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a strange sign at a resting point. in this picture children appear to be pulling garbage out of a trash can (thúng rác) and throwing it on the ground whilst a white-arsed lemur prepares to do to the little girl what politicians do to us all everyday. on the day we walked through - so did about 1000 school children. they had diligently followed the sign a chucked garbage everywhere but the bin at this stop. I wanted to ask the guide if we could shoot some tigers - but he was busy smoking a cigarette.
This image appeared in an in-house booklet produced for the John Lewis Partnership by Queen_Pigletta. It's great when another Flickrite asks for use of one of your images, and especially when you get a copy of the publication. This is what photosharing is about!
Road sign on Waterloo Bridge, seen from a pedestrian walkway.
115 Pictures #69 "traffic sign"
101 Pictures #74 "road sign"
Governor Moore Signs Bills into Law by Patrick Siebert, Joe Andrucyk at 100 State Circle, Annapolis, MD 21401
Stopped in for breakfast at The Timeless Materials Co Cafe and saw this once iconic marker of uptown Waterloo, ON. From the old Ali-Baba Steakhouse.
This lady got about a lot, I've seen her on several stages and in tents and I've also seen her on the BBC footage. First of all I saw her whilst watching Norman Lovett ( Holly from Red Dwarf ) and I can see the point of that, deaf people would enjoy hearing what Norman had to say.
I can see a bit less of a point in her signing along to bands, she signs the main instrument she can here ( in this case a saxaphone or something by the looks of it ) and some of the lyrics. Mainly she just seems to be dancing and having a great time.
1705 Chariot King Tut Info – Austin Home of Florida Carriage Museum, 3000 Marion County Rd., Weirsdale, Lake, FL. April 24, 2008. Decimal degrees: 28.952653, -81.904195
"Chariot of King Tut"
"Circa:1920's
Manufacturer: Reproduction originally made for the Henry Ford Museum
IID # 141"
"Originally made for the Henry Ford Museum, this is an authentic replica of the chariot found in King Tutankhamen's tomb in Egypt in 1922. Driven to two horses with a yoke type harness, early chariots were used for hunting, warfare, and ceremony. These Egyptian chariots were light weight for racing in battle and sport. They had to be light enough for a man to disassemble and carry onto a reed boat to be sailed across the Nile River where it would have been reassembled and put to horses again.
King Tut, as he is more commonly known, reigned from 1334-1325 BC and died mysteriously at the age of 18. He was known throughout history as The Boy King."
I got coffee & a donut at this new place, which I assume was previously a Dunkin. Or else they just like borrowing the color scheme