The Art and Craft of Blogging
A collection of discussions on the environmental issues
“The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to be a fool.” “Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none.” “Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind, And therefore is winged Cupid painted blind.”-William Shakespeare
...moments of unexpected clarity
Home of Lukas Kondraciuk Photography
Wellness, Support and Mindset
Thoughts on Creativity & Deeper Things
A Blog by Novella Carpenter
Ramblings of an Irish ecologist and gardener
Teaching the art of composition for photography.
Blog from SathyaSaiMemories ~ stories of love in action and the benefits of giving
There are 11,507 stories in Haddonfield; this is one of them.
Perennial gardening and more from the Green Mountains of Vermont
Whatever it will be...
Welcome to my little slice of the blogosphere
what is picture number three??
These are GREAT!!
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It is a gigantic fungus on a dead tree in the Olympic Peninsula. It was fascinating. I think it had a very hard shell.
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It is a gigantic fungus on a dead tree in the Olympic Peninsula. It was fascinating. I think it had a very hard shell.
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C is for Clever and Curve.
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I love the trees…reminds me of the Wizard of Oz for some reason and that last photo Tromboncini ?) the collection is really placed nicely with colours too.
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Thanks! I love the Tiled Mosaic option. It creates beautiful galleries.
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Lovely display!!
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Yes it is a tromboncini. I was so excited the day I found that one in my garden. It was so unusual and the photo has been very useful from time to time. The big brown one is also tromboncini, one that has been allowed to become a winter squash. That one was five feet long. They taste so good. I’m wishing I had them in my garden this year.
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Wow! even that big it is tasty. I found reguarl zuchini that I forgot that grew so huge did not have as much flavour. I would make zuchini loaf with those big ones.
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This is very different than a large zucchini. The inside is dark yellow. It is more like an acorn squash but I like the taste and the texture even better then the other winter squashes.
Sent from my iPhone
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Sounds lovely!
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Wow, quite a set of curves – love your opening shot!
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Harvesting that squash was such an exciting event. It was five feet long… and it tasted so good.
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Beautiful curves! 🙂
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