. Margaret's Bay

County: HRM (Halifax Regional Municipality)

Region: South Shore

Scenic Drive: Lighthouse Route

Tower Height: 050ft

Height Above Water: 067ft

Characteristic: Fixed Red.

Still standing: True

Still operating: True

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Lady was reading a book in Crysler Hall.

 

The Doric columns of this imposing structure, each made from one great pine tree, were moved from the original site when Crysler Hall was taken down and reconstructed in Upper Canada Village. It was originally built by John Pliny Crysler, a timber merchant. He was the son of the John Crysler upon whose farm the Battle of Crysler's Farm, had been fought (part of the War of 1812).

 

Crysler Hall was built as a residence. The sweeping circular drive, cast iron fence and formal gardens all add to the dignity of this fine example of Greek revival architecture. It is not typical of most houses of the period, and would have been considered pompous by most residents. The gardens all emphasize the Victorian interest in flower gardens as part of the landscape, and complement the architecture of Crysler Hall.

 

The interior of Crysler Hall is modern, and contains exhibits related to Upper Canada Village and the history of the area.

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Chinese umbrella & a pretty girl

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Photography by: Marie Whitfield

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