سلام هاتف جون عکسهای واقعا زیبایی گرفتی به وبلاگ منم یه سر بزن اون پست آخریشو بخون فکر کنم چیز قشنگی از آب در اومده باشه اگه هم برات مقدور هست بفرست به فرندفید ملت ببینن یه صفایی ببرن www.ferrarienzo69.wordpress.com
- فراری انزو
راستی این عکس خودته گذاشتی آواتورت؟؟؟؟؟؟؟
- فراری انزو
"Though Sedona was founded in the 19th century, the discovery of energy ‘vortexes’ here in the 1980s turned this once modest settlement into a bustling New Age destination. Today the combination of mysticism and red-rock majesty attracts throngs of tourists year-round. You’ll find all sorts of alternative medicine practices in town, along with art galleries, gourmet restaurants and top-end resorts, not to mention numerous businesses available to read (and photograph) your aura."
- Iván Abrego
from Bookmarklet
"The Sahara would have been a formidable barrier during the Stone Age, making it hard to understand how humans made it to Europe from eastern Africa, where the earliest remains of our hominin ancestors are found."
- Iván Abrego
from Bookmarklet
It is estimated they early man spread out at a rate of 15 miles per generation..making it even harder to understand !
- Michael Parsons
"The title of this painting stems from Psalm 139 as this painting became a meditation for me on my pregnancy. The miracle and wonder at the life growing in me. Hidden in the darkness of my body. I am around 24 weeks now and my belly is already so big, I wonder how I'll make it til the end! It's amazing how much faster we pop out the second time around."
- Kimber Scott
from Bookmarklet
I hope you're not congradsing me. I just shared this little tidbit, I didn't do it! The painting, or the getting pregnant, but thanks for sharing the verse. That's really nice!
- Kimber Scott
oops, my second strike for the night, i need to shut up, ;) (i'm sorry for misunderstanding, ;)
- chaz2b
"In John Singleton Copley's painting Watson and the Shark, a tiger shark – to judge from its teeth – is attacking a pale and terrified youth while his friends try desperately to hold it back with a boat hook while they rescue him. The rescue, in the harbour of Havana in 1749, was a success: although he lost a leg, Watson survived to become a prosperous London merchant, and probably commissioned the painting himself."
- M F
from Bookmarklet