ALL GLASS AQUARIUM CANOPIES

21.10.2011., petak

GOLDEN OAK BLINDS. GOLDEN OAK


Golden oak blinds. Protect a bub car seat sunshade. Office door blinds.



Golden Oak Blinds





golden oak blinds






    golden oak
  • Quercus alnifolia, the golden oak, is an evergreen oak species of Cyprus. Its common English name refers to the golden coloured lower surface of its leaves. Quercus alnifolia belongs to the endemic flora of the island and it is confined to the igneous geological complex of the Troodos Mountains.





    blinds
  • The blinds are forced bets posted by players to the left of the dealer button in flop-style poker games. The number of blinds is usually two, but can be one or three.

  • Deprive (someone) of understanding, judgment, or perception

  • A window blind is a type of window covering which is made with slats of fabric, wood, plastic or metal that adjust by rotating from an open position to a closed position by allowing slats to overlap. A roller blind does not have slats but comprises a single piece of material.

  • Cause (someone) to be unable to see, permanently or temporarily

  • Confuse or overawe someone with something difficult to understand

  • window coverings, especially vertical blinds, wood blinds, roller blinds, pleated blinds











St. Brigid




St. Brigid





St Brigid - Mary of the Gael - is second only to St Patrick in the esteem of the Irish people. She is, of course, specially associated with Kildare and the whole area of Magh Life (The Liffey Plain). It would appear that the veneration of St Brigid incorporates elements of a much older tradition. When the Celts came to Ireland, maybe around 500 B.C., they brought with them their Druidic religion. They had many gods, who interacted with the people, sometimes for good, and sometimes for evil. Many of the gods and goddesses were associated with cult sites at particular places. The pagan religious framework of the Celts is not well documented, and what details we have, are mainly of the religious practices of the continental Celts as described by Roman writers, who most likely never visited Ireland. So their accounts would not relate directly to the practices in Ireland, though there must have been broad similarities. The pagan religious practices of the Irish Celts were not encouraged by the Christians, and when they did record them, they would not have wished to present a balanced picture, even if they fully understood the rituals. So we actually have very little knowledge of the religious practices and rituals of the Druidic religion. On the other hand, the early Christian Church in Ireland did not seem to associate the Druidic religion with cruel and barbarous practices, which would have to be eliminated entirely. The names, and many of the attributes, of the Celtic Irish gods were preserved in an oral tradition though the Gods themselves were reduced to the ranks of fairies; they were not gods, but they were greater than human, they were the Sidh or the Tuath de Danann. The Christian traditions treated the Tuath de Danann with a certain sympathy and they are frequently shown as coming forth from their pagan world, being embraced in the Christian fold, and entering into heavenly bliss e.g. the stories of the Children of Lir, Oisin, and the tale of Eithne. It was not so easy to get the ordinary people to completely forget the pagan Celtic gods and elements of paganism survived for hundreds of years after Christianity became firmly established. Indeed there is evidence to suggest that some of the more popular deities were absorbed into the Christian tradition as local saints, and the rituals associated with their worship survived as folk customs right up to very recent times. This would appear to have happened, at least to some extent, in the case of St Brigid.

The head God of the Irish Celts was The Dagda. The Dagda Mor was the father and chief of the people of Dana (the Tuath de Danann). He was a master of music, as well as other magical endowments, and owned a harp that came flying through the air at his call.

Dana was the greatest of the de Danann goddesses; she was the mother of the Irish gods. Daughter of the Dagda, and like him associated with the ideas of fertility and blessing, Dana was also known as Brid "the poetess". Brid is identified with the goddess Brigantia, territorial deity of the Brigantes, a powerful Celtic tribe of North Britain. Brigantia was associated with water and gives her name to rivers; the Brighid in Ireland; the Braint in Wales; and the Brent in England. Place name evidence would also suggest that the goddess Brid was known in Celtic Europe. The name Brid was originally an epithet meaning "the exalted one". She is sometimes mentioned as a triple goddess i.e. three sister goddesses named Brid; one goddess associated with poetry and traditional learning in general; one associated with the smith's art; and the third associated with healing. However over time the separate attributes of the three goddesses became merged in the one figure. The Irish goddess Brid was specially concerned with the arts and with poetry. As such she was venerated by the filidh who were poets and prophets, and who had perhaps a rather academic interest in her. The Christian approach to the filidh seems to have been to allow them to maintain their literary, historical and legal responsibilities while suppressing their ritualistic role. However, it is mainly as a goddess of the ordinary people, concerned with healing, with flocks and stock and the yield of the earth, that she has survived to become a Christian saint.

So what of the Christian St Brigid? Brigid's father was Dubtach descendant of Con of the Hundred Battles, her mother Brotseach of the house of O'Connor. Her mother was said to have been a slave of Dubtach and she was sold, shortly before Brigid was born, to a Druid who lived at Faughart, a few miles from Dundalk. The date of Brigid's birth is disputed, but may be between 451 and 458; commonly it is taken as 453. Memories of the saint still linger around her birthplace. Her father's family were natives of the Province of Leinster and Fr. Swayne, late Parish Priest of Kildare, claims that they were from Umaras, between Monasterevin and Rathangan in Co. Kildare. Another exp











Papsoe Blind Tasting 19-04-2008




Papsoe Blind Tasting 19-04-2008





Sequence of the bottles that was sampled this evening.


1.La Rouget de Lisle Printaniere
2.New Holland Blue Goat Doppelbock
3.HeBrew Genesis 10:10
4.Siletz Oatmeal Cream Stout
5.Oggis Torrey Pines IPA
6.Firestone Double Barrel Ale
7.Viking Brewing Mjod
8.Sokildegaard Humlet Belgier XL
9.Renaissance Elemental Porter
10.Dogfish Head Red and White
11.Bogedal Nr. 0123
12.Middle Ages Kilt Tilter
13.Victory Grand Cru
14.Bi-Du Xtrem
15.Left Coast/Oggis Hop Juice
16.Eel River Triple Exultation
17.Lost Abbey Amazing Grace
18.Gourmetbryggeriet Pinsebryg Golden Strong Ale
19.North Coste Stock Ale Cellar Reserve Brandy Barrel
20.Independence Brewing Jasperilla Old Ale
21.Pizza Port High Tide Fresh Hop IPA
22.Struiselensis
23.East coast Brewers Barley Wine
24.Founders Deca
25.Sokildegaard Imperial Lakrids Stout
26.La Rouget de Lisle Burgonde
27.Ramstein Maibock
28.Thunder Canyon Warhead Stout
29.Allagash Fluxus
30.Des 2 Caps Blanche De Wissant
31.Foothills Seeing Double IPA
32.Teerenpeli Hullujussi
33.Iron Hill Oak Aged Quard
34.Bogedal 124
35.Stoudts Y2K IPA










golden oak blinds







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