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This photo is part of the nomadic camera project (or in hebrew), created by Ami Ben Basat
74 feet long, 104-foot wingspan and close to 20 feet high. This plane was built in Long Beach, California. It didn't see combat in WW II, but it was used for nuclear testing and then by the Forestry Service for dropping water on forest fires.
Geh, gehorche meinen Winken,
Nutze deine jungen Tage,
Lerne zeitig klüger sein:
Auf des Glückes großer Waage
Steht die Zunge selten ein;
Du mußt steigen oder sinken,
Du mußt herrschen und gewinnen,
Oder dienen und verlieren,
Leiden oder triumphieren,
Amboß oder Hammer sein.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
With the village of Hetton beyond, 60085 "SNOWDON" eases 6D37, GBRf’s 1227 Rylstone - Hunslet stone train round the bend from Taylors Bridge down towards Scale House on 19 December 2024.
With some of the smaller nudibranchs it's hard to get a sense of scale. Here's a typical Tulamben nudibranch wandering along the edge of a peacock mantisshrimp's burrow. This photo almost looks lifesize as in the real animals are about the size you see them on screen now.
* Sold to Sport Diver Magazine in 2011. [ DSC_4323 ]
431: I've realigned the scales into place on the Ti liners using alignment pins and clamps. Then I remove the alignment pins, and start to tap and transfer the threads from the Ti liners all the way through the Ivory.
Small scale insect sucking some fresh plant juices from this new Lantana flower.
Some info on Scale insects from Wikipedia:
The scale insects are small insects of the order Hemiptera, generally classified as the superfamily Coccoidea. There are about 8,000 species of scale insects.
Most scale insects are parasites of plants, feeding on sap drawn directly from the plant's vascular system. Scale insects vary dramatically in their appearance from very small organisms (1-2 mm) that occur under wax covers (some look like oyster shells), to shiny pearl-like objects (about 5 mm), to creatures covered with mealy wax.
Scale Modelworld 2017 - Club Displays
USAF SIG
IPMS Avon | www.ipmsavon.org.uk | www.facebook.com/ipmsavon
Un magnifique Scott Scale 20 modèle 2008 (devant) et un Scott Spark 20 (derrière). Cycles Pythoud, Bulle, Switzerland.