╰☆☆June☆☆╮'s photos
Yorkshire
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Jubilee Celebrations on the Thames
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Palace of Westminster
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Palace of Westminster
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Brambling
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The Brambling is similar in size and shape to a Chaffinch. Breeding-plumage male Bramblings are very distinctive, with a black head, dark upper-parts, orange breast and white belly. Females and younger birds are less distinct, and more similar in appearance to some Chaffinches. In all plumage's, however, Bramblings differs from Chaffinches in a number of features:
Brambling has a white rump whereas that of Chaffinch is grey-green; the breast is orange, contrasting with a white belly on Brambling, whereas on Chaffinch the underparts of more uniformly coloured (pink or buff);
Brambling's scapulars are orange, whereas Chaffinch's are grey or grey-brown;
the flanks are dark-spotted on Brambling, plain on Chaffinch;
Bramblings lack the white outer tail feathers of Chaffinch.
Thanks for dropping by, much appreciated.
Take a look at my blog, for tips and tricks
juneantillphotography.blogspot.co.uk/ ( juneantillphotography.blogspot.co.uk )
Where is the brass band?
Wells Harbour
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The walk to work
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The waiting game
The prom walkers !!
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The calorie burning lunch!
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Workers having a lunchtime run, London 2011
******************Thank you for your visits, much appreciated ************
The (young) face of the law
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Seeing eye to eye...
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Eye to Eye, a poem by Ivor E Hogg
A poet with an artist’s eye
can conjure words to set the scene.
Then with the words that he’ll supply
his reader feels as though he’s seen.
The same scene which the poet saw
Draws on his own experience
of things that he has seen before
though it makes little difference.
The message that the poet sent
is perhaps not the one received
The reader senses the intent
and finds the poem well conceived.
The picture which the reader gets
is the scene his own mind sets.
Ready and waiting
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Cromer's crab boats..
The town is famous for the Cromer crab, which forms the major source of income for the local fishermen. The town had grown up as a fishing station over the centuries and became a year-round fishery, with crabs and lobsters in the summer, drifting for longshore herring in the autumn and long-lining, primarily for cod, in the winter, when weather permitted. The pattern of fishing has changed over the last thirty years, and it is now almost completely focused on crabs and lobsters. At the end of the 19th century, the beaches to the east and west of the pier were crowded with fishing boats. Now, about ten boats ply their trade from the foot of the gangway on the east beach, with shops in the town selling fresh crab, whenever the boats go to sea.
Princes Street Edinburgh.
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A few smiles to start your weekend..If you like flash mobs, you will love this children's one.
It is the Prestwick Airport Flash Mob 2012 for the Aryshire Hospice. It takes a couple of minutes to get going, but it's worth the wait.
youtu.be/NWXo771bNQs ( youtu.be/NWXo771bNQs )
Thanks for dropping by, much appreciated.
Olympic Torch (East Midlands)
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