Welcome to this bilingual (Swedish-English) group blog by family members living on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, "the pond". Our interests range from the scientific to the eclectic, including gourmet food, horses, art and literature, computers, species in nature, history and iron, and photography. Three generations are posting here.
Third snapshot from my walk home from the post office, playing with my Loreo lens. The apples almost get a three dimensional feeling with the added "flavor" of the lens. All natural C.R.A.P™! ;)
/O.K
(Listening to while posting: Jack Johnson - Inaudible melodies)
9 comments:
Those C.R.A.P.py apples looks great! Like a Dutch painting, ready to be eaten. I love it! Send me a larger version by e-mail for my screensaver.
I also think this is a record for number of parenthesis in a blog post title! Eight.
"I also think this is a record for number of parenthesis in a blog post title! Eight."
But how many headlines do they make possible? ;)
I wonder if crap apples are related to crab apples?
These crapples are more related to common apples than crab apples (I had to look crab apples up, didn't know it meant 'vildapel'), but who knows? There might be a whole subspecies of crapples. Sour, rotten and juicy! ;)
mmmm, crappy, I likey it(y)
Jag gillar äppelbilden
Have you heard the story about the Swedish moose eating all the apples that had fallen down and then walking around drunk on the road? The apples had fermented on the ground, and had a pretty high alcohol content.
Crab apples are not wild apples. Crab apples are commonly grown in gardens for their spring flowers and small little apple-like fruits that you can make marmalade out of. I don't know the Swedish name, but it is not vildapel. Maybe 'kvitten'?
Vildapel, Malus sylvestris. Crab apple, Malus coronaria. Or?
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