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oblomow

macrumors 601
Apr 14, 2005
4,508
18,899
Netherlands
5043d0a0c929967a06d3bced9b00.jpg


leftover from low-light project this week
 

Matsamoto

macrumors 6502a
Oct 31, 2018
990
8,524
Halmstad, Sweden
I like you! You make me laugh, pretty much daily. View attachment 2138314
Thanks😊
I really love puns🙂
My wife and my friends tells me sometimes that I have some disability😂😂

I have this life motto that's it's better with a bad joke, than no jokes at all.

I have one pun right now:
Why do you call it French fries, when it's made in Greece?🤔😁

Edit: really appreciate your comment and that you like my jokes😊
 

tizeye

macrumors 68040
Jul 17, 2013
3,241
35,935
Orlando, FL
As promised yesterday in a discussion in the Photo Association thread questioning my death wish of photos of gators with no barriers, I took this one a couple weeks ago. To get the vegetation for minimal blocking and eyes peeking through, I had to contort my body straddling 6" high ant mounds with my left foot planted between two mounds. I was more afraid of swarming ants than the gators. Had to be quick!

Tomorrow will post one from the opposite perspective where I was walking on water and it gave me the idea for the shoreline approach. :)
Wetlands De 2022 2500px-21.jpg
 

rjjacobson

macrumors G3
Sep 12, 2014
8,529
26,056
Rocky Mt National Park, beautiful view. From Spargue Lake looking west.

Sprague Lake is a scenic lake in Rocky Mountain National Park, located on the south side of Glacier Creek, about two miles south of the Hollowell turnoff. The half-mile walk around the lake is wheelchair accessible and features boardwalks and bridges with views of Flattop Mountain and Hallet Peak. The lake is popular for Brook trout fishing.[1]

The area is named after Abner Sprague, who started a homestead there in 1874.[2] Later, he opened a lodge for dude ranching, hunting, and fishing. To improve the fishing, he dammed the far end of the lake. The area became part of Rocky Mountain National Park in 1915 and continued to serve guests as the Sprague Hotel. In 1919, guests paid $6.00 per room with a private bath, and $1.00 for regular meals.[3][4] The hotel, which no longer exists, stood near the present-day parking lot.



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