honeycomb light
partial eclipse
Bendigo
Sun Loong
Shamrock Hotel, etched glass pane
Alexandra Fountain
Alexandra Fountain, detail
coelho, Santa Clara a Velha
Romanesque capital, Santa Clara a Velha, main port…
Santa Clara a Velha, window detail
mudéjar tile, Santa Clara a Velha
Santa Clara a Velha, cloister
capital, Santa Clara a Velha, cloister
Santa Clara a Velha with Coimbra in the background
Coimbra by night
neither batman nor batwomen...
...just Coimbra students in traditional garb
A Torre
Via Latina
Via Latina e a Torre, gowned students in foregroun…
Via Latina e a Torre, Pátio das Escolas
sashed Minerva
through the narrow laneways down to the Mondego
strange fruit_1
wooden posts_2
wooden posts_1
bee hives, penumbra
Jeff Thomson (*1957): “Cow” (1987), detail_2
Jeff Thomson (*1957): “Cow” (1987), detail_1
Les Kossatz (*1943): “Guardians of the last piece”…
les fleurs du pyjama
Vlase Nikoleski (*1948): “The Seed – accumulation”…
Vlase Nikoleski (*1948): “The Seed – accumulation”…
rainy day in Sukhothai_2
Telamon_4
decoration
guardian lion
Lotus fruit
discarded roof tiles
decorative tile_3
Telamon_3
mythological guardian_1
water lily
Kinnari_2
Kinnari_1
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strange fruit_2


Osage orange
also called Bowwood, French Bois D'arc (Maclura pomifera), thorny tree with large, yellow-green, wrinkled fruit and a milky sap that can produce dermatitis in humans. It is the only species of its genus in the mulberry family (Moraceae). It is native to the south-central United States but has been planted extensively farther north in the Mississippi River valley and at points east of there.
The Osage orange is often trained as a hedge; when planted in rows along a boundary, it forms an effective spiny barrier. The tree also serves as a windbreak. Its hard yellow-orange wood, formerly used for bows and war clubs by the Osage and other Indian tribes, is now used for railway ties and fence posts. The wood yields a yellow dye. Attempts have been made to prepare an edible meal or flour from the fruit of the tree, which was long considered to be poisonous. The fruit often grows to more than 13 cm (5 inches) in diameter.
"Osage orange." Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica 2007 Ultimate Reference Suite . (2010).
also called Bowwood, French Bois D'arc (Maclura pomifera), thorny tree with large, yellow-green, wrinkled fruit and a milky sap that can produce dermatitis in humans. It is the only species of its genus in the mulberry family (Moraceae). It is native to the south-central United States but has been planted extensively farther north in the Mississippi River valley and at points east of there.
The Osage orange is often trained as a hedge; when planted in rows along a boundary, it forms an effective spiny barrier. The tree also serves as a windbreak. Its hard yellow-orange wood, formerly used for bows and war clubs by the Osage and other Indian tribes, is now used for railway ties and fence posts. The wood yields a yellow dye. Attempts have been made to prepare an edible meal or flour from the fruit of the tree, which was long considered to be poisonous. The fruit often grows to more than 13 cm (5 inches) in diameter.
"Osage orange." Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica 2007 Ultimate Reference Suite . (2010).
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