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A paradise within the city
"Mais de 200 anos de história é o que poderá visitar na marinha da Noeirinha. Depois de mais de 30 anos ao abandono a Marinha da Noeirinha voltou ao ativo com uma área de lazer onde poderá desfrutar do por do sol num ambiente calmo. Dispõe de alojamento, zona de banhos, spa salínico , visitas guiadas, loja de recordações, observatório"
"More than 200 years of history is what you can visit in Marinha da Noeirinha. After more than 30 years of abandonment, Marinha da Noeirinha is back in business with a leisure area where you can enjoy the sunset in a calm environment. accommodation, bathing area, salt spa, guided tours, gift shop, observatory"
Yes
That's the question
I'm being a bit Shakespearian this evening
I found the perfect house, it might need some decorating and cleaning up tho, but that's ok
Sometimes I really think that hibernating must be pretty nice
You set your life on hold
You can pause a bit
Think and Dwell
Check if this addiction is ruling your life
But
Perhaps thinking isn't always the answer
Sometimes it gets all messed up if you think too much
Sometimes you are supposed to just float along
But
It surely isn't always easy
All these thoughts
You are worried
You are left out
You are too far away
You can't do so much about anything
But you care
I guess
You just need the time to go
Or
Letting him go
Either the addiction goes away or not
God knows
I don't
A very cropped image of this little House wren that stopped for a minute on the fence. It was so fast that I couldn't change my settings. (Best in large)
The house wren ( Troglodytes aedon) is a very small songbird of the wren family, Troglodytidae. It occurs from Canada to southernmost South America, and is thus the most widely distributed native bird in the Americas. It occurs in most suburban areas in its range and it is the single most common wren.
Emeryville Marina & Park, CA
Note the white hair on her crown and breast. This appears to be a juvenile transitioning to adult plumage.
My Little House
by J. M. Westrup
I have a little house
With windows and a door,
Two chimneys on the top,
And a plot of grass before.
I have a little house,
With curtains and a blind,
Two chimneys on the top,
And a plot of grass behind.
I have a little house,
Where I go in and out,
Two chimneys on the top,
And a garden all about.
It was a fine house with a wide porch on which to sit and survey the land. The fence once marked the edge of the yard but has no purpose now.
Happy Fence Friday!
Photographed at my home, Yakima County, Washington. IMG_8469
Thank you everyone for the views, invites, awards, comments and faves. Have a wonderful week.
I like how that big bird flew in and landed on the roof -just as I got the shot of this old house!
HAVE A WONDERFUL WEEKEND YOU GUYS!
THANKS FOR LOOKING!
Originally I thought this was a boat house because it looks like it is in the water. It has a chimney and windows though. It is constructed of wood and metal. The door seems to be too big for a house and too small for a boat. There are two buckets hanging on either side of the door. It couldn’t be a barn because you would have to take the animals through the water to get them inside. I’m stumped!
I have to find a picture of something that I can identify. There are just no write ups on these old buildings.
A plain brown bird with an effervescent voice, the House Wren is a common backyard bird over nearly the entire Western Hemisphere. Listen for its rush-and-jumble song in summer and you’ll find this species zipping through shrubs and low tree branches, snatching at insects. House Wrens will gladly use nestboxes, or you may find their twig-filled nests in old cans, boots, or boxes lying around in your garage.
Bradgate House is a 16th-century ruin in Bradgate Park, Leicestershire, England.This is one of the first unfortified great houses in England and one of the earliest post-Roman use of bricks. It was lived in by the Grey family for the next 220 years. It is believed that the house was the birthplace of Lady Jane Grey, later Queen, ruling for a mere 9 days before being overthrown by Mary I. Jane was executed in 1553 and when her father was executed the following year the estate passed to the crown. Local history claims that groundskeepers marked the occasion of Jane's execution by pollarding the estate's oak trees in a symbolic beheading.
Back to MOMA for another shot. So many fascinating sights. Hope you enjoy the beauty of this museum, although I can't really do it justice with a camera...so powerful when experienced firsthand.