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Seemingly the gates to hell, in the caverns below Forbidden Corner in the Yorkshire Dales - an amazingly fun day out :-)

The Yellow Garden Spider, also referred to as Black and Yellow garden spider, Golden Garden Spider, Writing Spider, Corn Spider, and Zipper Web Spider for the "zipper" web in the center of their web. It is common to the contiguous United States, Hawaii, southern Canada, Mexico, and Central America. They have distinctive yellow and black markings on their abdomens and a mostly white cephalothorax. The etymology of its name means "gilded silver-face". Males range from 5–9 mm (0.20–0.35 in) females from 19–28 mm (0.75–1.10 in). These spiders may bite if disturbed or harassed, but the venom is seemingly harmless to humans.

 

A seemingly simple job made more complicated by the fact that the entrants needed to survey the invert of a 30m deep wastewater inlet chamber.

Our teams supervised the confined space safety elements of the entry and supplied equipment and a standby rescue team.

This photo shows members of the team watching as works are taking place in the chamber.

Seemingly unused towel in the Corning Ware/Corelle design Wildflower (related to Pyrex Shenandoah), found at the thrift. :)

Seemingly everyone in the School of Information Systems, Computing and Mathematics got involved and held an event, raising £505 in total.

Seemingly abandoned at the roadside near to Prague Castle, these Czech built vans are getting rather uncommon now.

 

Doubt if this one will run again.

seemingly endless markers

Seemingly older PO sign in the village of Lower Ashton still espousing a Girobank facility.

Seemingly examining his food.

These seemingly easy hikes for other are now becoming monumental for me. Climbing up and down sandy hills to wind me into compositions like this just may become a thing in the past. Father Time is not treating me with much respect.

 

Many of my Nature & Wildlife images are now available in beautiful canvas wrap prints as well as canvas prints in a natural wood floater frame. Please email me for details. jmwnaturesimages@comcast.net I have now moved all of this information over here at Flickr. Look for the album titled"Fine Art Canvas Prints".

 

www.facebook.com

www.jmwnaturesimages.blogspot.com

ALL SAINTS, HOLCOMBE ROGUS

Is seemingly all Perp. yet inside the two arcades are dissimilar, the north typically Devon, with bands of foliage capitals, that on the south plainer and typical of Somerset. There was a Victorian restoration and the east end reflects that with a rather Burges-esque reredos. Spacious though the church is, you come to Holcombe for the fittings and monuments. A former Perp screen is now wrapped around the north chapel, but was brought here from Tiverton. It is unusual in having wooden ribbons in the tracery, as if draped over. To the west is a complete Family Pew, Jacobean, with fifteen reliefs with scenes from the Old Testament. In the north chapel, the best two monuments. To the east Sir Richard Bluett d1614 lies propped up by an elbow on a shelf, looking down in a very caring way at his recumbent wife. Above inscriptions, a coffered arch, allegorical figures and achievement. To the west Sir John Bluett d1634 and wife, both recumbent, she above and behind him, under a heavy pedimented canopy supported on black columns. In frnt kneel eight children in a row, four carrying skulls, and maybe all girls? The wife's feet rest on a soppy looking dog, but his rest on a nut-eating squirrel. As Cameron continued snapping away, Mum and I passed comment on a poor lady commemorated in the chancel who had thirteen sons and nine daughters. [open]

Seemingly endless rainforest-covered mountains extending into the distance in Toledo District in southern Belize.

 

Taken from a small plane on an aerial photography trip with Ya'axché Conservation Trust - flights donated by LightHawk.

A seemingly homeless man, playing a flute-like instrument on the streets of Sofia

 

If you use this image I'd be grateful, if you could credit blog.uyora.com/author/svetlana/ Thanks!

This street seemed hippie-esque so we decided to walk on it.

seemingly a popular thing to sell in the bazaar outside Selimiye Camii. At least four shops were offering fake fruit.

  

Licensing Information

A seemingly odd mixture (for me anyway) of ingredients comes together to make one incredibly delicious flatbread.

 

www.fullforkahead.com/2014/11/05/fig-and-prosciutto-flatb...

Stelis lateralis - A nest parasite of Osmia...often seemingly associated with O. pumila. This one was found in the New York City area in Gateway National Recreation Area. Photographed by Kamren Jefferson and photo shopped by Elizabeth Garcia.

~~~~~~~~~~{{{{{{0}}}}}}~~~~~~~~~~

 

All photographs are public domain, feel free to download and use as you wish.

 

Photography Information: Canon Mark II 5D, Zerene Stacker, Stackshot Sled, 65mm Canon MP-E 1-5X macro lens, Twin Macro Flash in Styrofoam Cooler, F5.0, ISO 100, Shutter Speed 200

 

Beauty is truth, truth beauty - that is all

Ye know on earth and all ye need to know

" Ode on a Grecian Urn"

John Keats

 

You can also follow us on Instagram account USGSBIML Want some Useful Links to the Techniques We Use? Well now here you go Citizen:

 

Art Photo Book: Bees: An Up-Close Look at Pollinators Around the World

www.qbookshop.com/products/216627/9780760347386/Bees.html...

 

Basic USGSBIML set up:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-_yvIsucOY

 

USGSBIML Photoshopping Technique: Note that we now have added using the burn tool at 50% opacity set to shadows to clean up the halos that bleed into the black background from "hot" color sections of the picture.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bdmx_8zqvN4

 

PDF of Basic USGSBIML Photography Set Up:

ftp://ftpext.usgs.gov/pub/er/md/laurel/Droege/How%20to%20Take%20MacroPhotographs%20of%20Insects%20BIML%20Lab2.pdf

 

Google Hangout Demonstration of Techniques:

plus.google.com/events/c5569losvskrv2nu606ltof8odo

or

www.youtube.com/watch?v=4c15neFttoU

 

Excellent Technical Form on Stacking:

www.photomacrography.net/

 

Contact information:

Sam Droege

sdroege@usgs.gov

301 497 5840

 

Among Chiang Mai's seemingly endless array of richly adorned temples, Wat Chedi Luang is one of the most unmissable, consisting of various intricate temple buildings arranged around the massive ruined chedi that gives the complex it's name, a huge brick-built stupa that has remained in it's dramatic earthquake-shattered state since medieval times.

 

The huge chedi was begun in 1391 and wasn't completed until 1475, at which point it's spire rose to nearly 300ft. The huge stupa only remained complete until 1545 when an earthquake brought most of the upper part crashing down, never to be rebuilt. There was some limited reconstruction in the early 1990s, restoring the form of the tower part of the structure to something like it's original state.

 

Some of the sculpted decoration has been restored too; originally there was a terrace of lifesize elephants halfway up the base (very little remains of the originals, though those at the south west corner have been reconstructed. The staircases on each side are guarded by the largest, most fearsome nagas we saw, more monstrous than the usual elegant serpents.

 

The main wihan (prayer hall) only dates from the 1920s but is a particularly beautiful building with facades covered in gilded foliate ornament, and striking Buddha sculptures within.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wat_Chedi_Luang

Seemingly standing over the void. Last few kick steps before reaching the summit of Mt Cayoosh.

By forces seemingly antagonistic and destructive

Nature accomplishes her beneficent designs

- now a flood of fire

...again in the fullness of time an outburst of organic life.

 

John Muir

 

~

 

To all parties left, right and in between: A sober message through song:

This is the Last Stop - The Dave Mattews Band from the album Before These Crowded Streets:

 

Fire

The Sun is well asleep

Moon is high above

 

Fire grows from the east

How is this

Hate so deep

Lead us all so blindly killing killing

Fools we are if hate’s the gate to peace

This is the stop

For raining tears

(Is) War

The only way to peace

(Well) I don’t fall for that

Raining Tears

Go ahead and dream

Go ahead, believe that you are the chosen one

Raining tears

You’re righteous, so righteous

You’re always so right,

Oh no

Gracious even God

Bloodied the cross

Your sins are washed enough

Mothers cry

“Is hate so deep

Must a baby’s bones this hungry fire feed?”

As smoke clouds roll in

The symphony of death

This is the last stop

Scream

Right is wrong now

Shut up you big lie

This black and White lie

You comb your hair to hide

Your lying eyes

You’re righteous, so righteous

You’re always so right,

But why your lie

Go ahead and dream

Go ahead, believe that you are the chosen one

This is the last stop

Here there’s more than is showing up

Hope that we can break it down

So it’s not so black and white

You’re righteous

You’re righteous

You’re righteous

You’re always so right,

There you are nailing a good tree

Then say forgive me, forgive me

Why

Raining tears

This is the last stop

Here there’s more than is showing up

Hope that we can break it down

So it’s not so black and white.

 

Lucky residents of Virginia will be treated to a free live concert in Richmond, VA on Sunday, October 26, 2008. The Last Chance for Change performance will be held at the ALLTEL Pavilion at the VCU Stuart C. Siegel Center to encourage Virginians to vote for change.

 

For ticket locations and additional information, please visit www.barackobama.com/dave.

More info about DMB www.davematthewsband.com/news/

 

What is seemingly the most accessible form of the photographic medium – the family photograph – has been transformed into a vital theme in the oeuvre of Swiss photographer Annelies Štrba (1947). Through the depth of her treatment, her ability to see new qualities in what has been viewed a thousand times, she was able to depict the reality of her personal family life in such a way as to transmit a truly valuable, all-embracing message on interpersonal relations.

 

With breathtaking ease, she transcends the boundaries of the banal and the concrete, bringing the photograph and its resonances into a timeless space yet all the while retaining its tender subtleties. Štrba has for some time developed the family theme through both still photography and video in parallel. One essential shift in emphasis, though, occurred in 1997, when she abandoned photography to concentrate exclusively on work with video and the subsequent computer animation of its individual sequences. Utilising special technical approaches, she began to create self-standing pictures of time-stopped “filmstrips” in fantastic colours, displaying her capabilities of a nearly magical imagination. An essential theme remaining present in the work continues to be the moments of family life – instants that are hardly even remembered thanks to their simplicity and quotidian transience. A second, yet no less vital parallel theme of Annelies Štrba’s is the series, starting from the very outset of her career, of photographs and later videos of cities that she has visited. Modern technology has given the artist the means of self-expression through nearly visionary slices of urban reality, which in certain instances acquire, under the influence of political events, a tragic tone of commemoration of the threats of human civilisation, particularly underscored through their contrast with her other work.

 

The present exhibition is intended to present a cross-section of all phases of the oeuvre of this truly exceptional creative personality, from her first black-and-white photographs from the late 1970s presented in the form of a slide show up to the most recent series of coloured images depicting the motif of elves. A central element of the project, significantly located in the centre of the exhibit itself, is an extensive series of video films. Štrba works to an unusual extent with real time, thus revealing to the viewers her ongoing method of seeing and the background to her work with artificial colouring in the self-standing pictures.

 

Even though this important photographer has displayed her work across the world as part of many solo as well as group exhibits, the Prague exhibition is most likely to be her first retrospective show of work outside of Switzerland.

  

Seemingly affixed to this tree on the school field some time ago, it seems the tree is trying to get it's own back.

Photo Credit: Barbara Kinney / Clinton Global Initiative.

.

There is no shortage of proven solutions to many of the world’s most seemingly intractable problems. Yet rather than scaling up existing programs with established track records, many funders and founders continue to launch new organizations and spearhead new initiatives in search of the next game-changing startup or breakthrough idea. How can social innovators better recognize opportunities to join forces with organizations that possess the existing infrastructure and similar theories of change? If measurable impact is the ultimate goal, should students focus less on starting up and more on scaling up? Are solutions to illiteracy, climate change, or HIV/AIDS truly transferable from one location or community to another in the way that a fast food franchise can expand across a region? This session will bring together grassroots entrepreneurs, NGO leaders, and private sector representatives to explore the challenges, costs, and benefits of scaling up successful solutions..

.

Moderator:.

Chelsea Clinton, Vice Chair, Clinton Foundation.

Participants:.

Bill Drayton, Chief Executive Officer, Ashoka.

Katie Smith Milway, Partner, Head of Knowledge, The Bridgespan Group.

Deogratias Niyizonkiza, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Village Health Works.

Rosario Pérez, President and Chief Executive Officer, Pro Mujer

Seemingly withdrawn when seen at the Myton Road depot of Midland Red South in early 1991 are these two G&G, former Hull MCW Metropolitans, KRH413P and KRH414P

Seemingly abandoned since 2008 and slowly rotting away - this garage was due to be resurrected according to a news article - see comments below - but as yet nothing has actually happened so far. www.google.com/maps/@51.6562539,-3.0050301,3a,75y,314.68h...

This seemingly mundane artifact is an important part of the Folly Island occupation. The Civil War was a watershed of technological innovation and manufacture, particularly in the preservation of food.

“Tin cans” came into widespread use in the 1860s, spurred by the war and the need to supply large numbers of men.

 

Food cans used during the war were hole-in-the-cap technology. They were manufactured with a large hole in the top, to facilitate filling. The hole was closed by soldering on a plate, or cap. The tinned sheet iron corroded in the salt water, but many rings or strips of lead solder were recovered on Folly North.

 

From the collections of the Charleston Museum

 

Seemingly a long way from London, 307102 in NSE livery at Doncaster Station on 1.9.91

Seemingly simple, contrasting, multiple personalities... clash...

 

FGR: "Who the Flick Are You?"

Theme of the Week: "Faceless Photos"

  

Among Chiang Mai's seemingly endless array of richly adorned temples, Wat Chedi Luang is one of the most unmissable, consisting of various intricate temple buildings arranged around the massive ruined chedi that gives the complex it's name, a huge brick-built stupa that has remained in it's dramatic earthquake-shattered state since medieval times.

 

The huge chedi was begun in 1391 and wasn't completed until 1475, at which point it's spire rose to nearly 300ft. The huge stupa only remained complete until 1545 when an earthquake brought most of the upper part crashing down, never to be rebuilt. There was some limited reconstruction in the early 1990s, restoring the form of the tower part of the structure to something like it's original state.

 

Some of the sculpted decoration has been restored too; originally there was a terrace of lifesize elephants halfway up the base (very little remains of the originals, though those at the south west corner have been reconstructed. The staircases on each side are guarded by the largest, most fearsome nagas we saw, more monstrous than the usual elegant serpents.

 

The main wihan (prayer hall) only dates from the 1920s but is a particularly beautiful building with facades covered in gilded foliate ornament, and striking Buddha sculptures within.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wat_Chedi_Luang

37425 with 37558 seemingly dit and load 17 attacking bank as it leaves Thurston behind on its Colchester- Whitemoor move...

A seemingly simple image, but for some reason, I really like it... Perhaps one of my most Garnetic. Aerial landscape photographer William Garnet's collection includes one or two from this area.

Alder is always oblivious to most things

Alder - DIM Alpon

Amlet - DollnDoll Reeve

painted/owned by me

Parked at Hoboken Terminal, seemingly never moving, double-decker train cars like this were rolled out by NJ Transit in 2006, mainly because riders were not using the middle seat. They were only used on Northeast Corridor, North Jersey Coast Line and Midtown Direct service. The cars were built by Bombardier. The car's number is 7201, which contains my lucky number 721, albeit indirectly. Two interesting things about these cars are that first, these cars did resolve the middle seat crisis, but reduced standing room and made for congestion delays boarding/disembarking because people would crowd the stairs. Also, the added weight of the cars apparently caused issues because more power was required to drive the same number of train cars (and the added passengers), and the traction power system which was quite old had issues putting that much power through safely.

Seemingly adrift in a sea of grey, #55A Jacob Shoemaker and #19K Adam Bushman explore the track during practice @ the 91st running of the Barbara Fritchie Classic in Frederick MD.

aerial vantage point courtesy of my friends at www.f3-videos-and-photos.com.

NIK "Color Efex Pro 4"

© 2013 Doug Miller Photography - www.dougmillerphotos.com

Speed Vision of MD - www.svomd.com

To view the many images from this event, visit the Speed Vision of MD website - www.svomd.com

"Like" us on Facebook @ Speed Vision of MD

Follow us on Twitter @SpeedVisionofMD

  

Seemingly, life long antagonists Jonathan Toews and Ryan Kesler will continue to wage war on the ice tonight in Game 3 of the WCF. Kesler is a hated man in Chicago due his irritating style of play while he was a Canuck.

Seemingly abandoned for a second time. Static display at Alice Springs

Seemingly carved by an unwilling guest of the Doge of Venice.

seemingly useless steep and barren mountain engineered into productive rice terrace. Hani tribesmen practically "curved" the rice terrace with bare hands and simple hand tools as heavy machinery does not go well with steep slopes.

By forces seemingly antagonistic and destructive

Nature accomplishes her beneficent designs

- now a flood of fire

...again in the fullness of time an outburst of organic life.

 

John Muir

 

~

 

To all parties left, right and in between: A sober message through song:

This is the Last Stop - The Dave Mattews Band from the album Before These Crowded Streets:

 

Fire

The Sun is well asleep

Moon is high above

 

Fire grows from the east

How is this

Hate so deep

Lead us all so blindly killing killing

Fools we are if hate’s the gate to peace

This is the stop

For raining tears

(Is) War

The only way to peace

(Well) I don’t fall for that

Raining Tears

Go ahead and dream

Go ahead, believe that you are the chosen one

Raining tears

You’re righteous, so righteous

You’re always so right,

Oh no

Gracious even God

Bloodied the cross

Your sins are washed enough

Mothers cry

“Is hate so deep

Must a baby’s bones this hungry fire feed?”

As smoke clouds roll in

The symphony of death

This is the last stop

Scream

Right is wrong now

Shut up you big lie

This black and White lie

You comb your hair to hide

Your lying eyes

You’re righteous, so righteous

You’re always so right,

But why your lie

Go ahead and dream

Go ahead, believe that you are the chosen one

This is the last stop

Here there’s more than is showing up

Hope that we can break it down

So it’s not so black and white

You’re righteous

You’re righteous

You’re righteous

You’re always so right,

There you are nailing a good tree

Then say forgive me, forgive me

Why

Raining tears

This is the last stop

Here there’s more than is showing up

Hope that we can break it down

So it’s not so black and white.

 

Lucky residents of Virginia will be treated to a free live concert in Richmond, VA on Sunday, October 26, 2008. The Last Chance for Change performance will be held at the ALLTEL Pavilion at the VCU Stuart C. Siegel Center to encourage Virginians to vote for change.

 

For ticket locations and additional information, please visit www.barackobama.com/dave.

More info about DMB www.davematthewsband.com/news/

 

I feel authorized to post such scathing comments and seemingly accusing photos since I've been a registered nurse doing ER for 14 years. The incompetence I've witnessed while being with my father in the hospital has been completely inexcusable and I feel no shame whatsoever in voicing my anger and disgust. Most nurses I know including myself take great pride in doing an almost impossible task as well as we can. There is no room in our ranks for anything less.

 

This poster is one of the many that the charge nurse on my father's floor put together in celebration of Nurses Week. She was proud to tell me how she'd spent about 20 hours accumulating such memorabilia to display on her unit for the week. I wasted no time telling her that her time would have been better spent making sure that the patients on her unit were being cared for by the nurses and CNA's under her direction. Instead of addressing my concerns, she walked me down the hall to show me a collage of nursing propaganda that I guess she thought I'd like better.

 

The tour was completed in the room where she did all of the work-an empty patient room. SHE DID THIS WHILE AT WORK, NOT WHILE AT HOME! With such a poor role model to follow, it is no wonder my father was in such a shameful state when I arrived.

 

Honestly, he was lying in his own excrement (dried on already) and curled up in a fetal position. His voice was too weak to use a call system (they couldn't hear him over the intercom and did not come to evaluate him-I stood there and witnessed this myself). He was given food, but it was placed far out of his reach. Literally an entire shift would go by withn nobody even coming to evaluate him.

 

I imagine they were making up his vital signs because he was not on a monitor at this facililty despite his tachycardia and frequently irregular heart rhythm.

 

This is what we pay for? What if I had been unable to just leave my job in Chicago and come to south Texas to help him? I'll tell you what...he would have been killed at their hands and they would have gotten away with it.

 

Please, please please...don't go into a hospital in this country without a strong advocate to help you stand up for yourself. Many facilities are spectacular (for example, the one he's in now is a shining example of good care) but many aren't. Without outside help, it's almost impossible to fight for yourself as you are sick and at their mercy. Take good care of yourselves and practice well-being as much as you can. Educate yourselves about any illness that you have and learn about your medicines. Mistakes can and do happen. And, as I've witnessed and reported here, so does neglect.

. . . And this is just a SMALL part of the tremendous buildup of ice in the Northumberland Strait at Cap-Egmont in western P.E.I.

Seemingly oblivious to the noisy construction around them, the shuffle peacefully past the Vets Building, arm in arm. I always admire elderly couple who still hold hands. Of course, perhaps it is for purely practical purposes (holding each other up) but I prefer to see the romance in a lifetime love.

 

I debated making this black and white to lend more history and importance to it, but I couldn't resist the neon spray paint from construction.

This seemingly veteran monkey was apparently alarmed to see humans also in the rainforest canopy. Its because I was hoisted high onto a platform attached to a giant emergent tree. Its the humans at ground level he or she should worry about Canon 300ml.

seemingly holding up the balcony of this Beaux Arts building.

Among Chiang Mai's seemingly endless array of richly adorned temples, Wat Chedi Luang is one of the most unmissable, consisting of various intricate temple buildings arranged around the massive ruined chedi that gives the complex it's name, a huge brick-built stupa that has remained in it's dramatic earthquake-shattered state since medieval times.

 

The huge chedi was begun in 1391 and wasn't completed until 1475, at which point it's spire rose to nearly 300ft. The huge stupa only remained complete until 1545 when an earthquake brought most of the upper part crashing down, never to be rebuilt. There was some limited reconstruction in the early 1990s, restoring the form of the tower part of the structure to something like it's original state.

 

Some of the sculpted decoration has been restored too; originally there was a terrace of lifesize elephants halfway up the base (very little remains of the originals, though those at the south west corner have been reconstructed. The staircases on each side are guarded by the largest, most fearsome nagas we saw, more monstrous than the usual elegant serpents.

 

The main wihan (prayer hall) only dates from the 1920s but is a particularly beautiful building with facades covered in gilded foliate ornament, and striking Buddha sculptures within.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wat_Chedi_Luang

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