PHOTO ALBUM - ADDED FROM JULY 29, 2013 TO AUGUST 5, 2013
HOME » PHOTO ALBUM » ADDED FROM: JULY 29, 2013 TO AUGUST 5, 2013
Late night swimming
×Late night swimming
Various family members decided to take a swim late at night at the rented lake house
TC animals
×TC animals
Kelley hangs out in the basement of DJ's dad's house with the animals.
Kelley and Bo
×Kelley and Bo
Kelley loves on the dogs at my dad's house in TC.
Promotion cake
×Promotion cake
The cake for DJ's SNCO Induction ceremony. It was a really nice ceremony and a delicious cake.
Dribble face
×Dribble face
Dribble stares up at DJ while he takes a picture
Promotion goodies
×Promotion goodies
Some stuff that DJ got as a result of being selected for promotion
Promotion cupcake
×Promotion cupcake
The cupcakes that were available for the promotion party to MSgt
Cat is a dog?
×Cat is a dog?
Our cat, Bonus, is lays in the dog's kennel, so when he did we had to get a picture
Superbowl
×Superbowl
The big screen in our living room during the Super Bowl
Upgrading the PC
×Upgrading the PC
DJ spent Christmas day upgrading his computer with the new awesome parts he got for Christmas. He likes doing this.
SS Ayrfield
×SS Ayrfield
Homebush Bay in Sydney, Australia is home to the remnants of a ship-breaking yard that operated during the mid 20th-century. Large watercraft that outlived their usefulness were towed to Homebush Bay and dismantled to salvage any components that could be reused or sold for scrap.
One such ship was the SS Ayrfield, a 1,140-tonne behemoth built in 1911 as a steam collier that was later used during WWII as a transport ship. In 1972 it was brought to Homebush Bay to be dismantled, but fate would decide differently. Operations at the ship-breaking yard subsequently ceased and parts of several large vessels including the Ayrfield were left behind, the largest objects in an area now infamous for decades of chemical dumping and pollution. But only this century-old transport ship would be transformed by time into a floating forest, a peculiar home for trees and other vegetation that have since sprouted over the last few decades.