
For A Photo a Week: afar.
More photos illustrating afar can be found here.




The theme for Cee’s Black & White Photo Challenge this week is birds. I’ve decided to go with selective colour although in the last picture of the Canada goose it was difficult to find any colour in the animal itself.
Here are more monochrome photos of birds.



Rain threatening from above while I look up from below.
Nancy’s A Photo a Week prompted from below. For more photos from below click here.

Not Lost in Translation but lost in details is Paula’s prompt this week for the Thursday Special.
More lost details or photos lost in details can be found here.


This group of teenage gosslings caught my eye yesterday. They’re obviously siblings and haven’t yet learned to scare others away when there is food around.
For Cee’s Odd Ball Challenge. For more oddballs click here.


Ladenburg was called Lopodunum in Roman times and an important town in the region. Many streets were named to remember this past. Some of the street signs come with explanations.

Titus Vlavius Vespasianus was Emperor when the first wooden fort was built.

During the time of Emperor Domitian the fort was rebuilt in stone.

Emperor Trajan elevated Lopodunum to a town and is considered the founder.
Decimus Magnus Ausonius was a Roman poet from Burdigala (Bordaux, France) in the 4th century. In his poem Mosella Lopodunum was mentioned for the first time in a literary text.

Emperor Hadrian ordered the limes in this region built, to safeguard the Roman settlements.

There were to men called Januarius documented in Ladenburg, a decurio (soldier) and a magister pagi (a town official).

Mithras was a Persian, later Roman sun god. A stone relief depicting him was found in Ladenburg.
For Cee’s Which Way Photo Challenge. More photos of streets, alleys, paths, avenues, and street signs can be found here.






Cee is asking for monochrome animals this week. For more animals click on Cee’s Black & White Photo Challenge

This war memorial – commemorating the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/71 – stands in front of the St Laurentius Church in Weinheim. As in many towns all over Germany, memorials went up to celebrate this particular war and Kaiser Wilhelm I. A German historian talked of this as the epidemic of monuments brought forth by Germany’s boastful besottedness with national ideals (file:///C:/Users/nukman/AppData/Local/Temp/12240-21601-1-PB.pdf) and I am not at all fond of these glorifications of war.
There is a humorous side note to this particular one. Johann Wilhelm Goos, a miller in town, was considered to be the epitome of manhood and chosen to be the model for the charging soldier. He later emigrated to America with his family, where he became wealthy. To this day, descendants of Johann Goos come to Weinheim and want to see what their ancestor looked like.
This is a more comprehensive look of the church overlooking the market square.

For A Photo a Week Challenge: Light the Night. More lit up nights can be found here.