Bob Yankle wrote:
Believe those are the longest legs I have ever seen on, what we call in the states, a rabbit. A most captivating capture. It must have been fun!
In the uk we also have rabbits, a little smaller though, in March the hares go through a mating ritual, they jump, bounce and sometimes fight for a partner, nice pics though, well done š
I completely agree with awesome 14, (this IS the general discussion area) my iPad recently went tits up, so I ordered another pad from a person on eBay, it arrived with a flat battery, long story short, there were various other faults, Ā£220.00 š³ so I got in touch with eBay, no problem, they sent me a (free) return label, in the post, but Iām still awaiting the refund, but eBay assure me itās coming, eBay has changed, for the better !!
do you have a link Jerry ?
Please explain what it is with women and tats ?
Excellent piccies, and Qedlingburgh is a particularly quaint old German town (a very nice restaurant up by the castle) the reason for the over hang on each floor is that back in the dark ages tenants were taxed only on the floor (ground) they used, so they built each floor bigger, the sunburstās are a āhappy/hopefullā symbol for any forthcoming harvest, clever people those Germans
Absolutely fabulous, well done, we get a visit every night from a family, but only one at a time, we feed them dog food and they love it š
Always nice to see your good lady and your work back again
Excellent shots of phaleanopsis (spelling may be wrong)
Many thanks htbrown for the amurrican explanation, now where is amurrica exactly lol š
htbrown wrote:
Americans also distinguish between dados and grooves, but in English both are a housing joint.
In the uk a dado is a rail that goes around the wall of a room to prevent damage from chair heads, grooves are generally parts of wooden joints
In the uk a dado is a rail that goes around the wall about 3 ft high
Gasman57 wrote:
Don't like it. Why fix something that isn't broke.
Me too, what was wrong with the other layout, better separation
In the uk we call them rabbits š