Červen 2007

kolorizace, jen tak pro radost

30. června 2007 v 22:33 | Věra Žmolíková |  soutěže
kolorizace
Tak to je kolorizace kterou jsem si vykolorizovala, dám sem ještě černobílý obrázek, který můžete vykolorizovat a poslat mi ho na vera.zmolikova@seznam.cz a já ho dám do soutěže, která začne až bude min. 5 zájemců.
kolorizace

další statistiky

30. června 2007 v 22:20 | Věra Žmolíková |  toplist
Návštěvy za den (graf)
0
00
0
00
0
00
0
00
0
00
0
00
0
00
0
00
0
00
0
00
0
00
1
41
0
00
3
643
1
11
2
22
0
00
0
00
1
11
3
173
6
446
5
155
0
40
0
00
01234567891011121314151617181920212223
Dnes 22 lidí. Celkem od 19.05.2007: 1077 lidí.
Návštěv - Návštěvy (22) ... Zhlénutí - Zhlédnutí (152)
Návštěvy za den (tabulka)
ČasNávštěvyReloadZhlédnutí
0:00-1:00000
1:00-2:00000
2:00-3:00000
3:00-4:00000
4:00-5:00000
5:00-6:00000
6:00-7:00000
7:00-8:00000
8:00-9:00000
9:00-10:00000
10:00-11:00000
11:00-12:00134
12:00-13:00000
13:00-14:0036164
14:00-15:00101
15:00-16:00202
16:00-17:00000
17:00-18:00000
18:00-19:00101
19:00-20:0031417
20:00-21:0063844
21:00-22:0051015
22:00-23:00044
23:00-24:00000
Celkem:22130152
Celkem od 19.05.2007: 1077 lidí.

diplomy 26

30. června 2007 v 22:03 | Věra Žmolíková |  bleskovky
aragorn

diplomy 25

30. června 2007 v 21:50 | Věra Žmolíková |  bleskovky
zuzka
éowyn

William Turner (ne z Pirátů z Karibiku)

30. června 2007 v 21:25 | Věra Žmolíková |  Ti, co mají rádi přírodu...
William Turner (c. 1508 - 7 July 1568) was a British ornithologist and botanist. He is sometimes called "the father of English botany" and the first ornithologist in the modern scientific spirit.
//<![CDATA[ if (window.showTocToggle) { var tocShowText = "show"; var tocHideText = "hide"; showTocToggle(); } //]]>
William Turner was born in Morpeth, Northumberland in or around 1508. His father was probably a tanner of the same name. He studied at Cambridge University, Pembroke Hall, from 1526 to 1533, where he received his B.A. in 1530 and his M.A. in 1533. He was a Fellow and Senior Treasurer of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge. While at Cambridge he published several works, including Libellus de re herbaria, in 1538. He spent much of his leisure in the careful study of plants which he sought for in their native habitat, and described with an accuracy hitherto unknown in England. He had nothing but contempt for earlier herbals which he described as "full of unlearned cacographies and falselye naminge of herbes."
During his time at Cambridge, Turner embraced the reformation, apparently under the influence of Hugh Latimer and Nicholas Ridley. In 1540, he began travelling about preaching until he was arrested. After his release, he went on to study medicine in Italy, at Ferrara and Bologna, from 1540 to 1542 and was incorporated M.D. at one of these universities.

[edit] Career

After completing his medical degree, he became physician to the Earl of Emden. Back in England he became Chaplain and physician to the Duke of Somerset, and through Somerset's influence he obtained ecclesiastical preferment. The position as Somerset's physician also led to practice among upper society. He was Prebend of Botevant in York Cathedral in 1550, and Dean of Wells Cathedral from 1551 to 1553. When Mary I of England acceded to the throne, Turner went into exile once again. From 1553 to 1558, he lived in Weißenburg in Bayern and supported himself as a physician. He became a Calvinist at this time, if not before.
After the succession of Elizabeth I of England in 1558, Turner returned to England, and was once again Dean of Wells Cathedral from 1560 to 1564. His attempts to bring the English church into agreement with the reformed churches of Germany and Switzerland led to his suspension for nonconformity in 1564. Turner died in London on 7 July 1568 at this home in Crutched Friars, in the City of London, and is buried in the Parish Church of St. Olave's in Hart Street. An engraved stone on the south-east wall of this church commemorates Turner. Thomas Lever, one of the great puritan preachers of the period, delivered the sermon at his funeral.
Quite early in his career, Turner became interested in natural history and set out to produce reliable lists of English plants and animals, which he published as Libellus de re herbaria in 1538. In 1544, Turner published Avium praecipuarum, quarum apud Plinium et Aristotelem mentio est, brevis et succincta historia, which not only discussed the principal birds and bird names mentioned by Aristotle and Pliny the Elder but also added accurate descriptions and life histories of birds from his own extensive ornithological knowledge. This is the first printed book devoted entirely to birds.
In 1545, Turner published The Rescuynge of the Romishe Fox, and in 1548, The Names of Herbes. In 1551, he published the first of three parts of his famous Herbal, on which his botanical fame rests.
A new herball, wherin are conteyned the names of herbes… (London: imprinted by Steven Myerdman and soolde by John Gybken, 1551) is the first part of Turner's great work; the second was published in 1562 and the third in 1568, both by Arnold Birckman of Cologne. These volumes gave the first clear, systematic survey of English plants, and with their admirable woodcuts (mainly copied from Leonhart Fuchs's 1542 De historia Stirpium) and detailed observations based on Turner's own field studies put the herbal on an altogether higher footing than in earlier works. At the same time, however, Turner included an account of their "uses and vertues," and in his preface admits that some will accuse him of divulging to the general public what should have been reserved for a professional audience. For the first time, a herbal was available in England in the vernacular, from which people could identify the main English plants without difficulty.
A New Book of Spiritual Physick was published in 1555. In 1562, Turner published the second part of his Herbal, dedicated to Sir Thomas Wentworth, son of the patron who had enabled him to go to Cambridge. This book was published by Arnold Birckman of Cologne, and included in the same binding Turner's treatise on baths. The third and last part of Turner's Herbal was published in 1568, in a volume that also contained revised editions of the first and second parts. This was dedicated to Queen Elizabeth. A New Boke on the Natures and Properties of all Wines, also published in 1568, had pharmacological intent behind it, as also the included Treatise of Triacle.
As a member of the nonconformist faction in the Vestments controversy Turner was famous for making an adulterer do public penance wearing a square cap and for teaching his dog to steal such caps from bishop's heads

Jaké ovoce nebo zeleninu máte najradši?

30. června 2007 v 21:20 | Věra Žmolíková |  ankety
Jaké ovoce nebo zeleninu máte najradši?

John Gould 2

30. června 2007 v 20:51 | Věra Žmolíková |  Ti, co mají rádi přírodu...
John Gould John Gould
John Gould (14 September 1804 - 3 February 1881) was an English ornithologist. The Gould League in Australia was named after him. His identification of Charles Darwin's finches was pivotal in the development of the theory of The Origin of Species.
Gould was born in Lyme Regis, Dorset, the son of a gardener and the boy probably had a scanty education. Shortly afterwards his father obtained a position on an estate near Guildford, Surrey, and then in 1818 became foreman in the Royal Gardens of Windsor. The young Gould started training as a gardener, being employed under his father at Windsor from 1818 to 1824, and he was subsequently a gardener at Ripley Castle in Yorkshire. He became an expert in the art of taxidermy and in 1824 he set himself up in business in London as a taxidermist, and his skill led to him becoming the first Curator and Preserver at the museum of the Zoological Society of London in 1827.
Gould's position brought him into contact with the country's leading naturalists, and also meant that he was often the first to see new collections of birds given to the Society. In 1830 a collection of birds arrived from the Himalayas, many not previously described. Gould published these birds in A Century of Birds from the Himalaya Mountains (1830-1832). The text was by Nicholas Aylward Vigors and the illustrations were lithographed by Gould's wife Elizabeth. This work was followed by four more in the next seven years including Birds of Europe in five volumes - completed in 1837, with the text written by Gould himself, edited by his clerk Edwin Prince. Some of the illustrations were made by Edward Lear as part of his Illustrations of the Family of Psittacidae in 1832. Lear however was in financial difficulty and he sold the entire set of lithographs to Gould. The books were published in a very large size, imperial folio, with magnificent coloured plates. Eventually 41 of these volumes were published with about 3000 plates. They appeared in parts at £3 3s. a number, subscribed for in advance, and in spite of the heavy expense of preparing the plates, Gould succeeded in making his ventures pay and in realizing a fortune.
When Charles Darwin presented his mammal and bird specimens collected during the Voyage of the Beagle to the Geological Society of London at their meeting on 4 January 1837, the bird specimens were given to Gould for identification. He set aside his paying work and at the next meeting on 10 January reported that birds from the Galápagos Islands which Darwin had thought were blackbirds, "gross-bills" and finches were in fact "a series of ground Finches which are so peculiar" as to form "an entirely new group, containing 12 species." This story made the newspapers. In March, Darwin met Gould again, learning that his Galápagos "wren" was another species of finch and the mockingbirds he had labelled by island were separate species rather than just varieties, with relatives on the South American mainland. Subsequently Gould advised that the smaller southern Rhea specimen that been had rescued from a Christmas dinner was a separate species which he named Rhea darwinii, whose territory overlapped with the northern rheas. Darwin had not bothered to label his finches by island, but others on the expedition had taken more care. He now sought specimens collected by captain Robert FitzRoy and crewmen. From them he was able to establish that the species were unique to islands, an important step on the development of his theory of evolution. Gould's work on the birds was published between 1838 and 1842 in five numbers as Part 3 of Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle, edited by Charles Darwin.
In 1838 the Goulds sailed to Australia intending to study the birds of that country and be the first to produce a major work on the subject. They took with them the collector John Gilbert. They arrived in Tasmania in September, making the acquaintance of the governor Sir John Franklin and his wife. Gould and Gilbert collected on the island. In February 1839 Gould sailed to Sydney, leaving his pregnant wife with the Franklins. He travelled to his brother-in-law's station at Yarrundi, spending his time searching for bowerbirds in the Liverpool Range. In April he returned to Tasmania for the birth of his son. In May he sailed to Adelaide to meet Charles Sturt, who was preparing to lead an expedition to the Murray River. Gould collected in the Mount Lofty range, the Murray Scrubs and Kangaroo Island, returning again to Hobart in July. He then travelled with his wife to Yarrundi. They returned home to England in May 1840.
Platypus: illustration from John Gould's The mammals of Australia (1845-1863). Platypus: illustration from John Gould's The mammals of Australia (1845-1863).
The result of the trip was The Birds of Australia (1840-1848) - see selected digitised images from the published work. It included a total of 600 plates in seven volumes, 328 of which were new to science and named by Gould. He also published A Monograph of the Macropodidae, or Family of Kangaroos (1841-1842) and The Mammals of Australia (1849-1861) - see selected digitised images from the published work.
After his wife's death in 1841 Gould's books used illustrations by a number of artists, including Henry Constantine Richter and Joseph Wolf.
Throughout his professional life Gould had a strong interest in hummingbirds. He accumulated a collection of 320 species, which he exhibited at the Great Exhibition of 1851. Despite his interest Gould had never seen a live hummingbird. In May 1857 he travelled to the United States with his second son Charles. He arrived in New York too early in the season to see hummingbirds in that city, but on 21 May 1857 in Bartram's Gardens in Philadelphia he finally saw his first live bird, a Ruby-throated Hummingbird. He then continued to Washington D.C. where he saw large numbers in the gardens of the Capitol. Gould attempted to return to England with live specimens, but not being aware of the conditions necessary to keep them they only lived for two months at most. Gould published: A Monograph of the Trochilidae or Humming Birds with 360 plates (1849-61); The Mammals of Australia (1845-63), Handbook to the Birds of Australia (1865), The Birds of Asia (1850-83), The Birds of Great Britain (1862-73) and The Birds of New Guinea and the adjacent Papuan Islands (1875-88).
The Gould League, founded in Australia in 1909, was named after him. This organisation gave many Australians their first introduction to birds, along with more general environmental and ecological education. One of its major sponsors was the Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union, also known as Birds Australia.
His son Charles Gould was notable as geological surveyor.

hodnocení pro golradira vardamira

30. června 2007 v 20:25 | Věra Žmolíková |  Chceš ohodnotit blog?
1-Záhlaví ----hezký, až na to, že mají Aragorn a Legolas jen půl hlavy...9b
2-Vzhled-Barvy ----super, vše k sobě ladí10b
3-Rubriky ----je jich hodně, ale chtěli by seřadit dle abecedy 8b
4-Text/články ----hodně článků, ale skoro vše okopírované z jiných blogů 6b
5-Přehlednost ----dobrá, ale chtelo by to seřadit ty rubriky dle abecedy 8b
6-Můj nazor na tvůj blog----máš dobrý blog, jen ty články by mohly být víc z tvojí hlavy
hodnocení- máš 41 bodů-známka 1

Petr Podpěra

30. června 2007 v 20:00 | Věra Žmolíková |  Ti, co mají rádi přírodu...
Pan Petr Podpěra se narodil 3. července 1938 v Praze. O ptáky se zajímal již od útlého mládí. Vliv na to měli asi místní ptáčkaři - čižbáři, ale je v tom snad i kus rodinného dědictví. Děda ze strany jubilantovy matky musel mít doma stále klec buď s čížkem nebo stehlíkem. V rodině se traduje, že na rukojeti kočárku malého Petra vždy seděla hrdlička, která ihned, jakmile se probudil, spustila poplach.
Jubilant se velice zasloužil o úspěšný rozvoj a práci známého pražského Klubu pěstitelů exotického ptactva (KPEP), který byl v roce 1930 založen čtyřmi nadšenci. Hlavním iniciátorem založení byl Zdeněk Veger. Podpěra byl členem KPEP od r.1966. Je možné, že ve skutečnosti to bylo dříve, protože po jistou dobu nebyli členové spolehlivě evidováni.
Dlouhá léta pracoval ve výboru KPEP, převážně v odborné komisi. Zastával funkci výrobního redaktora časopisu "Zpravodaj KPEP". Pilně přispíval svými odbornými články v různém tisku, od roku 1994 také do Fauny.
Jako jeden z prvních u nás se začal intenzivně věnovat fotografování ptáků. Výsledky jeho práce byly uveřejněny asi v 50 publikacích. Navrhl obálku pro první vydání monografie Milana Vašíčka "Agapornisové". Ilustroval také moji knihu "Chováme exotické ptactvo -- astrildovití pěvci", která vyšla v roce 1978 ve třetím vydání.
Svého jedinečného nadání využil při tvorbě návrhů na plakáty a katalogy pro výstavy ptáků konané pravidelně v Botanické zahradě v Praze - Na slupi. Vydal první adresář KPEP, pro který navrhl obálku. Za své zásluhy o přínos KPEP pro chovatelství se stal Petr Podpěra držitelem zlatého odznaku této organizace. Výbor ocenil jeho práci také tím, že mu udělil pohár Svatopluka Vlasáka, kterým jsou odměňováni nejlepší chovatelé v rámci této organizace. Jubilant je držitelem poháru pro nejlepšího chovatele euroasijských ptáků ze Světového šampionátu v Olomouci v roce 1980. Vstupní hala v Olomouci byla přepůlena panely, na kterých byly informační, dalo by se říci reklamně informační, tabule ČSCHDZ, které navrhl a také realizoval Petr Podpěra. Byla to náročná práce, která ani nebyla objednavatelem dostatečně oceněna. Celý hlavní sál byl vyplněn panely, na kterých byly vystaveny autorovy fotografie (ty byly také otištěny v katalogu výstavy).
V roce 1984 si přivezl ze Světového šampionátu, konaného v německém městě Pirmasens, bronzovou medaili.
Posuzovatelem exotického ptactva byl jmenován u nás v roce 1971. Za mezinárodního posuzovatele byl jmenován v roce 1975 a současně se stal také držitelem zlatého odznaku OMJ.
V 70. a začátkem 80. let se přihlásil za člena přední německé organizace chovatelů ptáků A-Z (Austauschzentrale), která má na 46 000 členů. Každý měsíc vydává obsáhlý časopis v exkluzivním provedení. Jsou v něm odborné články doplněné krásnými fotografiemi. Podrobně seznamuje s činností všech svých středisek o výstavách, o bodování, o změnách bodovacího systému, upozorňuje na připravované výstavy a zasedání řídících orgánů atd.
Petr Podpěra se věnuje intenzivně systematice ptáků, především astrildovitých pěvců (Estrildidae). O věci má přehled a znalosti a proto správně hodnotí současný stav této problematiky. Odmítá jednoznačně názvosloví publikované v knize "Atlas ptáků světa" (autor Gosler), která vyšla u nás před nedlouhou dobou. Názory autorů na třídění druhů a jejich pojmenování se často liší, ale sbližování názorů je žádoucí. Rozdílnost jmen nalézáme i v cizích názvoslovích (německém, anglickém aj.) právě tak, jako odlišné členění do rodů, druhů a zeměpisných forem.
S PANEM PETREM PODPĚROU SE ZNÁM OSOBNĚ, JSEM TAKÉ ČLENKA KPEP. TENTO ČLÁNEK NAPSAL PAN RUDOLF VÍT, KTERÉHO TAKÉ ZNÁM, K 65. NAROZENINÁM PANA PETRA PODPĚRY.
amada tříbarvá

John Gould

30. června 2007 v 19:49 | Věra Žmolíková |  Ti, co mají rádi přírodu...
JOHN GOULD 1804 - 1881
John Gould, the Bird Man, was the enterprising genius behind the creation of 2999 different hand­colored lithographic plates of birds and animals. He was born on September 14, 1804, at Lyme Regis on the Dorset coast in England. As the son of a gardener, Gould had no formal university training. He considered himself a self-made man. He gained his ornithological knowledge by observation and experience. Nevertheless his contributions to this science were so vast that in 1843 he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society.
Gould married Elizabeth Coxen in 1827. Elizabeth traveled and worked with Gould until her death in 1841. Shortly after their marriage, Gould, who was a skilled taxidermist, acquired a collection of bird skins from the hill country of the Himalayas, many of them new to Europe. After he stuffed and mounted them, he realized their artistic possibilities, and his new life as a bird illustrator began. Elizabeth helped to draw, lithograph, and color many of his first plates. Over the next 57 years Gould published more than forty large folio volumes. The first set appeared in 1831 and the last in 1888, seven years after Gould's death.
Scholars think that Gould himself did the original sketches for all the plates. Other artists - Elizabeth Gould, Edward Lear, Joseph Wolf, William Hart, and H.C. Richter ­ did most of the hand coloring and lithography. With the hummingbirds, which are naturally iridescent, gold or silver leaf was used under the watercolor to mirror their natural beauty. Richard Bowdler Sharp cooperated with Gould on his later works and supervised the completion of the works after Gould's death in 1881.
In his pursuit of new and different birds, John Gould traveled to Asia, Australia and the East Indies. His series of natural history plates is considered by many as the finest works of bird illustrations ever presented. His Hummingbirds, along with his Toucans and his Birds of Paradise, are generally most in demand by collectors, but his other works are the same exquisite quality.
The making of these prints was technically and artistically demanding. Gould's original sketches were transferred to stone with special pencils or chalk. They were printed by hand from the stones. Each print was hand-colored, and issued in small sets to subscribers only. As the prints were very expensive for their time, only a few hundred of the wealthiest people and institutions could afford them, accounting for their rarity today.

nápis pro Golradira

29. června 2007 v 22:24 | Věra Žmolíková |  ostatní
golradir

bleskovka 26

29. června 2007 v 20:00 | Věra Žmolíková |  bleskovky
kytička
  1. co je to za kytku?
  2. líbí se ti?
  3. napiš tady co nejvíce komentářů, min. 10 !
  4. přihlaš se i do bleskovky 25 tady!
  5. co chceš na diplom?

PIŠTE STÁLE DO REKORDU V KOMENTÁŘÍCH

29. června 2007 v 17:44 | Věra Žmolíková |  soutěže
Pište stále do rekordu v komentářích!!! --->tady<--- Kdo napíše 50 komentářů, dostane diplom!!!!!!!!

I-amar-prestar-aen.blog.cz

29. června 2007 v 17:11 | Věra Žmolíková |  ostatní
www.i-amar-prestar-aen.blog.cz je můj druhý blog! tak se prosím na něj podívejte!

Celine dion- mp3

29. června 2007 v 16:49 | Věra Žmolíková |  hudba
Celine Dion - All By Myself.mp3
Celine Dion - Aun Existe Amor.mp3
Celine Dion - Aun Existe Amor.mp3
Celine Dion - Ave Maria.mp3
Celine Dion - Because You Loved Me.mp3
Celine Dion - Because You Loved Me.mp3
Celine Dion - Because You Loved Me.mp3
Celine Dion - Because You Loved Me.mp3
Celine Dion - Fly.mp3
Celine Dion - God Bless America.mp3
Celine Dion - I Drove All Night (Album Versi...).mp3
Celine Dion - I Wish.mp3
Celine Dion - If You Asked Me To.mp3
Celine Dion - Im Your Angel (Video).mp3
Celine Dion - Immortality.mp3
Celine Dion - Je Ne Vous Oublie Pas.mp3
Celine Dion - Miracle.mp3
Celine Dion - Misled (Full House Mix).mp3
Celine Dion - My Heart Will Go On.mp3
Celine Dion - My Heart Will Go On.mp3
Celine Dion - My Heart Will Go On Remix.mp3
Celine Dion - The Power Of Love.mp3
Celine Dion - These Are The Special Times.mp3
Celine Dion - To Love You More.mp3
Celine Dion - You And I.mp3
Celine Dion and Peabo Bryson - Beauty And The Beast.mp3
Celine Dion and R.Kelly - Im Your Angel.mp3
Celine Dione - Because You Loved Me.mp3
Celine Toner - Celine.mp3
Celion Dion - Because You Loved Me.mp3

Enya-další mp3

29. června 2007 v 16:45 | Věra Žmolíková |  hudba
Enya - Braveheart Theme STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Watemark STÁHNOUT MP3

Enya - Boadicea STÁHNOUT MP3

Enya - Storms in Afrika STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Pilgrim STÁHNOUT MP3

Enya - It´s In The Rain STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - I want Tomorow STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Silver Inches STÁHNOUT MP3

Enya - Eclipse STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Flora´s Secret STÁHNOUT MP3

Enya - How Can I Keep from Singing STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Angel STÁHNOUT MP3

Enya - A Day Withou Rain STÁHNOUT MP3

Enya - Shepherd Moons STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Amid The Falling Snow STÁHNOUT MP3

Enya - Diamonds STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Caribbean Blue STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Book of days STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Exile STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Sail Away STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - May It Be STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Orinoco Flow STÁHNOUT MP3
Enya - Now we are Free STÁHNOUT MP3


nápis pro Zuzku 2

29. června 2007 v 12:14 | Věra Žmolíková |  ostatní
nápis


Hodnocení pro Zuzku

29. června 2007 v 11:51 | Věra Žmolíková |  Chceš ohodnotit blog?
1-Záhlaví ----zajímavé, protože je to můj ptáček :-) 10b
2-Vzhled-Barvy ---- moc barev, neladí k sobě 5b
3-Rubriky ---- jen jedna, ale dost obsažená 6b
4-Text/články ----zajímavé a inspirůjící pro ostatní lidi 10b
5-Přehlednost ----dobrá 10b
6-Můj nazor na tvůj blog----máš dobrý blog, dobré články, ale chtělo by to víc rubrik a něco s tou barvou.
hodnocení- 41bodů- známka 1