textures - shapes of Mother Nature -
- there was a crooked
Sie kommen schon wieder :-)))
Witch Hazel
a little blue ..
sunshine bloomer -
Color !
bothering the furball -
Purple February 2013
Luas Tram 4013
Pic of the Day in February 2013
looking up ..
Florida grown jewels . . .
Me and my shadow ..
März 2013
directions ?
camouflage ..
.. welcome
2013, jaro de justa komunikado (korea versio)
for rent - a home ..
Lakeside texture . .
.. by the lake
pose ..
Upside down frog
Foggy froggy point of view P1040069
right side up -
shadows and sun ..
Yellow gold !
green .. Pink Woodsorrel (Oxalis debilis)
.
.. just us
The little store on the corner
Horse stable
Happy Valentine's Day
- for you
You only told me to shovel the driveway
Impassable
Snow removal New England Style
Iced over
Hunkered in
Plowing the streets
Main Street 2
Main Street 1
Casa Del Sol
Old South Street
Pleasant Street
Keep Right of Snow Bank
Pedestrian Crossing
Kirkland Avenue
Snow Emergency When Flashing
La Fiorentina
Armory Street Lot
Unphased
17 Inches
Main
und rechts von mir tobten Faschingsumzüge...
Only another 25 feet to the street
Avalance - suburban style
Windshield wipers at the ready
Serene snow (Explored)
Thigh high in snow
New England Fence
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
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460 visits
Geese ..
ya think . . .
- the humans will clean this up
- will probably take them awhile
- priorities, you know
- aesthetics for Geese are most likely
- not on the top of the list-of-do things
- oh, well
- we will just strut around that pile of sticks
Chinese Geese:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Chinese Goose is a breed of domesticated goose descended from the wild Swan Goose. Chinese geese differ from the wild birds in much larger size (up to 5–10 kg in males, 4–9 kg in females), and in having an often strongly developed basal knob on the upper side of the bill. The knob at the top of the beak is more prominent on males than females. By 6–8 weeks of age, the knob is already pronounced enough that it can be used for sexing. Chinese geese are a close cousin of the African goose, a heavier breed also descended from the Swan Goose.
Chinese geese appear in two varieties: a brown similar to the wild Swan Goose, and white. While many domestic Chinese geese have a similar body type to other breeds, the breed standards as defined in the American Poultry Association's Standard of Perfection and other sources call for a slimmer, taller fowl.[1]
Chinese geese are among the better laying breeds of geese. A female Chinese goose can lay 50–60 eggs over the course of the breeding season (February to June), although there are reports of Chinese Geese laying up to 100 eggs during that time."
edited in:
www.picmonkey.com
© All Rights Reserved
- the humans will clean this up
- will probably take them awhile
- priorities, you know
- aesthetics for Geese are most likely
- not on the top of the list-of-do things
- oh, well
- we will just strut around that pile of sticks
Chinese Geese:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Chinese Goose is a breed of domesticated goose descended from the wild Swan Goose. Chinese geese differ from the wild birds in much larger size (up to 5–10 kg in males, 4–9 kg in females), and in having an often strongly developed basal knob on the upper side of the bill. The knob at the top of the beak is more prominent on males than females. By 6–8 weeks of age, the knob is already pronounced enough that it can be used for sexing. Chinese geese are a close cousin of the African goose, a heavier breed also descended from the Swan Goose.
Chinese geese appear in two varieties: a brown similar to the wild Swan Goose, and white. While many domestic Chinese geese have a similar body type to other breeds, the breed standards as defined in the American Poultry Association's Standard of Perfection and other sources call for a slimmer, taller fowl.[1]
Chinese geese are among the better laying breeds of geese. A female Chinese goose can lay 50–60 eggs over the course of the breeding season (February to June), although there are reports of Chinese Geese laying up to 100 eggs during that time."
edited in:
www.picmonkey.com
© All Rights Reserved
micritter, have particularly liked this photo
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