(In Shetland) the period around midsummer when the sun sets below the horizon for only a few hours each day, resulting in an extended twilight until sunrise.
Image: St Ninians Isle Sunset via Ronnie Robertson on Wiki Commons CC BY-SA 2.0 pic.twitter.com/UX7dm8rEew
— National Library of Scotland (@natlibscot) June 17, 2020
this is laila, when we aren't quick enough to let her back in the house, she likes to get our attention via the back windows (viralhog) pic.twitter.com/fK3BjFTOze
— Humor And Animals (@humorandanimals) June 16, 2020
Morning prayer Lord this pandemic that doesn’t leave a corner of the world untouched,the fact that we have no cure should demonstrate just how helpless we are without You, You are our only hope, send an anwser All Powerful Ruler of The Universe.
Those nutria must have some trigger thay says “aaaaah” in the top of their heads. Been really enjoying the highly infrequently used words; in fact, I think I’d only heard one of the recent ones before. Imagine, people in Europe never had potatoes before the discovery of the New World (and thought tomatoes poison since they were related to the deadly nightshade!)
Those nutria must have some trigger thay says “aaaaah” in the top of their heads. Been really enjoying the highly infrequently used words; in fact, I think I’d only heard one of the recent ones before. Imagine, people in Europe never had potatoes before the discovery of the New World (and thought tomatoes poison since they were related to the deadly nightshade!)
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Potatoes are also in the nightshade family, as are peppers. All are from the New World!
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My paternal grandfather always called tomatoes “love apples” and refused to eat them.
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