Next forage images Forage through ImageFree's vast selection of free wallpapers for a unique, natural look. From lush meadows and wildflowers to rustic barns and country roads, you'll find the perfect wallpaper to bring the outdoors indoors.96...
Old plants disappeared and new plants arrived at a rapid rate, making any such efforts somewhat wasteful. Over time, the same kinds of plants began to establish on the neighboring parcels, growing voraciously and looking down on the second parcel with a mixture of nostalgia and disdain. Mission...
In the distance, stood white farm houses and barns with lipstick red roofs, stainless steel grain silos glinting in the setting sun. Neatly bundled bales of hay stood at equal distances, ready to be carted away. A massive harvester lay still at the far end, like a slumbering diplodocus,...
He turns his camera eye and nimble mind on the natural world: field, forest, and hillside; river, lake, and seascape, but he focuses too on the human community: the parades, festivals and farmers markets in towns and villages, the work and play of farmers and fishermen; the climbers cele...
being creative and capturing the beauty of nature. Her favorite subjects include, but are not limited to: birds of prey (bald eagles, hawks, osprey, owls, and falcons), small birds, mammals, amphibians, reptiles, butterflies, waterfalls, landscapes, bridges, old buildings and barns, and ...
Sumter was a small crossroads community in Sumter County, just north of Smithville; it had a post office from 1884-1954. [It may have also been known as Sumter City]. It could just as well have been known as Webb, as the Webb family was in the area by circa 1825 and John Ronaldson...