.. watching
What does it mean ..
- see lessons needed in the near future
appetizer for one ..
- we are waders
Green ..
all a flutter ..
A special one ..
King's Mantle . .
Ginger !
we have Bananas ! --- green ones --
Like a statue ..
serene -
.. deep breath
until 2015 ...
- hello
zzzzzzzzzz.....
peaceful sleep ..
reflections ...
Point of view ..
Sir Stillness ...
'Painting' wildlife . .
on the dock . .
more than . .
- one Swan a swimming
Good eats ..
green is the color ..
Yes, I am ..
whatever your style . .
oh, how I wish this were so ...
- no where to go
No, it wasn't me !
a stopover ...
.. saw two
- beauty
The Geese are coming ...
scrambled ..
- take your pick
Union Jack ..
layers of fragrance ..
Hossam Ramzy Tshirt front -
'Quote' from Hossam Ramzy ..
All the colors in a Rainbow ..
Colors of reflections ..
interesting ... ' x ' shaped wine rack
See also...
See more...Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
419 visits
floating on diamonds -


" Swans were reported to be on the city's lakes as early as 1923.
Most likely, those early swans had been purchased as pets by lake
front residents, who later released them on the lakes. By 1954 the
last of these swans and their descendants had died, having fallen
prey to people, pet dogs, and/or alligators.
A Lakeland resident, Mrs Robert Pickardt who had enjoyed the
swans and mourned their passing, wrote to Queen Elizabeth of
England and inquired about purchasing a pair of swans from the
royal flock on the Thames River. A representative of the royal
family replied that the Queen would donate a pair of swans to
Lakeland if the city would pay the cost of capturing and shipping
the swans to the US. The money was raised for shipping the
swans, and two white mute swans were released on Lake Morton
on February 9, 1957.
Their descendants continue to grace Lake Morton and other lakes
throughout the city. "
- taken from the website City Of Lakeland
edited in:
www.picmonkey.com
© All Rights Reserved
Most likely, those early swans had been purchased as pets by lake
front residents, who later released them on the lakes. By 1954 the
last of these swans and their descendants had died, having fallen
prey to people, pet dogs, and/or alligators.
A Lakeland resident, Mrs Robert Pickardt who had enjoyed the
swans and mourned their passing, wrote to Queen Elizabeth of
England and inquired about purchasing a pair of swans from the
royal flock on the Thames River. A representative of the royal
family replied that the Queen would donate a pair of swans to
Lakeland if the city would pay the cost of capturing and shipping
the swans to the US. The money was raised for shipping the
swans, and two white mute swans were released on Lake Morton
on February 9, 1957.
Their descendants continue to grace Lake Morton and other lakes
throughout the city. "
- taken from the website City Of Lakeland
edited in:
www.picmonkey.com
© All Rights Reserved
micritter, have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.