Temple detail
Let's go swimming!
Style in Florence
Those are some big pipes you've got there, sir
Wall of infamy
Wall mushroom
Those are some big balloons you've got there, ma'a…
One this way, one that way
Dry grass
Goats
Dirt road
Going home
Pasture, highway, lake
Farm
Underwood building
Dark corner
OK, I'll give that a try
Deceased Kmart after rain
Scooter-girl goes shopping
Tree elf
Wong's, since the 1930s
Former creamery, now a brewery
Tulelake water
Tokyo: Lady with purse
Hotel lobby art
Kyoto corner
Temple detail
Restaurant art
Itoh
It's
Alley lantern
Ireland
Klamath County Main Library
Primo Levi, my next project
Children's section
So many books, so little time...
Graham Kerr
Northern Ireland
Norway
Sun sprite
Yellow tutu
Pink fairy
Wave
Door No. 4
Post Office
Location
Lat, Lng:
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Address: unknown
See also...
Archive Airings Group - THIS GROUP HAS BEEN CLOSED
Archive Airings Group - THIS GROUP HAS BEEN CLOSED
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300 visits
Usagi ( 野ウサギ ) with ocean waves


Tokyo temple detail.
"[A] hare motif that is commonly seen in Japanese art is the hare and ocean wave motif. This unusual combination originated from a story in the Kojiki (Japan’s oldest history book) called “Inaba no Shirousagi,” or the “White Rabbit of Inaba” (present day Shimane prefecture). According to the legend, a white rabbit crossed the ocean from Okino Island to the mainland at Inaba by using the backs of sharks as stepping stones and thus appeared to be running over the tops of the waves. This story became the theme of a Noh song that translates roughly, “While the moon floats over the ocean, a rabbit runs over the waves; what interesting island scenery.” japanesqueaccents.com/?p=6
AA329 Meaning.
"[A] hare motif that is commonly seen in Japanese art is the hare and ocean wave motif. This unusual combination originated from a story in the Kojiki (Japan’s oldest history book) called “Inaba no Shirousagi,” or the “White Rabbit of Inaba” (present day Shimane prefecture). According to the legend, a white rabbit crossed the ocean from Okino Island to the mainland at Inaba by using the backs of sharks as stepping stones and thus appeared to be running over the tops of the waves. This story became the theme of a Noh song that translates roughly, “While the moon floats over the ocean, a rabbit runs over the waves; what interesting island scenery.” japanesqueaccents.com/?p=6
AA329 Meaning.
Smiley Derleth, John FitzGerald have particularly liked this photo
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