Very nice shots! We had a Baltimore Oriole feeder in our backyard. It had a custard dish for the grape jelly.
Our squirrels took to it. We would find the dish on the ground or on the neighbors fence. The last time
we couldn't find it any where. I can't imagine them taking it to their nest?
This isn't quite the same but I recall seeing in Nevada these Stuckeys shacks in the
middle of nowhere advertising pecan log rolls. I always wondered how far their employees
had to travel to get there.
I wonder if it has ever been featured on the Food Network's Diners Drive-Ins and Dives. If not it should be.
It came with the kit from an authorized dealer in my area. Who really knows?
I once had the OEM Nikon battery for my Nikon D80 start to melt in the camera.
Original equipment doesn't always guarantee superiority over aftermarket batteries.
Nice set. Your third shot is the first one that I've seen with sunspots.
Try
www.qwant.com they are in France. They claim never to withhold your personal information.
When you use Google and go on a business or product site, you get their advertising until the cows come
so to speak.
I like #2 the best. They are all beautiful. I like the purple edged fringe in photo two.
Dollar Tree has oversaturated the market. The town that I live in which is about 10 square miles in area and
23,000 in population has two. A similar sized neighboring community about 1 1/2 miles away has one. I saw their
selling point on a news broadcast that stated their purpose is convenience. An alternitive way to avoid checkout
lines at Walmart.
Exploration. Internal and external.
Advertisers should keep their minds away from the pelvic girdle region of our anatomy.
I'm not outraged by it. The first time that I saw it I said to myself, do I really need to see this?
I understand your opinion.
The T.V. ad that is number one on my hate list is of the woman shaving her pubic hair.
A close number two is the armits one.
I feel your pain. The once thriving regional mall about three miles from me had at one time five
major department stores. it is down to two. A J.C.Penny and a Dillard's. Sears was the first to go
A developer recently purchased the building. The dying local newspaper carried the story. It read that
this developer hasn't figured out what to do with it as yet. As the late author Kurt Vonnegut would often
say. So it goes.