Archive for January, 2008

Baby, it's cold outside!

Wordless Wednesday…check it out and all participants here

My friends small houses

I promised a dear friend that I would feature here shots I made (and he also made, though they are yet to be featured in the near future) of his small houses collection. I shot quite a lot during the 2nd Christmas day last December when we had dinner at their house, for now I chose these 2 shots first.

at “The Post Office”

the scene is in the left building.

Aren’t they cute? They are actually fun to look at especially this collection, a whole lot of them.. they are better viewed when lights are out and only the small houses lights are on.

Exposed Beauty | Weekend Snapshot #16

“Sometimes we have to look deeper to see its true color”

* click thumbnails for bigger images

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SunSet, amazing God's work

As I was taking a break from work, I looked outside my office window and realized that the sun was already setting and I kind of got caught at the striking orange fire in the sky. I hurriedly ran down because my camera bag was in our living room. I was in a bit of dilemma because I had to choose quickly ( I was afraid the sun would set fast) between using the DSLR which I have to change lenses to capture from different distances or just a Point & Shoot..the latter won ..so please do join me looking at the following results.

This is what I look at everyday, my neighbors

I love this one

This was becoming exciting

THIS is my favorite among this set

My hands were shaky in this one. I could have zoomed out few mm. more but I chose not to. Hands were too tired.

Thank you God, for giving us such beauty.

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I still am not finish tinkering my blogs…in this page I still have to change the theme… I need a vacation *sigh* I am so tired..

Thesserie Up and running again

I’m up and running again…but still not finish tinkering around…all 3 blogs…so please bear with me…I shall visit you the soonest I get the chance.

~Thess

WHITE FISH WRAPPED IN SMOKED BACON | WEEKEND SNAPSHOT #15

I have such a busy schedule that I almost forgot to place my Weekend Entry! Oh no!

anyway, better late than never….so this is my entry, half cooked white wish wrapped in smoked bacon. this wasn’t the finished product yet, it was still to be placed in the oven for few minutes of grilling, I just thought I’d take a shot before the pieces caramelized.

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Are you laughing at me?!

This is the only type of bird that can get to my pug’s nerve! Maybe because of the sound they make, my pug interprets it as ‘making fun’ óf him. When Charlie my pug sees them, he becomes hard to subdue and would like to attack every crow he sees. Whether on land or if they’re up the trees, my pug thinks he can fly and give them a piece of his mind.

But I must say that crows are rather quite brutal and anti social. But sometimes I can’t help but feel sorry for them, especially during winter time…because food is scarce, they feed on dogs’ poop. :(

Carrion Crow

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Of all birds the carrion crow is the most detested by gamekeepers and country people who rear flocks of poultry, because it is the craftiest of egg thieves. Wild birds also suffer acutely from its depredations.

It is the habit of crows to perch like sentinels on the tops of isolated trees, where they can see what is going on in all directions. When birds are building their nests, their activities are observed and remembered by the watching crow, and in due course many nests are wrecked and robbed.

Later, when trees are more leafy and it becomes harder for the nests to be spotted, the crow is quick to observe other birds carrying food to their young and again he makes his merciless pounce when all has been discovered; this time he takes the chicks.

He may be considered a natural regulator of bird populations and to some extent he plays a useful part in improving the chances of birds which can manage to outwit him.

For many years past I have lived in marshy districts inhabited by a good many crows, which nest unmolested in tall riverside trees. These birds take nearly all the first clutches of duck and moorhen eggs that are laid early in the season. In a cold spring, the chicks which would have hatched from these eggs would in all probability die of starvation, whereas when further clutches of eggs are laid in replacement of those lost, the offspring stand a much better chance of survival.

If a bird loses its first eggs, it usually seeks a better concealed place in which to build its second nest and in any case there is always more natural cover from vegetation later in the spring. In learning to escape the vigilance of crows, birds also avoid the attention of some other predators, such as jays and magpies. They also tend to sit closely on their eggs and leave them, when they have to, with secrecy.

read the rest HERE