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These photos were taken by and appear courtesy of professional photographer Nathani Treen of Pixel Poison Photography.

 

Thank you! Thank You! THANK YOU! Our incredible volunteers cleaned from Merritt Boulevard to North Point Boulevard and included North Point Road today (4/6)! Over 170 volunteers arrived at Bread and Cheese Creek to clean the Willow Road Section of the stream, but they quickly met and exceeded this goal and cleaned up the section of North Point Road between North Point Plaza (Wal-Mart’s Shopping Center) and German Hill Road. As if this wasn’t incredible enough the continued cleaning in the stream until they reached North Point Boulevard! However, this still was not the end volunteers moved in the opposite direction cleaning up to Merritt Boulevard including the trash choked shore next to Merritt Manor shopping center! You can see through the photos the huge difference they have made! This totals over 3 miles of stream and a road that are now completely trash free!!! We have said it before and we will say it again No-one can match our incredible volunteers! Thank you so much for your incredible and monumental effort! Today we removed over 3.5 tons of trash (227 trash bags!), over 2 tons of metal that has been recycled, 23 shopping carts, 14 tires (one a huge tractor tire), 2 bicycles, 2 lawnmowers, a portable black and white TV, a section of wrought iron fence, an elliptical machine, and more! Our motto is “Together can make a Difference” and thanks to our volunteers, we are! Today was our must successful cleanup EVER thank you YOU!

 

We would also like to thank Gold's Gym Dundalk, Gotügo Portable Restrooms, The Caddy Shack, The Boulevard Diner, The Lions Club, Bob Long, & Entenmann's Bakery Outlet for all their donation of food and supplies to help make today so successful!

 

We also wish to thank Moments By Thomas, Pixel Poison Photography, Towson University Alumni Association, Towson University Ultimate Frisbee, the CCBC Geocache Club, the CCBC History Department, Todd Gator-Scott Chesapeake Pile, Morgan State University, and J&K Auto Repair for all their incredible volunteers today!

www.BreadandCheeseCreek.org

 

Treeniä treeniä

 

This is a pair of small woodturnings, called treens by some (particularly by Beall Tool Co., the maker of the Treen Mandrel System which I used to turn these.)

In der Eider-Treene-Sorge Niederung, kurz ETS genannt, durchströmen die drei Flüsse, Eider, Treene und Sorge eine weite, marschähnliche Landschaft, welche durch ihre atemberaubende Weite eine ganz besondere Magie entfaltet, welche sich allerdings nicht auf dem ersten Blick erschliesst. Es braucht Zeit, diese strukturarme Landschaft zu erschliessen, mit ihrer beindruckenden Vogelvielfalt und Erlebnisdichte. Ob es jubelnde Lerchen sind, oder zigtausende Gänse, genauso wie Kranich und Singschwäne, welche auf ihrem Zug nach Norden oder zurück, zu Zehntausenden die Landschaft mit ihren wilden Rufen füllen oder den Himmel verdunkelnde Staren Schwärme, die ihre betörenden Strudel tanzen. Es ist unmöglich, sich nicht faszinieren zu lassen in dem Gefühl: Genauso wirkte und klang die Welt hier bereits vor tausenden von Jahren.

Scholl Portraits, No. 1632 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia." The cabinet card maker was Emil Scholl, who is known for photographing many actors of the era, presumably those who came through Philadelphia for theatrical performances. (See this link for a few examples: cabinetcardgallery.wordpress.com/category/photographer-sc...) He later, in the 1890s, had studios in State Street, Chicago, and billed himself as a theatrical photographer.

 

In this image, Hanna Treen is almost certainly wearing mourning.

 

I have not been able to discover the story of Hanna's early years, but Hanna’s husband Charles William Treen was born in 1842 in Pennsylvania. The 1850 census of Lancaster, Strasburg County, Pennsylvania, showed him living with his 44-year-old mother, Harriet Treen, and his sisters Louisa (b.1834); Rebecca (b. 1837); Amelia (b. 1839), and Lavenia (b. 1845). All of the family had been born in Pennsylvania.

 

Charles and his family cannot yet be identified on the 1860 census, but he did shortly join the Pennsylvania Infantry, on 8 August, 1862, enlisting as a private in serving in both Company A of the 124th.

 

Drawing heavily from “The Union Army, Vol. I,” Treen’s military career can be recounted. The 124th was led by Colonel Joseph W. Hawley; Lieutenant-colonels Simon Litzenberg and William B. Waddell; and Major I. L Haldeman. Under the call of July, 1862, the 124th regiment was recruited in Chester and Delaware counties, rendez-voused at Camp Curtin, and on 12 August was ordered to Washington, where it was mustered into the U. S. service for a nine months' term. On 7 September, it was sent to Rockville, Maryland, and attached to the 1st brigade, 1st division, 12th corps, which started two days later for South Mountain and Antietam—which happens to be where I live. During the battle of Antietam, the 124th was ordered to reinforce Gen. Hooker on the right of the line and was soon in action, with 50 in killed or wounded. It then went into camp at Pleasant valley, where it was transferred to the brigade under General Kane, and on 30 October, occupied Loudoun heights. It was next ordered to the support of the troops engaged at Fredericksburg, but arrived too late for the battle. The regiment then encamped at Fairfax Station (which is very near where I lived as a child), joined in the "Mud March," and returned to camp near Stafford Court House. On 27 April, 1863, as part of Geary's division, 12th corps the regiment started for Chancellorsville, where it was posted on the right and was closely engaged on May 2. It then returned to camp and remained there until the expiration of its term of service, being mustered out at Harrisburg, Virginia on 16-17 May, 1863. At that time Charles Treen was listed as hospitalized, almost certainly having been wounded in the Chancellorsville battle.

 

After having seen so much terrible fighting, and survived injury or possibly disease, Treen returned to Pennsylvania, where he shortly thereafter married Hanna S. Fernwalt (b. 1842, PA). One has the impression that she had been his young sweetheart, waiting for his return from war.

 

On 8 November, 1864, she gave birth to twin girls Emma L. and Kathryn J. Five years later, the Treen family appears on the 1870 census in East Whiteland, Chester County, Pennsylvania. Charles Treen is enumerated as a farm worker, age 28, and along with wife Hannah S. and children: Emma L.; Kate J.; Charles William, Jr. (b. 1866, PA); William Henry (b. 1868, PA).

 

By 1874, they appear to be living in Philadelphia in Aspin Street, as is attested by the City Directory of that year. Treen appears in the city directories as a blacksmith right through to 1880, when the address given was 728 N. 36th Street. However, In 1880, Charles is enumerated back in East Whiteland, Chester County as a blacksmith. Possibly, the family had always been based out of East Whiteland, which is about 20 west of the city, and Treen had business quarters there. On the 1880 census, the couple had three more sons: Joseph Elwood (1871, PA – 22 April, 1946); Louis Haden (b. 1872, PA); and Luther Martin (b. 1875, PA). (A final child, a girl named Lothe, was born and died in 1875.)

 

Before his death, On 3 August, 1891, Hanna applied for Charles’s Civil War pension. She applied again, probably noting the change in status from spouse to widow, on 21 September, 1898, only several weeks after Charles’s death. His death notice reads “Treen—At Greentree, on September 13,1898. Charles W. Treen in his 58th year. Relatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend the funeral on Saturday, September 17, leaving the house at 2:30 pm. Service at Malvern M.E. Church at 3 pm. internment at Malvern Baptist Cemetery. Carriages will meet the trains at Greentree that leave Broad Street at 12:45 pm, and West Chester at 11:54 pm.”

 

Hanna Fernwalt Treen died 6 May, 1918, age 79.

 

TypeCon 2012 MKE SHFT

 

Design by Kory Gabriel, Blake Helman, Liz Minch,

Mary Rabun,

Alli Treen, and Kaitlyn O’Connor of UGA

In this tight urban development nature get his own theatre backround.

Best viewed with Cooliris

Could be Bronze or early Iron age, no one is sure.

 

What is sure is that someone needs to come her with a brush cutter to prevent the site being totally over grown.

Photos of folk art butter stamps from the Reading Museum of Rural Life, Reading, Berkshire, England.

Treen Osborne and Isle B Jessie riding the X-Country in the Pre-Novice at #TIE Tamworth

In der Eider-Treene-Sorge Niederung, kurz ETS genannt, durchströmen die drei Flüsse, Eider, Treene und Sorge eine weite, marschähnliche Landschaft, welche durch ihre atemberaubende Weite eine ganz besondere Magie entfaltet, welche sich allerdings nicht auf dem ersten Blick erschliesst. Es braucht Zeit, diese strukturarme Landschaft zu erschliessen, mit ihrer beindruckenden Vogelvielfalt und Erlebnisdichte. Ob es jubelnde Lerchen sind, oder zigtausende Gänse, genauso wie Kranich und Singschwäne, welche auf ihrem Zug nach Norden oder zurück, zu Zehntausenden die Landschaft mit ihren wilden Rufen füllen oder den Himmel verdunkelnde Staren Schwärme, die ihre betörenden Strudel tanzen. Es ist unmöglich, sich nicht faszinieren zu lassen in dem Gefühl: Genauso wirkte und klang die Welt hier bereits vor tausenden von Jahren.

Thatched Cottage, Treen, Cornwall.

Could be Bronze or early Iron age, no one is sure.

 

What is sure is that someone needs to come her with a brush cutter to prevent the site being totally over grown.

These photos were taken by and appear courtesy of professional photographer Nathani Treen of Pixel Poison Photography.

 

Thank you! Thank You! THANK YOU! Our incredible volunteers cleaned from Merritt Boulevard to North Point Boulevard and included North Point Road today (4/6)! Over 170 volunteers arrived at Bread and Cheese Creek to clean the Willow Road Section of the stream, but they quickly met and exceeded this goal and cleaned up the section of North Point Road between North Point Plaza (Wal-Mart’s Shopping Center) and German Hill Road. As if this wasn’t incredible enough the continued cleaning in the stream until they reached North Point Boulevard! However, this still was not the end volunteers moved in the opposite direction cleaning up to Merritt Boulevard including the trash choked shore next to Merritt Manor shopping center! You can see through the photos the huge difference they have made! This totals over 3 miles of stream and a road that are now completely trash free!!! We have said it before and we will say it again No-one can match our incredible volunteers! Thank you so much for your incredible and monumental effort! Today we removed over 3.5 tons of trash (227 trash bags!), over 2 tons of metal that has been recycled, 23 shopping carts, 14 tires (one a huge tractor tire), 2 bicycles, 2 lawnmowers, a portable black and white TV, a section of wrought iron fence, an elliptical machine, and more! Our motto is “Together can make a Difference” and thanks to our volunteers, we are! Today was our must successful cleanup EVER thank you YOU!

 

We would also like to thank Gold's Gym Dundalk, Gotügo Portable Restrooms, The Caddy Shack, The Boulevard Diner, The Lions Club, Bob Long, & Entenmann's Bakery Outlet for all their donation of food and supplies to help make today so successful!

 

We also wish to thank Moments By Thomas, Pixel Poison Photography, Towson University Alumni Association, Towson University Ultimate Frisbee, the CCBC Geocache Club, the CCBC History Department, Todd Gator-Scott Chesapeake Pile, Morgan State University, and J&K Auto Repair for all their incredible volunteers today!

www.BreadandCheeseCreek.org

 

Taken from a hotel room in Tofino, Canada

Japanese Maple - Acer Palmatum "Katsura" in Virginia Water

"Chicago Birdalow"

Adult

 

Birdalow is ideally suited for a tree near the edge of a large field, so the American Kestrel can not only feel at home, given its preference to nest in treen cavities, but it can perch on Birdalow's roof and search for its favorite meals, insects or rodents, in its front yard. I strived to build a birdhouse that not only is sustainable, but is practically and beautifully constructed. I designed the shape, colors, and "brick" walls to pay homage to the solidly-constructed and beloved Chicago bungalow, the namesake for my bird house.

 

284

ari san auqé meli en el tren para ir a la playaa (:

On Treen Cliff, the National Trust have introduced Dartmoor ponies - primarily to keep the land well grazed for local farming.

 

One such beautiful pony was walking the coast path freely.

The Dartmoor ponies were enjoying the freedom of the Treen Cliff and enjoying grazing in the lovely warm weather.

She's 17 inches tall, fully articuated and came with her box which doubles up as a carry case and also a wardrobe, curling tongs, bag, stand, Hairbrush and leaflet.

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