Sam ...Me encantaría tener el Gallo de Sergio Castillo....liliana
said siempreviva37
Sam... Quiero agradecerle todas las notas que Ud. gentilmente ha dejado en algunos de mis álbums. Atrasado agradecimiento. Pero sucede que webshots no me envia los mensajes como anteriormente lo hacia y revisando algunos de mis albumes me he encontrado con varios de sus mensajes.Muchas Gracias.Chile es un pais como pocos en latinoamérica. Desde el año 1973 ha reiniciado una nueva etapa de gran crecimiento paulatino pero seguro. Tenemos muchas cosas agradables como en todo lugar del mundo. Yo especificamente trato de mostrar algo de lo que puede agradar a quienes a veces no saben ni que existimos !...jajaja!- Le envío un cariñoso saludo desde Temuco- Chile.....liliana
said siempreviva37
Dear Sam, I sprayed the peonies with DDT especially. Only kidding! They are usually crawling with them, especially the buds. They must have all been camera shy that day....("New plodding" this time - well they got it half right...)
said missjane111
Hi dear Sam,thank you so much for signing my guests book and forgive me responding you late.I was so busy.dear I uploaded an art album which includes some drawings done by my beloved sister and I want to dedicate it to you.hope you enjoy it.warmest regards and have great days,Shima
said alis_azami
Thank you for your kind comments. Taking these photographs was a lot of fun. Having my photo selected as the POTD was even more fun plus a surprise and an honor. I love all the wonderful comments from fellow photographers!
said camerabug1
Hello Sam,thanks for your great comments on my Featured album 'Sunflowers in Turkey' on 27 October.I was very happy to see one of my albums was featured album .I wish every body see their album is featured,here.Thanks again.Wish you a wonderful week...Greetings from Istanbul, Rasim
said Rasim02
Hi Sam! I just wanted to say that I saw all of the lovely comments you left on my photos recently. I love the fact that you enjoy my photos. I recently got a new camera and am waiting for a lens to go with it that will allow me to photograph my birds (the lens that came with the camera falls short of reaching my feeders). I have a LOT to learn with this new camera and lens, but hope to be posting photos taken with them soon. Also, this past summer I had 4 eye surgeries to correct/cure the eye disease I've had for many years, and I can now actually see my birds! I used to "see" them through my photos, but now that I can see, I'm being a whole lot more selective with the photos I keep and share. I hope all is going well with you. Maureen
said maureenl1
Hi Sam,thanks for your nice comment on my album P*O*T*D* Sheep herd in meppel.greetings from holland Jan & Henriette
said fotoshopjan
Hi again! About Rodda's Cornish clotted cream, featured on a small banner over the tea shop at Kynance Cove: Rodda's Creamery is a small family company in northwestern Cornwall. Its specialty is clotted cream, an especially thick and rich cream, somewhat yellowish in tint and thick enough to spread. Unlike sour cream or yoghurt, it is not tart. It is often served on scones, with jam or on its own. Clotted cream is the pride and joy of tea servers in both Cornwall and Devon; while Devon cream teas tend to be better known, the Cornish (naturally!) insist that theirs are even better. My husband loves them both (and I like them both), so we don't take sides. The trick is to take a brisk enough walk, either before or after tea, to justify the calories; for all the fat content in the cream, we hardly see any overweight people in the West Country!
said green298
Hi, Sam, On the one hand, much of Britain has been deforested over the millennia, some of it thought to have been quite early in prehistory (from archaeological reports that I've read, based on pollen analyses) -- so open landscapes today may well have been filled with woodlands prior to the Neolithic and Bronze ages; other forests were cleared more recently, during and since the Middle Ages. On the other hand, the geology of The Lizard is quite distinctive, with plenty of hard metamorphic rock, so a number of the plants that grow there are distinctive. The slope above Kynance Cove probably has rather thin soil. It's also, of course, quite exposed to the elements. There are sheltered river valleys and seaside nooks, on the eastern and southern parts of the peninsula, that do have richer vegetation and trees. (I hope to post a couple of albums from such areas in future.) I need to do more research to provide a better answer. The best collection of information on The Lizard that I have seen was right in the library at the bed-and-breakfast home where we stayed there -- so now we have another reason to return! Anyway, thanks for raising the intriguing question -- and thanks for your friendship! Rebecca
said green298
Hi, Sam, Thanks very much for your unfailingly supportive and imaginative comments, in my albums on a Holy Cross February in New Orleans and on Kynance Cove in Cornwall (both 2008). While people evidently view and download my New Orleans pictures, I don't receive many comments on them, so I particularly value your stopping by the lovely historic neighborhood of Holy Cross and telling me about it! You had a couple of interesting questions about the Kynance Cove and the Lizard Peninsula, including whether trees had been felled above the cove or were never really there. I'm afraid that I don't have a definitive answer, but I'll respond a bit in a separate message (to reduce the risk of losing this one as I type). I hope that you have begun a superb Thanksgiving Day and that you are enjoying the entire holiday with family, thankful for their love and for the beauties around us! --Rebecca
said green298
Ohhhhhh, eggnogg! So bad, yet sooooooooo good. I have to admit, I am one of those who live to eat, not eat to live!
said missjane111
Hola Sam !...It was a pleasure to receive your loving greeting Feature obtained from my album "Intense Spring" in Home & Garden section. Thank you very much and a warm greeting from Temuco-Chile ...... liliana
said siempreviva37
Dear Sam, happy Thanksgiving! Thank you for your wonderful comments on my flowers, and I want to thank you too, for being such a fun and loyal friend to me... it always brightens up my day when I hear from you. Do you overindulge at Thanksgiving the way we do at Christmas? That is, eat till you think you will burst, then go to sleep and snore all afternoon while the "wimmin" do the washing up? Hahah. It's a tradition in my family!
said missjane111
Hi Sam, I really appreciate your comment for my dog, Kyra, at Pets POTD last week; especially from someone who takes great photos natures wonders, like the hummingbird! Best regards, DJ
said DJManalo
Hi!! Thank you for you kind messages left of my POTD, shawls! Take care, Regina
said jdfugatini
Thank you kindly for your wonderful words on my "Spiral Stairs" photo. I was pleasantly suprised to see in was the POTD in Entertainment!!
said MsElanna
Dear Sam, Thank you very much for your kind comments on my album "Black & White" and thank you for congrats, your visit and your comments are very much appreciated, best regards. Dalia
said didoo115
hi Sam - thanks so much for all your lovely comments. Hope you and your family are all well. Have a lovely weekend, God bless you, Ingrid
said ingrid7014
Thank you kindly for yor comment on my POTD in Home and Garden. It was such a lovely surprise to be chosen. Greetings from Canada.
said mariancorcoran
Thanks for the nice comment on my Bridge pictures! I have added several this year, but wanted to do more. Minor health problems have slowed me up. We wanted to do more Indiana, maybe next year.
said waltdaniels
Hi, Sam, Many thanks for all of your wonderful comments on my albums on Audubon Park in winter (Dec. 2007) and on the village of Cadouin, in southwestern France (May 2009). You raise an interesting question about the work involved in maintaining and repairing those old French village buildings -- I wish that I knew an answer. As for the "halo" around the man's head, it was indeed probably a lamp, or perhaps a mirror reflecting light from outdoors. The "halo" shape was one of those things that never occurred to me at the time but that I noticed in the picture itself later on and found fun. I fully share your love of the Southern live oaks (or water oaks) and was hugely relieved that most of them survived the devastating flooding that followed Hurricane Katrina. We are very fortunate in that rows of them stand just half a block from our home, helping to shade the neighborhood, muffle noise, and provide character. I hope that autumn weather is still kind to you -- and that you are enjoying a splendid week! --Warm wishes, Rebecca
said green298
Hi Sam - Thanks for the comments in my albums. I appreciate your looking at them. Its always nice ot get comments and to know that others are enjoying the pics we take.
said _marymarg
Hi Sam, do you have your album messages turned off? I tried to leave a few messages and could not. Hope you are doing well - we're getting Fall now and frosts at night - will be taking photos of snow scenes soon. - Best regards, DeeAnne
said missdee101
Hi Samohsong, Thanks for your kind words and support. Have a wonderful day!Regards! Alex from Canada
said alextam100
Please login to post here.