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    Nature

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
    197 Posts 10 Posters 9.3k Views 1 Watching
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    • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
      RockChalkinTexas 0
      last edited by

      I got a 🐝!!

      20211022_132046.jpg

      #RCJH GO KU

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      • bskeetB Offline
        bskeet @RockChalkinTexas 0
        last edited by bskeet

        @RockChalkinTexas-0 said in Nature:

        One thing I miss in Texas is BIG trees like what grow up in Kansas. I have always wanted to see these majestic trees and have never gotten to.
        redwood.JPG

        I can attest that the Redwoods and Giant Sequoias are spectacularly huge, majestic and awe-inspiring.

        There is a property a couple blocks from me that has 3 redwoods on it and was recently bought by a developer who razed the classic mid-century house and is squeezing in five rental units. I've been pretty concerned that the development will put one or more at risk... It's really sad because those trees have been there since before Columbus discovered the new world.

        I'm generally not a tree-hugger, but trees that are more than 500 years old should be considered national treasures.

        Rock Chalk!

        nuleafjhawkN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • nuleafjhawkN Offline
          nuleafjhawk @bskeet
          last edited by

          @bskeet I had a few trees about this size (πŸ™„πŸ™„) blown down after our 120mph (legit) windstorm a couple of weeks ago.

          America! Where you have the right to be wrong.

          RockChalkinTexas 0R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
            RockChalkinTexas 0 @nuleafjhawk
            last edited by

            @nuleafjhawk Sorry for your loss, sincerely. During the freeze of 2021 I lost 17 really tall palm trees that were behind my garden/solarium. Not to mention the many limbs that came down from my live oaks. It hurts to lose a friend!

            #RCJH GO KU

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            • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
              RockChalkinTexas 0
              last edited by RockChalkinTexas 0

              Voyager 1 is getting close to reaching one light DAY after travelling all this time through interstellar space. It boggles the mind what technology from September of 1977 has produced. The distance of Voyager 1 from Earth is currently 25,454,331,948.8 kilometers, equivalent to 170.1516995509 Astronomical Units. Light takes 23h 35m 6.512s to travel from Voyager 1 and arrive to us. I follow it on Twitter and it posts it's location throughout the day. On the flip side, it is such an incredibly small distance to cover over all this time when compared to the distance of neighboring stars. It's simultaneously a major achievement and very humbling. Your phone charger is smarter than the computer on Voyager 1.
              voyager.jpg

              #RCJH GO KU

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              • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
                RockChalkinTexas 0
                last edited by

                Another picture of Hattie under the bird feeder, apparently eating the shells from the black sunflower seeds in the feeder. The birds do NOT like her being there. Male Cardinals dive bomb her.
                Hattie.jpg

                #RCJH GO KU

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                • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
                  RockChalkinTexas 0
                  last edited by

                  I worked with an attorney who was on the Board of Directors of McDonald Observatory and he would bring me 11 x 17 official and stunning photographs from Hubble Telescope along with reading material. I have dozens of the most famous of its findings. On the back or a slip of paper inside would reveal what it is. This below is the globular cluster NGC 6723, also known as the Chandelier Cluster. Each of its β€˜lightbulbs’ is an individual star 27,000 light-years away in the constellation Sagittarius (the Archer) 🏹 Globular clusters contain some of the oldest stars in our galaxy πŸ‘΄β­ with some clusters nearly as old as the Universe itself! Exactly how globular clusters form is not yet known...... but observing programmes using Hubble have revealed clues to the history of globular clusters like NGC 6723, which appears to have undergone two periods of star formation.
                  image.png

                  #RCJH GO KU

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                  • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
                    RockChalkinTexas 0
                    last edited by

                    NASA just announced that #Voyager 1 will reach 1 light-day from Earth at 12:16:07 a.m. CST on November 18, 2026. At that point, any signal we send to the spacecraft will take 24 hours to reach it. (2 days before my birthday!)

                    #RCJH GO KU

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                    • RockChalkinTexas 0R Offline
                      RockChalkinTexas 0
                      last edited by

                      Hard work = these beauties! Happy Saturday

                      20190609_174616.jpg

                      #RCJH GO KU

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                      • W Offline
                        wissox83
                        last edited by

                        83FF2FFD-29ED-48FF-9AF3-B4C9B1B6AC70_1_105_c.jpeg

                        W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • W Offline
                          wissox83 @wissox83
                          last edited by

                          Loons at Stormy Lake put on a show this week. Brought some diversions from the trauma of dad passing. Several days ago an eagle dive bombed a loon with young ones. Because of the young ones they won't dive and leave them unprotected and the eagle caught a loon. It was too heavy to lift so it was seen swimming across the lake, almost a mile, dragging it in the water. Amazing!

                          approxinfinityA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • approxinfinityA Offline
                            approxinfinity @wissox83
                            last edited by

                            @wissox83 wow thats crazy nature!

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