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I really wanted a 1 x 2 cheese slope stuck on each end of that girder. The one end was easy, but the other was not. That's pneumatic tubing around the minifig hands. The 1 x 2 plate helps to hold it, but isn't necessary.
Includes colour hud with 16 colour choices. Comes in mesh sizes Maitreya, Slink, Belleza & TMP
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/LD-Studded-Tassel-Heels-MAIT...
La mia bellissima donna.
..e sulla tua persona e quando io,
senza capire, ho detto sì.
Hai detto "E' tutto quel che hai di me".
È tutto quel che ho di te.
No groups invites or images in my comments, please .
Niente inviti o icone di gruppi nei miei commenti, grazie 1000!
Aardvark presents Spud Stud. Our free gift for Second Life's Valentine Shop and Hop!
If you were a potato....
You'd be a hot potato <3
Love is in the air and so too are these adorable loving potatoes.
Dressing down and removing their peels. Bringing with them a giant heart, just so you know how much you're loved.
The perfect decor item for any romantic kitchen scene or random shelf/empty spot needing some happiness and love.
Copy / Mod
100% Original Mesh
Decor : 1 land impact
Out at Second Life's Valentine Shop & Hop
Available at the Mainstore after the event
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Inworld : Marketplace : Facebook
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I had a few requests to make some studs for people with gauged ears. So here they are.
They are all made with acrylic plugs!
Koonoona. 440 metres above sea level.
Koonoona station leasehold of 14,000 acres was established in 1863 by Walter Duffield, the wealthy flour miller from Gawler and his partner T Porter. Walter Duffield built the classical style mansion called Para Para in Gawler in the 1850s. This was good pastoral country and by 1894 a provisional school opened on Koonoona station. It operated until 1915. Duffield established a prize Merino Stud with the Koonoona Merinos being obtained from the Murrays stud at Mt Crawford and from C B Fisher’s stud at Hill River station near Clare. Their pedigree was strong and the early stud was managed from 1881 by Waldermar Gaskel Hawkes who was born in England in 1863 and arrived in South Australia in 1879. He later became the President of the Stockowners' Association and of the Stud Merino Breeders' Association. When Walter Duffield died in 1882 Hawkes’s son-in-law, Mr Makin took over Koonoona with Walter Duffield’s son. Not long after this time Mr Hawkes became a part owner of Koonoona Merino along with the trustees of the estate of Walter Duffield. Koonoona became one of the most important Merino studs in Australia and was running over 30,000 sheep in 1900. Their rams were sold yearly to the far north of SA, Western Australia, and Queensland. Koonoona won many first prizes for their rams in the Royal Adelaide Show. Koonoona had well-watered valleys, paddocks of lucerne and dryer hilly country. By around 1900 Koonoona consisted of 29,000 acres of freehold land but this was diminished in 1901 when the government bought 3,600 acres for closer settlement. A further 3,000 acres (for 9 farms) was bought by the government in 1907 and 6,700 acres in 1908. Then the government bought a further 8,700 acres in 1909. The last 9,000 acres (36 farms) of Koonoona was purchased by the government for £52,000 in July 1910 and sold for closer settlement. This last section of subdivided land was located near Emu Downs. But Koonoona Stud continued on one of the freehold blocks sold by the government. It was run by the trustees of the estate of Walter Duffield until 1918 when the trustees sold the stud to Waldermar Hawkes. When he retired in 1930 his son Glen took over Koonoona Stud. The comfortable stone homestead was surrounded by large trees and a rose garden. In 1929 the Burra newspaper reported that 70 past and current employees, some third generation employees, gathered at Koonoona to attend a garden party there. Walter Duffield’s two daughters, both in their 80s, sent Christmas presents to be handed out to the children attending. In 1910 when the government had subdivided Koonoona estate, and parts of Anlaby estate, the government began surveys for a railway from Eudunda to Robertstown so that the new farmers at Emu Downs and elsewhere would have a nearby railhead. But the 26 km long railway from Eudunda to Robertstown did not open until 1914. Above a 1908 Koonoona Merino Stud Ram. One of their prize winning rams sold for 150 guineas in 1935. The stud closed down in the 1940s.
66552 powers this Willesden Euroterminal to Stud Farm empties past the old LNWR box at Narborough closed in 2006.
After seeing Tomcod and Jerry Curtis's shot of the Caribou on the Southern Shore of Newfoundland I decided to see if I could find one. This guy was laying down on the bog and my wife spotted his very impressive antlers so I walked out towards him and this is one of the shots. Please view large as you can see the velvet better and also the tremendous amount of flies on his face. This was shot along the road to St. Shoats, my wife spotted him about 500 yds off the road I managed to get within 100 yds.
I trust we are all enjoying the unbearably hot weather?
With Summer now upon us birds have become far more secretive so today I turned to my local Silver-Studded Blue Butterflies, a heathland specialist.
(00187)
[tmk] STUDS BELT (white)
質感たまりませんね
*LALALALab*_Nyanvaders_TVGAME_Bver.020
若い人はこれって知ってるのかな。
Visit this location at CAFE---LA rara abierta in Second Life
A small valley of hoodoos with slanted caps, called Stud Horse Point (part of Ferry Swale), can be found west of Page, Arizona, less than a mile south of the Utah state line.
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