golden and green— Gemma Wiseman (@AuraGem) July 10, 2020
fields dress
a forest of peaks
white dollhouses add
a pinch of magic #tanka https://t.co/RFhmdmhjc8
Connecting moments in my peninsula world, my Australia and beyond...Whatever speaks to my thalassophile soul in these tidal days...
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Friday, 10 July 2020
forest of peaks...
oasis...
crystal clear— Gemma Wiseman (@AuraGem) July 10, 2020
spring waters
and a pocket of greens
a traveler's pearl
in desert wilds #tanka https://t.co/pNabbyxwmv
bridge of many arches...
A stunning scene, but it is the reflected bridge that is the star of the show - artistically linking all the elements together. The many arches are like multiple windows connecting here and there. Just beautiful. https://t.co/6EHQlqXylo
— Gemma Wiseman (@AuraGem) July 10, 2020
Afghanistan schooling...
And the above image is not an isolated example of schooling in Afghanistan...— Gemma Wiseman (@AuraGem) July 10, 2020
School in distant, difficult classrooms: Afghanistan https://t.co/M6rNVpKWoL via @eddarrell pic.twitter.com/q20j0PRXud
shaggy...
— Gemma Wiseman (@AuraGem) July 10, 2020Samuel Amess, from Scotland, who made a fortune in the Victorian goldfields and became Mayor of Melbourne in 1869, kept a small fold of black Highland cattle on Churchill Island, (near Phillip Island) in the 19th century.
NOTE: Although a group of cattle is generally called a herd, a group of Highland cattle is known as a "fold". This is because in Scotland's winter, the cattle were kept in open shelters made of stone called folds, to protect them from the weather at night. Source: HERE
beautiful drawing of a dog...
EXTRAORDINARY drawing by young artist Sarah Fletcher from Glen Innes, NSW. The dog's eyes and the positioning of the paws are so expressive of an emotional moment.https://t.co/dfhbWeyUdi pic.twitter.com/tPeoqarX0r— Gemma Wiseman (@AuraGem) July 10, 2020