With love from Tibet.

With love from Tibet.

I am not usually a fan of any dog that is smaller than a cat and genuinely think they just shouldn't be. But these dogs are adorable. They have their origins as monastery dogs from the high Tibetan plateau. They were exchanged as gifts between the palaces of Tibet and China for several hundred years.

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Uploaded on Dec 6, 2011

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Supper Moon

Supper Moon

Super Moon- Saturday's (19th March 2011) full moon was apparently the closest the moon has been to Earth in 18 years. Even after waiting for ages in the darkness, battered by freezing winds, due to poor calculations, from the spot I had chosen the moon didn’t exactly rise behind the Statue of Liberty as I had hoped for. Guess I'll try my luck again in 2029 :). Liberty State Park, NJ.

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Uploaded on Mar 21, 2011

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Native Portraits

Native Portraits

Clouds Standing Straight in the Sky- a member of the Hopi tribe of northwestern Arizona. Like many of the native American people, the Hopi (or the Hópitu-shínumu, meaning 'peaceful all people') suffered under the 'white man'. Today there are under 7000 Hopi living in a Reservation in the Big Mountain area which they share with the Tewa-Tano.

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Uploaded on Mar 6, 2011

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Illuminati mediocre!

Illuminati mediocre!

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Uploaded on Feb 19, 2011

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Somewhere, under the rainbow!

Somewhere, under the rainbow!

For the Iroquois people, Nee-ah-gah-rah or the 'Thundering Waters' is very sacred.

Long ago, their peaceful tribe of the Ongiaras lived beside the Niagara River. For an unknown reason, Indians were dying, and it was believed that the tribe must appease the Thunder God Hinum, who lived with his two sons in a cave behind the Falls. At first, the Indians sent canoes laden with fruit, flowers and game over the Falls, but the dying continued. The Indians then began to sacrifice the most beautiful maiden of the tribe, who was selected once a year during a ceremonial feast.

One year, Lelawala, daughter of Chief Eagle Eye was chosen. On the appointed day, Lelawala appeared on the river bank above the Falls, wearing a white doeskin robe with a wreath of woodland flowers in her hair.

She stepped into a white birch bark canoe and plunged over the Falls to her death. Her father, heartbroken, leaped into his canoe and followed her. Hinum's two sons caught Lelawala in their arms, and each desired her. She promised to accept the one who told her what evil was killing her people.

The younger brother told her of a giant water snake that lay at the bottom of the river. Once a year, the monster snake grew hungry, and at night entered the village and poisoned the water. The snake then devoured the dead.

In spirit, Lelawala told her people to destroy the serpent. Indian braves mortally wounded the snake on his next yearly visit to the village. Returning to his lair on the river, the snake caught his head on one side of the river and his tail on the other, forming a semi-circle and the brink of the Horseshoe Falls. Lelawala returned to the cave of the God Hinum, where she reigns as the Maid of the Mist.

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Uploaded on Feb 4, 2011

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