Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths
Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths Color: Cream white to reddish brown. The Tree: Produces sweet sap used to make maple syrup. Matures at heights of 90-120 feet with a trunk 24-36”. The Wood: Figured with many small swirls resulting in circular ”eyes” separate from each other. Typical Uses: Furniture and accessories. Source Region: Northeastern USA & Canada.
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San Francisco Gate – In the saddling paddock before Saturday’s Grade 3, $100,000 Berkeley Stakes at Golden Gate Fields, trainer Bob Hess thought My Creed was the best-looking horse. Minutes later, My Creed proved to be the best horse on the track. With Guiding Hand
Horse racing: Hills team have a banker in the shape of Azeema
Guardian Unlimited – Eleven years on from partnering Shaamit to victory in the Derby, Michael Hills has to settle for Folkestone today. It’s something of a family affair, with five of his rides shared between two trainers, father Barry and brother John, and the former
Southern Takes All takes Heritage Place Futurity
ESPN.com – Off at near-even odds under jockey Larry Payne, the New Mexico-bred son of Southern Cartel beat Zoominatchya by 1\ lengths, with Furrtreeous another 3/4 of a length behind in the richest race of the track’s annual quarter horse meet, which ended
Read This: ‘Divisadero’
Seattle Post Intelligencer – into two parts — its shards jagged and dangerous, essential to each other to become whole. Ondaatje is a master at constructing breathtaking passages dropped in as casually as stars in a night sky; they range here from a mother’s burial to a horse
TheStar.com – Sports – The horse, the heiress and the golden hurdle
Toronto Star – ORANGEVILLE The wild lilac bushes lining the Mono Adjala Townline sway gently against warming spring breezes, a flowering welcome mat leading north from endless traffic speeding across Highway 9 and into a niche of Ontario’s horse country. A



June 3rd, 2007 at 11:20 pm
[...] Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths Color: Cream white to reddish brown. The Tree: Produces sweet sap used to make maple syrup. Matures at heights of 90-120 feet with a trunk 24-36”. The Wood: Figured with many small swirls resulting in circular ”eyes” separate from each other. Typical Uses: Furniture and […] [...]
June 4th, 2007 at 6:58 pm
[...] Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths Color: Cream white to reddish brown. The Tree: Produces sweet sap used to make maple syrup. Matures at heights of 90-120 feet with a trunk 24-36”. The Wood: Figured with many small swirls resulting in circular ”eyes” separate from each other. Typical Uses: Furniture and […] [...]
June 9th, 2007 at 5:43 am
[...] Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths Color: Cream white to reddish brown. The Tree: Produces sweet sap used to make maple syrup. Matures at heights of 90-120 feet with a trunk 24-36”. The Wood: Figured with many small swirls resulting in circular ”eyes” separate from each other. Typical Uses: Furniture and […] [...]
June 10th, 2007 at 2:45 am
[...] Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths Color: Cream white to reddish brown. The Tree: Produces sweet sap used to make maple syrup. Matures at heights of 90-120 feet with a trunk 24-36”. The Wood: Figured with many small swirls resulting in circular ”eyes” separate from each other. Typical Uses: Furniture and […] [...]
June 11th, 2007 at 10:03 am
[...] Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths Maple Birds Eye 4/4 S2S, various widths, various lengths Color: Cream white to reddish brown. The Tree: Produces sweet sap used to make maple syrup. Matures at heights of 90-120 feet with a trunk 24-36”. The Wood: Figured with many small swirls resulting in circular ”eyes” separate from each other. Typical Uses: Furniture and […] [...]
October 15th, 2007 at 4:00 am
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