This is the largest JW Marriot with more than 917 rooms . Located at San Anonio, texas. I also learned that San Antonio has the largest water park and Roller Coaster in the world . This was told by our Cabbie he was very proud of San Antonio. San Antonio happens to be the largest military base too. We could see so many marines in our flight from Dallas to San Antonio.
Posts Tagged ‘canon eos 7d’
JW Marriott San Antonio Hill Country Resort & Spa
March 24th, 2011Red Sweet William Macro
March 1st, 2011Dianthus Barbatus/Sweet Willaim flower macro.. Shot this in our complex garden yesterday .
Dianthus barbatus (Sweet William) is a species of Dianthus native to the mountains of southern Europe from the Pyrenees east to the Carpathians and the Balkans, with a variety disjunct in northeastern China, Korea, and southeasternmost Russia.The plant’s common name, “Sweet William”, refers to William of Marlborough, Duke Cumberland. Due to Cumberland’s victory at the battle of Culloden and his generally brutal treatment of the king’s enemies, Irish and Scots sometimes refer to the flower as “Stinking Billy”. More en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dianthus_barbatus
Uploaded by Swami Stream on 28 Feb 11, 3.39PM IST.
Tara – Bronze Wall Mounting Statue
April 5th, 2010
Tara , originally uploaded by Swami Stream.
We brought this Bronze Tara wall mounting statue as gift for our anniversary.
Tara (Sanskrit: तारा, tārā) or Ārya Tārā, also known as Jetsun Dolma (Tibetan language:rje btsun sgrol ma) in Tibetan Buddhism, is a female Bodhisattva in Mahayana Buddhism who appears as a female Buddha in Vajrayana Buddhism. She is known as the “mother of liberation”, and represents the virtues of success in work and achievements. In Japan she is known as Tarani Bosatsu, and little-known as Tuoluo in Chinese Buddhism.
ārā is also known as a saviouress, as a heavenly deity who hears the cries of beings experiencing misery in samsara.
The Tārā figure originated not in Buddhism but in Hinduism, where she, Tārā, was one of a number of Mother Goddess figures alongside Sarasvati, Lakshmi, Parvati, and Shakti. In the 6th century C.E., during the era of the Pala Empire, Tārā was adopted into the Buddhist pantheon as an important bodhisattva figure just a few centuries after the Prajnaparamita Sutra had been introduced into what was becoming the Mahayana Buddhism of India. It would seem that the feminine principle makes its first appearance in Buddhism as the “Mother of Perfected Wisdom” and then later Tārā comes to be seen as an expression of the compassion of perfected wisdom. However, sometimes Tārā is also known as “the Mother of the Buddhas”, which usually refers to the enlightened wisdom of the Buddhas, so in approaching Buddhist deities, one learns not to impose totally strict boundaries about what one deity covers, as opposed to another deity.
They all can be seen as expressions of the play of the energies of manifested form dancing out of vast emptiness. Be that as it may, Tārā began to be associated with the motherly qualities of compassion and mercy. Undoubtedly for the common folk who were Buddhists in India of that time, Tārā was a more approachable deity. It is one thing to stare into the eyes of a deity who represents wisdom as void. It is perhaps easier to worship a goddess whose eyes look out with infinite compassion and who has a sweet smile.
Tārā then became very popular as an object of worship and was becoming an object of Tantric worship and practice by the 7th century C.E. With the movement and cross-pollination of Indian Buddhism into Tibet, the worship and practices of Tārā became incorporated into Tibetan Buddhism. Independent of whether she is classified as a deity, a Buddha or a bodhisattva, Tārā remains very popular in Tibet and Mongolia. And as Ms. Getty notes, one other reason for her popularity was that Tārā became to be known as a Buddhist deity who could be appealed to directly by lay folk without the necessity or intervention of a lama or monk. Thus, as Tārā was accepted into the ranks of Buddhist bodhisattvas, she became popular to both common folk as one to appeal to in daily life, and for monastics, as an entry way into understanding compassion and mercy as part of one’s evolving path within Buddhism.
More on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tara_(Buddhism)
Uploaded by Swami Stream on 5 Apr 10, 7.50AM IST.
Tiger Balm Oil
March 30th, 2010Random shots testing my new camera . I am still learning how to use it better.
Uploaded by Swami Stream on 30 Mar 10, 3.33PM IST.
Music Shop
March 25th, 2010Shot of the musical shop in Millennia Walk Singapore
Uploaded by Swami Stream on 23 Mar 10, 11.32PM IST.
The Fullerton Hotel
March 25th, 2010This was the old Post office that has now become a premium Hotel in SIngapore opposite the famous Merlion .
The Fullerton Building was named after Robert Fullerton, the first Governor of the Straits Settlements (1826-1829).Commissioned in 1919 as part of the British colony’s centennial celebrations, the building was designed as an office building by Major P.H. Keys of Keys & Dowdeswell, a Shanghai firm of architects, which won the project through an architectural design competition.
The Fullerton Building was opened on 27 June 1928 by the Governor, Sir Hugh Clifford, who suggested the building be named after Robert Fullerton. The building had five founding tenants: the General Post Office, The Exchange, Singapore Club (now Singapore Town Club), the Marine Department, and the Import and Export Department (later the Ministry of Trade and Industry). It also housed the Chamber of Commerce, and various government departments dealing with agriculture, fisheries and forestry.The General Post Office (GPO) was the anchor tenant, which only moved in a fortnight after the Fullerton Building’s official opening.
In 1997, Sino Land (Hong Kong) Company Ltd, a sister company of Far East Organization, acquired the Fullerton Building from the Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA). It spent close to another S$300 million converting Fullerton Building into a hotel and building the two-storey commercial complex One Fullerton opposite Fullerton Road. Renovation works on the Fullerton Building were completed on 8 December 2000. The Fullerton Hotel Singapore was officially opened by then Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong on 1 January 2001
Uploaded by Swami Stream on 25 Mar 10, 3.26PM IST.
View from Uniworld Garden
March 10th, 2010I had taken this shot a while back and was playing with raw when i got this effect . Its something I have never got before with BW shots . This is the shot from by Balcony in Gurgaon
Uploaded by Swami Stream on 10 Mar 10, 8.58PM IST.
Esplanade view of Business District
March 6th, 2010Shot this from Esplanade in Singapore.The business district in the backdrop.
Uploaded by Swami Stream on 6 Mar 10, 9.53AM IST.
Marina Bay
March 3rd, 2010Shot of the bridge on the Marina bay on the Singapore River . I shot this from the Esplanade side during my singapore visit
Uploaded by Swami Stream on 1 Mar 10, 7.47PM IST.








