الأحد، 12 مايو 2013

☆شماغ وتنورة☆ *UNITED STATES*_* 36





إن عشت ياراسي كسيتك عمامه...أناهيك...وإن مت ياراسي فدتك العمايم


عندما أموت ..... لا أريد سوا أن تـدفنوني في وطني سـوريا .... وأن تكتبو على شاهدة قبري : لم أعد مغترباً

 
Region: North America
Area Total: 9,826,675km2
Coast Line: Pacific and Atlantic Oceans
Capital: Washington DC
 
 
 
Alabama Capitol Building
 
 
Birmingham,Alabama
 
 
Montgomery, Alabama
 
 
Mobile Alabama harbor
 
 
Downtown Huntsville, Alabama
 
 
Alabama Swamp
 
 
Legacy of the tornadoes, 27 April in the town Magnolia Terrace in Athens, Alabama
 
 
Boll Weevill Monument
The Boll Weevil Monument in downtown Enterprise, Alabama, United States is a prominent landmark and tribute erected by the citizens of Enterprise in 1919 to show their appreciation to an insect, the boll weevil, for its profound influence on the area's agriculture and economy. Hailing the beetle as a "herald of prosperity," it stands as the world's only monument built to honor an agricultural pest.
 
 
 
 
 
Bryant Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Alabama
 
 
Harrison Plaza at the University of North Alabama in Florence. The school was chartered as LaGrange College by the Alabama Legislature in 1830
 
 
Carolyn Blount Theatre-Montgomery
 
 
Vulcan on top of Red Mountain in Vulcan Park-Alabama
 
 
Recall at LaGrange College
The LaGrange College was founded in 1830 and burned down during the civil war of Northern States troops. Each year, this event is an occasion taken a Civil War re-enactors hold.
Including the old fire (really original) muskets ...
 
 
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Shoe Tree in Cherokee, Alabama

In the U.S., there are about 80 so-called "Shoe Trees". These are trees, on whose branches are no longer used shoes to be hanged. Very democratically everyone can participate and everyone can also get shoes hanging down there.
Here are relatively close (about 100 km) is such a Shoe Tree, in Cherokee on Highway 72, near the border with Mississippi.
there was and finally have my old sneakers that have become holes in the soles, hung on the tree.
good 10 years I had them, and they have so few done with at this time. More comfortable and more durable shoes I rarely had, so I did not want to just throw it in the trash. So that's the trip to the Shoe Tree in Cherokee - a fitting final resting place, I think.

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