burkphoto wrote:
I think they could be! They are raucous birds. I’ve never seen so many in one place.
Pelicans can be so funny to watch - flying straight and instantaneously diving straight down. Kamikaze (no offense meant) type birds.
bep beep
a funny thing was Tues/night ROBIN slipped down the stairs
four was enough damage now could be worse later and she
belongs to me to heal/fiw her back to new/showroomquality
William wrote:
last frame is industreal (ck/sp) my id id close to ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
It is something to do with wine making. It was sitting on the porch of Somerset Winery in Temecula, California. I actually have no clue what it is, nor care. It was just a cool contraption.
Wine aficionados might know what it is. We liked that winery, especially their "Fuzzy Bunnies" and their Sangiovese wines. They are one of the few wineries to use terra cotta urns to ferment some of their wines.
William wrote:
he's Unbleavable (club/mucic/plays))))
Raymond Burr (ck/sp) Bill ok man @
Mr Burk is super/cool/dude yall uhh.
Like the plane. That should be parked in Charlotte, NC, outside Douglas International Airport.
hey man mr B
IS PICKING ME A SATURDAY NITE FIGHT
(
Download)
William wrote:
bep beep
a funny thing was Tues/night ROBIN slipped down the stairs
four was enough damage now could be worse later and she
belongs to me to heal/fiw her back to new/showroomquality
Oh no!! Did Robin break anything? You'd better be a good nurse to her or I'll have to come down there and teach you a thing or two!
burkphoto wrote:
It is something to do with wine making. It was sitting on the porch of Somerset Winery in Temecula, California. I actually have no clue what it is, nor care. It was just a cool contraption.
Wine aficionados might know what it is. We liked that winery, especially their "Fuzzy Bunnies" and their Sangiovese wines. They are one of the few wineries to use terra cotta urns to ferment some of their wines.
I wondered what that was.
PAToGraphy wrote:
Pelicans can be so funny to watch - flying straight and instantaneously diving straight down. Kamikaze (no offense meant) type birds.
They were doing that, fishing, up the shoreline a bit. They are really quite large. The flock was across the water at least 200 yards away. I used a 200mm equivalent lens to reach them. I keep trying not to think about what is on those rocks...
Here's another critter... Western gray squirrel popped his head up out of the weeds and wanted food...
The gulls were raucous, too. Apparently the tourists feed them. They're not supposed to.
William wrote:
hey man mr B
Its the one eye and not the red eye?
burkphoto wrote:
They were doing that, fishing, up the shoreline a bit. They are really quite large. The flock was across the water at least 200 yards away. I used a 200mm equivalent lens to reach them. I keep trying not to think about what is on those rocks...
Here's another critter... Western gray squirrel popped his head up out of the weeds and wanted food...
The gulls were raucous, too. Apparently the tourists feed them. They're not supposed to.
Same here about feeding gulls. I have a series of a sea gull pecking a large potato chip bag out of a picnic basket and pecking at it until he successfully opened the bag and got the goods. The folks in the picnic group had left their baskets out in the open and were off exploring....guess no one told them of "gull ways"
PAToGraphy wrote:
Oh no!! Did Robin break anything? You'd better be a good nurse to her or I'll have to come down there and teach you a thing or two!
BEST OF THE BEST CARE I KNEW EVER KNOW
near serious close/called by Doc. Taylor back @
the MEA cost me over eighteen shrunken $$$'s
Kroger nailed me over seventeen $$$'s rip/off@
Doc Taylor said it coulda been more worse advice
good advice really has no pain like Robin but I...
think she turned her corner and should recover>
think I never will look at stairs the same way now
you I we all step down one at a time now or fall}}
PAToGraphy wrote:
Same here about feeding gulls. I have a series of a sea gull pecking a large potato chip bag out of a picnic basket and pecking at it until he successfully opened the bag and got the goods. The folks in the picnic group had left their baskets out in the open and were off exploring....guess no one told them of "gull ways"
Birds are smart. Crows will make crude tools to get into human food supplies.
I still remember my old scoutmaster telling us to hang our food from a tree in a rope-tied waterproof tote about 12 feet off the ground while we were out on a hike.
PAToGraphy wrote:
I wondered what that was.
Here's some more gizmos on the same winery porch...
I like the random cactus in a pot sitting on the rusty machine.
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