View allAll Photos Tagged questionmark
Crédit photo : POPH
Fresque murale sur le thème de la Commune de Paris, rue de la ferme Savy (où furent situées les dernières barricades), au bas du parc de Belleville à Paris. Une fresque réalisée à l'occasion des 150 ans de la Commune par l'artiste Question Mark (projet des Amies et Amis de la Commune)
Questionmark Butterfly sunning itself along the banks of the Little Miami River in Hamilton County, Ohio.
A Question Mark active this warmer winter day. For anyone confused by commas, Dallas is great. The Question mark is the only species of that group here! Trinity River Trail, Joppa Preserve, Dallas, Texas. 30 January 2024
Bridgekeeper: STOP!
He who would cross the Bridge of Death
Must answer me
These questions three
Ere the other side he see.
-Monty Python and the Holy Grail
I had to redo the cave because I forgot to click a red questionmark, I guess I was suppose to click on a person npc more than 1 time. My team memeber here experience the same thing. Here we bother are tyring to figure out what was going on.
When we formed a new group, it was better than the 1st time and larger, it was a lot of work as a healer to keep everyone's health good and keep the monsters away from me. Also as a healer I have to heal myself separately. Often I was so busy to heal others that I did not realize my own health was low.
Yo lo tengo muy claro... ¡están riquÃsimas!
Si toda la vida las hemos llamado magdalenas, ¿por qué ahora las llamamos muffins? Eso ya no me queda tan claro...
All images copyright © olivia house / ©oliviahousephotography. All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal.
Sometime Life is a Question mark….
When you finish your graduation…
When you get multiple job offer letters…….
When you loose your favorite job…
When you invite a partner to your life…
When you miss your dear ones…
When you enjoy the birth of your first baby…
When you retire from the job….
And finally when you reach to the answer…
You are packed in a 6 feet box…Yes it is too late to answer….too late.
Do not feel bad.. Its is thought from me.
The Question Mark is a North American butterfly in the family Nymphalid. It ranges from southern Canada and all of the eastern United States except the Florida peninsular, west to the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains, and south to southern Arizona and Mexico. They typically live in wooded areas, or generally any area that features a combination of trees and open spaces.
The adult butterfly has a wing span of 2.5 - 3 inches (6.4 - 7.5 cm), which is larger than it close cousin the Eastern Comma at 2 - 2.5 inches (5 - 6.4 cm). Its flight season is from May - September.
As seen above a silver - white mark on the underside of the hindwing is broken into two parts, a curved line and a dot, creating a question (?) shaped mark that gives this species its common name.
Forewing is typically hooked; upperside is red-orange with black spots. Upperside hindwing of summer form is mostly black with a short tail; winter form is mostly orange with a longer, violet-tipped tail. Underside of both wings is light brown in color.
This cryptic colored and uniquely shaped creature is one of the few butterflies that overwinter as adults. Hiding in cracks and crevices of wood, they remain inactive throughout the cold months. Their colors help keep them hidden and safe. This is also a butterfly that doesn’t prefer nectar, but will drink it occasionally. It's preferred food is tree sap, overripe fruit, and animal scat. The scat supplies proteins that the butterfly doesn't get from nectar. This butterfly can tolerate cooler temperatures than most other butterflies and as a result is usually one of the first to appear in Spring.
ISO1600, aperture f/8, exposure .004 seconds (1/250) focal length 300mm
© Beth Retro 2009
-Not to be used anywhere without written consent.
From "Letters to a young poet" by Rilke.
"Have patience with everything that is unsolved in your heart.
Try to cherish the questions themselves, like closed rooms and books written
in a strange tongue. Do not search now for the answers which you cannot be given because you could not live them.
It is a matter of living everything.
LIVE THE QUESTIONS NOW.
Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, one distant day,
live right into the answer".
298/365
...You never know what your gonna get.
taken for this weeks flickrfriday
#LifeIsLikeABoxOfChocolates
#flickrfriday 02/08/13
The Question Mark is a North American butterfly in the family Nymphalid. It ranges from southern Canada and all of the eastern United States except the Florida peninsular, west to the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains, and south to southern Arizona and Mexico. They typically live in wooded areas, or generally any area that features a combination of trees and open spaces.
The adult butterfly has a wing span of 2.5 - 3 inches (6.4 - 7.5 cm), which is larger than it close cousin the Eastern Comma at 2 - 2.5 inches (5 - 6.4 cm). Its flight season is from May - September.
As seen above a silver - white mark on the underside of the hindwing is broken into two parts, a curved line and a dot, creating a question (?) shaped mark that gives this species its common name.
Forewing is typically hooked; upperside is red-orange with black spots. Upperside hindwing of summer form is mostly black with a short tail; winter form is mostly orange with a longer, violet-tipped tail. Underside of both wings is light brown in color.
This cryptic colored and uniquely shaped creature is one of the few butterflies that overwinter as adults. Hiding in cracks and crevices of wood, they remain inactive throughout the cold months. Their colors help keep them hidden and safe. This is also a butterfly that doesn’t prefer nectar, but will drink it occasionally. It's preferred food is tree sap, overripe fruit, and animal scat. The scat supplies proteins that the butterfly doesn't get from nectar. This butterfly can tolerate cooler temperatures than most other butterflies and as a result is usually one of the first to appear in Spring.
ISO400, aperture f/8, exposure .006 seconds (1/180) focal length 300mm
Polygonia interrogationis. Strange name, strange shape for a butterfly. Deep inside a bush beside Polishing Pond, Fulshear TX
This spiky beauty will turn into the Question Mark butterfly when it is finished munching on the volunteer elm tree by my garage.
You know those moments when their eyes and posture tell you there is a big question mark above their head - this is one. :)
It is a three mile round trip walk between Montrose and Belmont, and yesterday the only butterflies were Cabbage Whites and a Sulpher. Today one stretch had a couple of these guys. Nice and fresh looking they were. Told apart from Commas by the longer tails since we cannot see the underwing.
A great sign appeared in the sky above the nuclear generating facility near Salem, N.J. Taken from the other side of the Delaware River estuary at Augustine Beach just south of Port Penn, Delaware. Opinions expressed by the steam vent are strictly its own.
-Added to the Cream of the Crop pool as most favorited.
Another view of this scene: flickr.com/photos/48878663@N00/266533252/