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we're not kids anymore.
todays bird
Monterey Bay Aquarium

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Sweet Seals For You, Always

@theartofmadeline
$LAYYYTER
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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Claire Keane

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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
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@spinneroo
雨の青石畳通り// Rainy Blue Stone Paved Street
1980S REIMAGINED LOGOS x
Tony Hawk as Larry David for Halloween
Galaxie 500
Herbert James "Burt" Munro
Herbert James "Burt" Munro (Bert in his youth; 25 March 1899 – 6 January 1978) was a New Zealand motorcycle racer, famous for setting an under-1,000 cc world record, at Bonneville, 26 August 1967.[2] This record still stands; Munro was 68 and was riding a 47-year-old machine when he set his last record.
Working from his home in Invercargill, he spent 20 years to highly modify the 1920 Indian motorcycle that he had bought that same year. Munro set his first New Zealand speed record in 1938 and later set seven more. He travelled to compete at the Bonneville Salt Flats, attempting to set world speed records. During his ten visits to the salt flats, he set three speed records, one of which still stands.
His efforts, and success, are the basis of the motion picture The World's Fastest Indian (2005), starring Anthony Hopkins, and an earlier 1971 short documentary film Burt Munro: Offerings to the God of Speed, both directed by Roger Donaldson
Fred Gwynne and Yvonne De Carlo - The Munsters, 60s