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This bit of Tagus Cove had really old graffiti from visiting sailors and the like. The oldest bit is this carved-in "1836."
Isabela Island, Galapagos
...these are the actual colors! ( Just cropping and slight lightening adjustments were made.) Longwood Gardens
Breakfast at McDonalds because the soy milk was frozen and it was too hot to eat oatmeal. Here's the thing: I eat food that's too good for me now. My stomach can't take McDonalds processed crap. I don't think I'll be trying that again for quite awhile.
www.stvincent.edu | Dress rehearsal photos from "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" presented by the SVC Company.
it took me some time to find these beauties, but it was worth the effort!
a-line jacket from "runway knits"
lana grossa ultra from my stash
vintage buttons from trumperies on etsy
Really, don't!
Great show from these guys:
fr-fr.facebook.com/pages/Les-Bateleurs-de-Sire-Jean/34068...
Blue Dicks, or Desert Hyacinth, is a fairly common spring blooming perennial. After wet winters, these flowers often carpet the desert floor but are very rare and widely scattered this year. This one has a tiny, green-eyed, winged visitor. - Mineral Mountains, Pinal County, Arizona
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Oh sure, Brainerd's got Paul Bunyan and Babe, just up the road in Garrison, on the banks of Mille Lacs, they've got a huge fish.
I can hear the town council meeting: "All the tourists stop in Brainerd to see Paul Bunyan and Babe. We've got to get a really big thing in order to stay competetive! A gorgeous lake just isn't enough anymore!"
Really enjoyed making these roses and I hope that I can master the craft of creating the flowers especially the roses...
LOL These eggs are great the way they hang out from the end.
Check out the "glue" that has stuck them there.
Just found some eggs that look similar on Brisbane insects site and there is a good possibility that these are leaf beetle eggs.
On October 16/17 we had a hatch of tiny Assassin Bugs (Reduviidae, Heteroptera, Hemiptera) on a Prickly Pear (Opuntia, Cactaceae) cactus in our garden, see this photo. The hatchlings have since scattered, but I happened too notice this one today on a different cactus in the same cactus patch. It's interesting that it seems to have the same defensive pose as the adult in this photo - front legs and head up in the air. It is about 600 pixels long at 1:1 magnification in this macro shot, which I figure is about 2.4 mm long - about 1/10 inch, really tiny. (See here for how I figure.) Hah - if you think that's tiny, follow the spider web down from the upper-left to the bundle of cactus spines in the lower-right. Now there's a really tiny spider - 1/100 inch long? I wonder if it has an even tinier mite on it! I won't add this to the Arachtober group, but it shows that you see spiders everywhere when you really look! (San Marcos Pass, 28 July 2017)
I really did have plans to find something outdoors today, but I have one little guy home with the flu, so ta-dah: another ornament. This one came to Atticus during his first Christmas, 12 years ago!
Apparently, it fell from the tree at some point during the last month and has lain there gathering dust ever since.
An overload of pink. Custom order for a great customer.
I'm always open for custom work! Please contact me if you have something in mind.
4 really cool Autumn wreaths by Lakbear.
Please, don't hesitate to contact me here for more info: szentantal@gmail.com