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Front Yard - Brick Pavers
SHE SPENT HER WHOLE FIRST YEAR IN THE WNBA JUST TO BE BENCHED THEN HER FIRST GAME ON HER OFF SEASON TEAM SHE HURTS HER KNEE IM DONE
HER SCREAMS BROKE SOMETHING IN ME
PRAYING FOR NIKA’S RECOVERY RN
To cool down!!! #sundaychill #seattle https://www.instagram.com/p/BygoF90nlgH-dwKKoxronJok_GrUEABwZ_MjTk0/?igshid=b3qpcvzbl8rg
Seattle Modern Exterior An illustration of a mid-sized, minimalist, two-story metal house with a green roof.
Craftsman Patio Seattle Large backyard stone patio fountain idea with a gazebo and a craftsman style
Enclosed - Living Room Inspiration for a mid-sized enclosed medium tone wood floor and wallpaper living room remodel with gray walls, a standard fireplace, a brick fireplace and a wall-mounted tv
Dining Room in Seattle An illustration of a sizable, traditional, enclosed dining room with beige walls and no fireplace and a medium-tone wood floor.
Morning blowjobs are now part of our routine and expected. I usually relax and drink my coffee while my baby worships me, and I enjoy rubbing her back and neck, playing with her hair. It isn't important that I finish, as my baby doesn't have a large enough throat to take me entirely, but it is important that her mouth is on my cock every morning.
Would you like that wife?
Slut hotwives! Let him watch, that's HALF the fun, take pictures/videos. You look beautiful 😉
Has it really? Please tell me about it newly minted hotwife 🔥
Example of a mid-sized trendy blue two-story concrete fiberboard exterior home design with a shingle roof
Add my kik and send me naughty pics l, messages asks anything naughty really 😉 sluttyjaz2000
Phytoplankton are more than just nature’s watercolors: They’re tiny ocean organisms that play a key role in Earth’s climate by removing heat-trapping carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis. These tiny organisms live in the oceans, absorbing carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen, like plants on land. Earth’s oceans absorb about half of the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which feeds phytoplankton.
This year, phytoplankton blooms popped up in the panhandle region of Alaska and along the coast of British Columbia slightly later in the year than the main blooms that tend to occur in May.
This image was acquired on July 21, 2018, by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on our Terra satellite and shows milky blue waters near Prince of Wales Island. The discoloration is thought to be caused by a bloom of non-toxic phytoplankton known as coccolithophores, specifically Emiliania huxleyi, which like warm, stratified, and low nutrient conditions.
This week, our Export Processes in the Ocean from Remote Sensing (EXPORTS) team is shipping out into the open ocean to study these important organisms, sailing 200 miles west from Seattle into the northeastern Pacific Ocean.
Read more about the image and learn more about the EXPORTS campaign here: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2018/expedition-probes-ocean-s-smallest-organisms-for-climate-answers
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.