Judging from scale I'd rate those bivalves as DD.
Top shelf find old Chap.
Judging from scale I'd rate those bivalves as DD.
A bit of research shows that those Iowa-class turrets are the surgeon's gift, dangJudging from scale I'd rate those bivalves as DD.
Top shelf find old Chap.
i'm not so sure, those look like vintage turrets, from an age when the surgeons weren't quite so active in body remodeling.A bit of research shows that those Iowa-class turrets are the surgeon's gift, dang
I'm going to go with this answer despite what the truth may actually be.i'm not so sure, those look like vintage turrets, from an age when the surgeons weren't quite so active in body remodeling.
Check out the video in this articleView attachment 4300614
Meteor Impacts on the moon from Midas...they are the white flashes
A phalaenopsis? Outdoors!?The first sign of spring, here. When these ladies return, I know the greys are almost over.View attachment 4300085 View attachment 4300089
that's cool, now we only need to do is find the crater...lol.....Check out the video in this article
http://www.astronomy.com/news/2019/01/impact-on-the-moon-during-the-total-lunar-eclipse
Yes.A phalaenopsis? Outdoors!?
One of my three Phalaenopsis (two years ago I had none, but family kept giving them to me to adopt) has thrown a spontaneous clone (orchideers call that a keiki, apparently a Hawaiian word for baby or offspring). Mine is getting close to being repottable. That same plant is sending forth a flower spike from the same stalk.Yes.
Unfortunately, no.
I don't think my babies would last through September outdoors, here. Indoors, they start flowering in February. I don't know much about them in their natural habitat.
Very cool. I'm glad you are getting to experience this, too.One of my three Phalaenopsis (two years ago I had none, but family kept giving them to me to adopt) has thrown a spontaneous clone (orchideers call that a keiki, apparently a Hawaiian word for baby or offspring). Mine is getting close to being repottable. That same plant is sending forth a flower spike from the same stalk.
It takes a year or so for Phalaenopsis plants to acclimate to the rather low humidity where I live now.
Looks like you still have the stake&clips from the florist. I've been saving mine ... packrat I amVery cool. I'm glad you are getting to experience this, too. View attachment 4300841
6 years old. My oldest of seven. It flowered from the top baby in 2016, 17.(I cannot find a pic) Nothing last year. I'm thinking I will seperate them soon.
Sorry meng. But finding fake ones is always a disappointment to me. They don't move right.I'm going to go with this answer despite what the truth may actually be.
Don't bust a guys fantasies like that Bear!