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  • Framed by the last of summers vibrant green trees we see a pavement level view down Brooke Street
    A Look Down Brooke Street in Nicole ...jpg
  • A Majestic Residence in the Wentzville - New Melle Area
    Autumn New Melle Home.jpg
  • Proud Kevin.jpg
  • 4736 Francis St. Wentzville, Missouri (Corner View)
    4736 Francis Street - Corner View.jpg
  • Located at 4612 Hwy Z in New Melle, Missouri, Seven Stones offers a relaxed, intimate atmosphere for the enjoyment of rare and exceptional wines from around the world. They are located in an old school house built in the 1800's by German settlers in New Melle, MO. The old school house was recently renovated and re-opened this summer as a wine garden that is committed to preserving the rich German heritage of New Melle.
    Seven Stones Wine Garden.jpg
  • Blue skies cover the home at 4754 Jacob Lane in New Melle, Missouri on the late autumn afternoon
    4754 Jacob Lane.jpg
  • A festive Autumn Scene at 4811 Brooke St. in New Melle, Missouri
    4811 Brooke St Wentzville.jpg
  • 4736 Francis St. Wentzville, Missouri (Side View)
    4736 Francis Street - Side View.jpg
  • 4736 Francis St. Wentzville, Missouri (Front View)
    4736 Francis Street - Front View.jpg
  • A view from the curb waiting on the postman at 4754 Jacob Lane in Wentzville, Missouri
    Mail at 4754 Jacob Ln.jpg
  • A sunny and warm summer day at an Iowa Farm highlighting the rural beauty and the calm of a country life.
    Summer Iowa Farm.jpg
  • Kevin Peeks From The Shadows.jpg
  • Kevin Peacock Soaking Up Sun.jpg
  • 4301 Dianna Lane, Wentzville, MO 63385, USA
    4301 Dianna Lane.jpg
  • A View from the Lawn.jpg
  • Well, the view from the backyard is still a Winter Wonderland. If your wondering where that new nice contrasting black fence came from, it was Tri-County Fence & Deck!
    339A3902.jpg
  • A Soft Yellow Dandelion In The Lawn
    Dandy Yellow.jpg
  • The quintessential early bird, American Robins are common sights on lawns across North America, where you often see them tugging earthworms out of the ground. Robins are popular birds for their warm orange breast, cheery song, and early appearance at the end of winter. Though they're familiar town and city birds, American Robins are at home in wilder areas, too, including mountain forests and Alaskan wilderness.
    Robin at Sunrise.jpg
  • Yes even a robin can have some majesty and prowess.<br />
<br />
The quintessential early bird, American Robins are common sights on lawns across North America, where you often see them tugging earthworms out of the ground. Robins are popular birds for their warm orange breast, cheery song, and early appearance at the end of winter. Though they're familiar town and city birds, American Robins are at home in wilder areas, too, including mountain forests and Alaskan wilderness. <br />
<br />
The American Robin or North American Robin is a migratory songbird of the thrush family. It is named after the European Robin because of its reddish-orange breast, though the two species are not closely<br />
<br />
A distinctive, potbellied bird. Forages on lawns and other areas of short vegetation for earthworms and other invertebrates in a run-and-stop pattern typical of terrestrial thrushes. Adult: depending on sex and subspecies, head, with white eye arcs, varies from jet black to gray, with white supercilia and throat, blackish lores and lateral throat stripe. Underparts vary, often in tandem with head color, from deep, rich reddish maroon to gray-scalloped, peachy orange. Males tend to be darker, females grayer, but overlap makes determining sex of many problematic.
    Majestic Robin Blues.jpg
  • Common Grackles are blackbirds that look like they've been slightly stretched. They're taller and longer tailed than a typical blackbird, with a longer, more tapered bill and glossy-iridescent bodies. Grackles walk around lawns and fields on their long legs or gather in noisy groups high in trees, typically evergreens. They eat many crops (notably corn) and nearly anything else as well, including garbage. In flight their long tails trail behind them, sometimes folded down the middle into a shallow V shape.
    IMG_3324.jpg
  • The Common Starling, also known as the European Starling or in the British Isles just the Starling, is a medium-sized passerine bird in the starling family Sturnidae.<br />
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First brought to North America by Shakespeare enthusiasts in the nineteenth century, European Starlings are now among the continent?s most numerous songbirds. They are stocky black birds with short tails, triangular wings, and long, pointed bills. Though they?re sometimes resented for their abundance and aggressiveness, they?re still dazzling birds when you get a good look. Covered in white spots during winter, they turn dark and glossy in summer. For much of the year, they wheel through the sky and mob lawns in big, noisy flocks.
    Starling On Lime Grass.jpg