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Winding road through Dyers Pass, leaving Christchurch on the way to the Banks Peninsula, New Zealand.
Common Eider showing the wing span.
King Eider in the background with a common Eider in front. Both are beautiful but the King sure stands out. Both are males.
Oil Painting on Canvas, Red Barn in Rockwall, Tx / Painted by Eric Dyer Eric-Dyer.com
Dinner time is here just love pellicans prints well on canvas and as a laminated print 25% of the profits from all grarbaleg images is recieved by charity a further 50% will go into a propsed trust named the Allan Dyer Trust my sons, gran and i decide who we can and can’t help but do our best to help all we can with things like school fees new shoes excursions.
Here the location where the Rio Celeste (Sky Blue River) is getting its color. The Rio Celeste is located in Tenorio National Park close to Guatuso, La Fortuna in the Alajuela Province, Costa Rica
Colours at a dyer’s shop in India
The dyers souk is a very interesting place to visit in Marrakech and provided me with a great opportunity for photography.
This is the CD cover for a recording of the same name, by my long-time friend Eddy Dyer.
Weisdale Mill is in the Central Shetland mainland. The story of its construction in 1855 is that the stone used to build it was reclaimed from the homes of 300 crofters “cleared” from the estate to make room for much more profitable (for the landowners) sheep rearing. Its construction suggests that the designers were not worried about the cost of materials for which was to become the largest corn mill in Shetland. Today the mill finds use as home to three related ventures. The top floor is the Bonhoga Gallery, which shows a series of exhibitions of art and craft. Also at the mill is the Shetland Textile Working Museum, run by the Shetland Guild of Spinners, Weavers and Dyers. Demonstrations can be seen, and visitors can see a vast collection of textiles which show the history of spinning, weaving and knitting in Shetland from ancient times up to the present day. The final part of the mill is the Mill Cafe, which extends out from the side of the Mill overlooking the Burn of Weisdale. A beautiful spot to sit outside on a fine day. Weisdale Mill is well worth a visit.
Video Links Wayne Dyer Summarises The Tao. Change Your Thoughts, Change Your Life “Wayne Dyer Summarises The Tao. Change Your T…
Video Links Wayne Dyer Summarises The Tao. Change Your Thoughts, Change Your Life Wayne Dyer Summarises The Tao. Change Your Thoughts, Change Your Life Wayne Dyer Summarises The Tao. Change Your Thoughts, Change Your Life
A Dr. Wayne W. Dyer quote. I love it!
Dr. Wayne W. Dyer quote. Photograph taken at the Arboretum / University of California, Davis Campus.
This is a concept art movie poster for a proposed movie which could very possibly be made with the right amount of money. / Bob Hoskins,Ray winstone and Danny Dyer would obviously star in it. / Don’t know if the film will be any good, but the poster looks great…
A portrait of Michael
Last week I spent four days with my family in Ballarat before spending a few days by myself ‘getting it out of my system’ as my wife calls it. My love of nature, desire to explore and passion for photography manifests itself in many ways, one of them has been a little project I’ve had to visit every waterfall within 100km of Melbourne. Over the last few years I’ve visited 77 of them and have about 30 (or so) to go. Fortunately I have a love of research too, and discovering this many waterfalls has required quite a bit of detective work. It has involving everything from word of mouth, history books from libraries, a large map collection or simply wandering up likely creeks to see if anything was there. In the process I have come across a number of nameless and unmapped drops and one day am thinking of compiling all my discoveries into a book tentatively called ‘Melbourne’s Waterfalls – 100 drops within 100km of Melbourne’. To my great delight the most recent releases by Vicmap have included many obscure waterfalls previously missing from there publications and during and after my family holiday I spent two days visiting 12 waterfalls to the west of Melbourne an area I do not get the chance to visit very often. While we were in Ballarat it rained everyday, in fact it rained in this drought stricken area more in the last week than it has in seven years so the waterfalls were in rare form indeed. Of the 12 sometimes obscure drops I visited I’d have to say that Dyers Falls piked my excitement the most. The top of the falls pass within a few hundred metres of a country road and even though I knew the waterfall was there, looking across the grassy paddocks it’s existence was still invisible. The falls themselves are on a reserve but the only way to this reserve is across private property. The tributary that feeds it is extremely small so I dare say that most of the time they are dry or just a few drips falling down the massive columnar basalt cliffs (the trees give a good sense of scale. It didn’t stop raining for the two days I was wandering around the countryside which made things decidedly more challenging. After risking fathers day crossing a number of barbed wire fences I scaled this very steep blackberry covered cliff to get to this vantage point (the sky and upper cliffs were really blowing out in the shots I took from below looking up). This shot was taken juggling an umbrella and camera gear. Camera: Canon EOS 5D mkII / Lens: EF 16-35 f/2.8II USM @ 22mm / Filter: Circular polarizer / ISO: 100 / Shutter Speed: 4 sec / Aperture: f/16 / WB: Auto / Exposure Compensation: -1/3rd / Time: 3:51pm on 25/9/09 / / For more waterfall shots check out my Waterfalls gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society
Tubular Spine © Vicki Ferrari This makes me feel like I want to walk in under the red spiral arch! I’d have to be a mini to do it though as this is a macro shot of a magical Wayne Dyer Perpetual Flip Calendar! Mmm… if I could walk in here, would that mean I would absorb a lot of brilliant Dyer Knowledge? Well… I can always dream! Does it remind you of anything different? I would love to hear your ideas! / Vicki Purchase Card / Purchase Framed Print / / Purchase Mounted Print / Purchase Canvas Print / Purchase Laminated Print / / UL200911171455
The Ainsworth Dyer Bridge was named in memory of a corporal who was one of four Canadian soldiers killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan on April 17, 2002. Corporal Ainsworth Dyer (July 29, 1977 – April 17, 2002) was one of 4 Canadian soldiers killed by US Forces in a friendly fire incident near Kandahar in Afghanistan (see Tarnak Farm incident). Dyer was born in Montreal in 1977 and grew up in Toronto. He joined the Canadian Army in October 1997. He served with Canadian peacekeeping forces in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2000. He was killed when an American laser-guided bomb was dropped on members of Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry taking part in a live-fire training exercise.
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