Retired
This user is no longer active on Wikipedia.
Welcome!
I live in Bishop, California in the Sierra Nevada Mountain range.

Facts:

  • Birth location: Ireland
  • Age: 18
  • Favorite Food: Carrot or Lettuce
  • Favorite Sport: Baseball
  • Interests: Politics, Baseball
  • Favorite Trip: Lake Tahoe (yearly)
  • Edit Count
  • SSP Up to Date: At Daily Digest January 18
3,100+This user has made more than 3,100 contributions to Wikipedia.
fr-2Cet utilisateur peut contribuer avec un niveau intermédiaire en français.
This user is a cat lover.
VThis user is a vegetarian.


This user eats apples.
This user eats bananas.
This user loves oranges.
This user loves to eat pineapples.
This user eats watermelon.
This user loves eating carrots.
This user eats green beans.
This user loves to eat cucumbers.
This user eats potatoes.
This user eats salad.
This user eats spinach.
This user eats candy corn.
This user likes pie.
This user likes Ice cream.
This user is interested in law.
This user enjoys filmmaking.
This user enjoys pottery.
This user is interested in politics.
This user wants to stop
global warming.

Today's motto...
Memento mori
("Remember your mortality")


Nominate one today!

Nave and font of Salisbury Cathedral
Salisbury Cathedral is a Church of England cathedral in the city of Salisbury in Wiltshire, England. Built in early English Gothic style, it was constructed between 1220 and 1258. This photograph, taken in 2014, shows the interior of the cathedral, looking eastwards towards the high altar through the tall and narrow nave. It has three levels: a tall pointed arcade, an open gallery, and a small clerestory. In the foreground is an unconventional modern baptismal font, installed in September 2008. Designed by the water sculptor William Pye, it is the largest working font in any British cathedral. The font is cruciform in shape, and has a 10-foot-wide (3.0 m) vessel filled to its brim with water, designed so that the water overflows in filaments through each corner into bronze gratings embedded in the cathedral's stone floor.Photograph credit: David Iliff