• House Sit Europe Trip
  • House Sit Europe Trip

House Sit Adventure

We are off exploring ! Leggi altro
  • Beauly Priory

    8 maggio 2025, Scozia ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

    There are many references to the Priory in Outlander. Beauly Priory was founded around 1230 by monks of the Valliscaulian order. They came from their mother house in Burgundy, in France, and settled beside the Beauly River, at the place where it enters the Beauly Firth.

    They were invited to do so by the lord, Sir John Bisset. And there their successors lived for the next 300 years, until the Protestant Reformation of 1560 brought their cloistered and contemplative life to an abrupt end. Today their legacy lives on, in their pretty, tree-fringed abbey church, the priory is now roofless but otherwise largely intact. It’s a very calm and serene place.
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  • Urquhart Castle on Loch Ness

    17 maggio 2025, Scozia ⋅ ☀️ 13 °C

    Once one of Scotland’s largest castles, Urquhart saw great conflict during its 500 years as a medieval fortress. Control of the castle passed back and forth between the Scots and English during the Wars of Independence. The power struggles continued, as the Lords of the Isles regularly raided both castle and glen up until the 1500s.

    The last of the government troops garrisoned here during the Jacobite Risings blew up the castle when they left. Urquhart’s iconic ruins remain, offering glimpses into medieval times and the lives of its noble residents.
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  • Culloden Battlefield

    27 maggio 2025, Scozia ⋅ 🌬 11 °C

    The battlefield where the 1745 Jacobite Rising came to a tragic end

    Enjoy panoramic views from the roof garden, see the restored 18th-century Leanach Cottage.

    On 16 April 1746, the final Jacobite Rising came to a brutal head in one of the most harrowing battles in British history.

    Jacobite supporters, seeking to restore the Stuart monarchy to the British thrones, gathered to fight the Duke of Cumberland’s government troops. It was the last pitched battle on British soil and, in less than an hour, around 1,600 men were slain – 1,500 of them Jacobites.

    In 1881 the memorial cairn and grave markers were commissioned by Duncan Forbes of Culloden House.
    Some of the clans and regiments that were recognised are Campbell, Mackintosh, Fraser, Stewards of Appin, Mixed Clans, Macgillvrey, MacLean, Maclachlan, Clan Donald, Keppoch.
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  • Balnuaran of Clava and Milton of Clava

    27 maggio 2025, Scozia ⋅ 🌬 12 °C

    One of Scotland's most evocative prehistoric sites, the exceptional remains of an ancient cemetery, set on a terrace above the River Nairn.

    The Clava Cairns are about 4,000 years old and were built to house the dead. The cemetery remained a sacred place in the landscape for millennia, and provides many clues to the beliefs of Bronze Age society.

    What remains today would have once been part of a larger complex. Two parts of the complex, Balnuaran of Clava and Milton of Clava, are open to the public. The sites contain a range of prehistoric burial monuments and the remains of a medieval chapel.
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  • Fortrose Cathedral

    29 maggio 2025, Scozia ⋅ 🌧 12 °C

    The Cathedral dominated the town of clergyman that was built around it. At its peak, 21 canons and five vicars served here.
    Each canon had a manse in Fortrose while the powerful Bishop of Ross lived in a palace.
    Mary Queen of Scots and her royal court stayed for several days in 1564.

    A brass ewer filled with 1,100 silver groats was found on the edge of the cathedral green in 1880. It had probably been buried for safe keeping in the late 1300s or early 1400s, a time of unrest.
    Just the chapter house and aisle remain in John Slezer's drawing of fortrose in 1693.

    REDUCE, REUSE, RECYCLE
    In 1572, after the Protestant Reformation, William, Lord Ruthven, was given the lead from the cathedral roof. Oliver Cromwell's army supposedly stripped stone and wood from its buildings for a fortress at Inverness in 1653.
    Public services continued to be held in the south aisle. A clock turret was added from which the cathedral's recast 1449 bell still rings. The first floor of the chapter house became a courtroom and council chamber with a prison below.

    GLOBAL PESTILENCE
    Legend tells of a flying ball of mist-like plague that the canons caught in a sheet.
    They buried the threat with a bell, book and candle' on the cathedral green.

    GUARDIAN OF SCOTLAND
    Sir Andrew Murray, Guardian of Scotland, was buried here in 1338 before his remains were moved to Dunfermline Abbey. His father led the Scottish army alongside William Wallace at the battle of Stirling Bridge.
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  • Castle Leod

    29 maggio 2025, Scozia ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

    14th Century Historic Scottish Tower House
    'Leod' er'Liotr is a Viking name which can be traced to an uncle of the mighty Norseman Thorfinn.

    The original building may have been a wooden fort on a natural mound, built by Pictish tribesmen and taken over at a later date by the Viking invaders
    The stone structure you see today was in the medieval period, a fortified tower with the original entrance on the second floor, defended by a ladder that could be drawn up.
    • The iron yetts, numerous arrow slits and gun loops remind us of its defensive purpose.
    I605 the tower was re-modelled into a more comfortable residence by Sir Rory, Mackenzie (the formidable "Tutor of Kintail'and de-facto clan chief) for his new wife Dame Margaret Macleod of Lewis. Their marriage stone is placed above the front entrance. new wing' was added in the 19th century, (Vicarian era) and extended again in the first decade of the 20th century (Edwardian era).
    Mackenzies' dramatic and colourful lives were inextricably linked with the great events of Scottish history and the characters that haped it, among them Mary Queen of Scots and Prince Charles Edward Stuart.
    For 500 years Castle Leod has provided the backdrop for the Mackenzie family who live here to this day.

    Recognised as the real-life inspiration for Outlander’s Castle Leoch, it continues to captivate with its rich history and timeless allure. Nestled near the Victorian spa town of Strathpeffer, Castle Leod stands majestically against the backdrop of Ben Wyvis, surrounded by impressive trees and thriving wildlife. With battles long past, we are now dedicated to its preservation for future generations to explore and enjoy.

    The oldest tree is the Spanish Chestnut with its extraordinary, huge spiralling trunk. This was recently chosen as one of 70 trees officially dedicated to the late Queen Elizabeth II as part of her Platinum Jubilee. It was planted in 1553 by John Mackenzie of Killen to mark the confirmation of Saisin of Castle Leod by Mary Queen of Scots at Inverness. The tree has the oldest recorded planting date in Scotland.
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  • Edinburgh and Botanical Gardens

    31 maggio 2025, Scozia ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Discover a spectacular array of plants from around the globe, explore one of the richest Living Collections in the world, and uncover a fascinating history that stretches back to the 17th century.

    Just one mile north of Edinburgh’s city centre, the Garden spans over 70 acres of stunning landscape and offers breathtaking panoramic views of the city skyline. Affectionately known as "The Botanics" by locals, the Garden offers an unforgettable experience in every season.

    Highlights include the Rock Garden, the Alpine Houses, the peaceful Woodland Garden, the Pond, the Arboretum, the Chinese Hillside, the vibrant Rhododendron Collection, and the Scottish Native Plants Collection within the Heath Garden.

    Beyond its beauty, the Garden is a living centre for global plant research, conservation, and learning. With every visit, you’re helping protect our botanic world and supporting our vision to build a better future for plants, people, and the planet.
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  • Edinburgh & Tiffany Window

    3 giugno 2025, Scozia ⋅ 🌬 12 °C

    Tiffany Window
    The window is located in the North Gallery. It depicts a young David, sling in hand, going out to do battle with the giant Goliath. David was the shepherd boy who became a soldier before becoming a King; in turn, Cuthbert was a shepherd boy who became a soldier before becoming a Saint.
    The window was created by Tiffany of New York in 1903 and is one of only a handful of Tiffany windows in this country. Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848 - 1933) was an American artist and designer who worked in the decorative arts and is best known for his work in stained glass. He was the first Design Director at his family company, Tiffany & Co, founded by his father Charles Lewis Tiffany.
    There is no inscription on the window but on a plate below it says: "To the Glory of God and in memory of Lieutenant William Victor St Clair McLaren who fell in the South African War July 26th 1900. This window is dedicated by his mother.
    His mother was Mrs W G McLaren of Hillpark, Bannockburn.
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  • Botanical Demonstration Gardens

    3 giugno 2025, Scozia ⋅ 🌬 14 °C

    Community Engagement at the Botanics
    Our community engagement programme is called Engaging Gardens and is made possible thanks to players of People’s Postcode Lottery.

    We want to make sure that every person can access and benefit from the health, wellbeing and learning opportunities that Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh's gardens, collections and expertise offer.

    We connect health and wellbeing, environmental sustainability, people and plants through a range of activities.

    Seasonal Community Workshops
    Meet the Gardener drop in

    Discover our productive garden with the Edible Gardening Project volunteers, find out what jobs need doing in your own garden this season and have your vegetable growing questions answered.

    Demonstration Garden,
    Gardening with Community Groups

    We provide opportunities for local community groups who want to grow their own food. We have a number of groups who look after their own vegetable plots in the Demonstration Garden and attend each week to work alongside our community gardeners.

    Skills Share Workshops

    We deliver a range of free workshops in community growing settings. Topics include vegetable growing for beginners, composting, growing winter vegetables and organic pest and disease control.

    Kitchen Garden

    The Kitchen Garden is supported by Heritage Portfolio Ltd, who look after the cafés onsite. We grow seasonal produce, using organic methods, and make regular deliveries throughout the year directly to the kitchens ensuring that our visitors can enjoy fresh garden-grown produce.

    Nature Connections – Health and Wellbeing activities

    Food Social

    Our Food Social sessions are friendly and supportive opportunities for people to cook and share a meal together. They are especially suitable for those who would benefit from a supportive and social environment.

    Dementia-friendly Garden Social and Garden Thyme

    A social session for people with dementia and their carers exploring garden themes, with activities and refreshments on the first Friday of each month.

    Move More

    Gentle gardening and activity for people experiencing cancer.
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  • Helensburgh

    9 giugno 2025, Scozia ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    Helensburgh is known for its old, large, and architecturally significant buildings, particularly Charles Rennie Mackintosh's Hill House. Most of the old large homes are converted to units now.

    Mackintosh designed the Hill House in 1902 when, with the optimism of a new century, there was an emerging battle of architectural styles.

    The external render of the property has not proved watertight and the walls have gradually become saturated and are crumbling, with water now threatening the interiors. If we don’t act, the house will be irreparably damaged and we’ll lose its iconic architecture and unique interiors forever.

    We’ve embarked on a 10-year conservation programme, which will allow continued public access to the house. Stage one opened to visitors in early June 2019, with a protective steel frame structure covered in chainmail mesh, featuring walkways around and over the top of the house.
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  • Citeaux Abbaye de Villers

    29 giugno 2025, Belgio ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

    The Mill
    This large mill-bakery was built in the 13 th century. Still used after the abolition of the abbey, the mill bakery was partially refurbished into a hotel-restaurant following a fire in 1858. Only the south wing still served as a mill.
    The hotel was expanded in 1897, but the improvements did not reach the south wing, which remained unoccupied for over a century. The hotel burned down again in 1953. The two upper levels of the building are the result of successive transformations and restorations.

    Citeaux Abbey, in Burgundy, was founded in 1098 by Robert of Molesme. Beginning with this "New Monastery" and its first four daughter abbeys (La Ferté, Pontigny, Clairvaux and Morimond), abbeys founded on the Cistercian principles of solitude, poverty, and manual labour spread throughout Europe during the 12t and 13tn centuries.
    The Rule of Saint Benedict (t 547) remains the founding text of Cistercian life. However, under Abbot Stephen Harding (1109-1134), the Cistercian Order adopted its own organisational structure through a Charter of Charity.
    The women's branch of the order was established in the 13th century.
    Saint Bernard (1091-1153), the first abbot of Clairvaux, is still remembered as an emblematic figure of the growing order. Born to a noble family, he became one of the greatest religious and political leaders of his time.
    He outlined the rules of the Knights Templar, advised popes, denounced the philosopher Abelard, criticised the Cluniac Order, and preached in support of the Second Crusade. He left to posterity a significant collection of correspondence, as well as treatises, sermons, and poems to the glory of the Virgin.
    At the time of his death, the Order included 351 abbeys, including 169 founded from the Clairvaux branch alone.

    Agricultural work
    This system of direct farming by lay brothers was responsible for the continuous economic growth of the Cistercian Order from the early 12th century to the first half of the 13th century. By the second half of the 12 th century, the Order allowed abbeys to sell their surplus produce at markets and to collect some profits, which had previously been prohibited. This was the case with the tithe, a tax on the "tenth part of all things on which the sun shines, the dew gathers, or the wind blows", as stated by a 1230 charter of Villers.
    In the late 13th century, the recruitment of lay brothers decreased. The 14th century saw an economic crisis, which led the monks to sell many parcels of land, lease the others, and group them into four "districts": Villers, Louvain, Mellemont and Schoten.

    In 1146, a small community of monks settled down on land donated by the Lord of Marbais and located between the springs of Goddarch to the south and Chevelipont to the north, at the crossroads of the Thyle River and the Mellery Road. In addition to the abundance of water needed to irrigate the crops, move the mill wheels or the smiths' bellows, and meet the daily needs of the monastery, the site is surrounded by schist rocks, a material that was used for the majority of the abbey's construction. Finally, there was abundant wood, which was necessary for both daily life and construction work.

    The abbey is surrounded by high walls that define two enclosures: the abbey, including the monastic buildings and the mill, and the farm,

    The abbey was closed down in 1796,

    Church
    The church was the abbey's largest building, measuring 94 m in length, with a nave rising to 23m. Its construction began in 1197 in Romanesque style, as witnessed by the front porch. From 1210, the Gothic style was adopted under the impetus of Abbot Conrad of Urach. In the late 13th century, side chapels were built onto the northern aisle. Towards the mid 18th-century, the abbots modernized the west front in the Neoclassic style of the time, although nothing remains of this today.
    The monks assembled at the church seven times every day and once every night for services.
    They were installed in rows of seats, known as stalls. Today, we can still see their location in the eastern area of the nave. They were separated from the lay brothers and guests by a high partition, no longer in existence: the rood screen.

    Despite all these changes, the natural setting around the abbey remains relatively well-preserved to the north, east, and west of the large enclosure, where the large Hez Forest, one of the last remnants of the large Brabant forest, can be found.
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  • Limelette

    2 luglio 2025, Belgio ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    With cultivated areas and urbanised spaces, the The Bois de Lauzelle is an ecological corridor and a refuge area for many animal and plant species. It is one of the region's last biodiversity reservoirs, which maintains and develops a wide range of various indigenous tree species (including beech, oak and ash, as well as a variety of conifers). The forestry policy carried out at the Bois de Lauzelle since 1976 has made it possible to keep intact the diversity of its flora, fauna and forest settlement and has ensured their integrity and protection. This biodiversity guarantees the development of a rich herbaceous flora that has a positive effect on the fauna.
    Since it is a living laboratory close to the University and open to researchers and students who concretise the teachings of their applied natural science courses.
    The Bois de Lauzelle also fulfils a function of space / green of Louvain-la-Neuve. Its vocation as a place for walks, sports and leisure is one of the fundamental reasons that prompted the university to open this wood to the public.
    Biodiversity of certain species in the Walloon forest , Flowers 25%, Birds 57%, Butterflies 43%, Insects 100%

    In Greek mythology, dryads are the protective nymphs of trees and forests. Each dryad is born at the same time as a tree of her own, which she guards. A distinction is made between hama-dryads, who are attached to a particular tree and live in it, and other dryads, who can wander freely in the forest.
    Nymphs often serve as attendants to higher deities, such as Apollo or Artemis, or to nymphs of a higher rank, such as Calypso.
    While they often appear in love myths as the lovers of the gods, they are more commonly united with lower deities, such as satyrs.

    The Berger Picard or Picardy Shepherd, is a French herding dog originating in Picardy. These dogs nearly became extinct after both World War I and World War II[1] and remain a rare breed

    The Maca
    This boy, with a mischievous face, who climbs the perch of the City Hall is the Maca, one
    symbols of the city of Wavre! He represents the rebellious and sometimes mocking spirit
    attributed to the Wavriens. According to legend, stroking his buttocks would bring luck. In 1962, the sculptor Jean Godart gave birth to a metal teenager.
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  • St. Gertrude in Nivelles

    15 luglio 2025, Belgio ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

    I known, another church but they don’t make them like this any more.

    A Romanesque abbey-church dates from the 11th and 12th centuries. It features two transepts, double choir and an impressive western front, incorporating an apse, from which rises an octagonal bell-tower. It represents a late example of the imperial ottonian architectural tradition, itself inherited from the Carolingians. The edifice is built on the site of an abbey founded in the 7th century by Gertrude, one of the daughters of Pepin the Elder. In 1046, the Germanic emperor, Henry Ill removed the relics of St. Gertrude: her tomb may be seen in the crypt. The size of the church is impressive at 100m. in length, 28,5m. in width and 55m. to the summit of the bell-tower. For such inspiring architecture, mainly built with squared rubble masonry of pale limestone with the occasional dressed blocks confined to archways and pillars.Leggi altro

  • Ottawa life

    28 luglio 2025, Canada ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    Rideau Hall
    Open day visitors can discover the State rooms of Rideau Hall at their own pace and tour the greenhouses and gardens, Rideau Hall, the official residence of the Governor General of Canada and the official residence of The King and The Queen while in Canada, has grounds spanning 32 hectares (79 acres). The main building contains about 175 rooms and covers approximately 8,825 square meters.Leggi altro

  • Mādahòkì Farm - Indigenous Tourism Des

    8 agosto 2025, Canada ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Home of Indigenous experiences and events, Indigenous Marketplace, Summer Solstice Indigenous Festival, a growing herd of endangered Ojibwe Spirit Horses and more!

    “Sharing the Land”—that’s what Mādahòkì, pronounced Ma-dau-ki, means, and it’s exactly what the team behind this Indigenous-led farm is putting into practice every day.

    The Ojibwe Spirit Horse is the only known Indigenous breed of horse to Canada. Our Elders say they have lived in harmony with our Indigenous communities since time immemorial.

    The only known Indigenous breed of horse to Canada, they were hunted to the point of extinction, with their wild lands disappearing.

    The Lac La Croix Indigenous pony, named after the Lac La Croix First Nation, now the Gakijiwanong Anishinaabe Nation, primarily existed in northwestern Ontario and across the United States border into Minnesota.
    This unique pony breed, considered to be developed by the Indigenous Peoples, was used for winter transportation, running trap lines, hauling logs and ice, and pulling sleighs. As forest dwellers, the breed boasts strong hooves to endure the rocky terrain of the Canadian Shield; fuzzy ears to protect them from insects; and often a dorsal stripe down its back and zebra stripes on its legs.

    The breed was well on its way to extinction in 1977 before a “pony heist” changed its destiny. Now with no more than 200 horses in Canada, found in Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia, as well as Wisconsin and Minnesota in the US, the breed is considered critically endangered but making a comeback. The Ojibwe Horse Society maintains the breed registry of the horse, which is now officially registered as the Ojibwe Horse but commonly referred to as the Spirit Horse in honour of their connection to the spiritual past and ability to heal intergenerational trauma. Although small in size, the Ojibwe Horse’s history is full.

    In the 1940s, a large herd of the Lac La Croix ponies on a reservation in Bois Forte in northern Minnesota was destroyed at the request of missionaries, who considered it inappropriate for the residential children in the area to witness horses breeding in nature. This resulted in the full extinction of the breed in the US, leaving only a small herd north of Lake Superior in the Lac La Croix First Nation region.

    The remaining herd in Canada was used in the winter for trapping and pulling; their work was rewarded with food, shelter, and protection from wolves and other predators. Just before the ice melted, the ponies would be herded back to an island known as Pony Island to breed, foal out, and forage on their own.

    In the 1970s these sacred horses almost went extinct as they were wild and eating farmer’s fields. Some brave men from Lac La Croix FN captured the last four wild mares and, like in a scene out of a movie, took them across the frozen ice to Minnesota, where they started to bring back the breed.

    Ojibwe Spirit Horses are smaller and furrier than most horse breeds, with physical traits like thick manes and hard hooves that make them well-suited to snowy, rocky, and forested terrain.

    These horses can also be identified by their zebra or tiger-like leg stripes, a dorsal dark stripe along their back, and an extra nose flap and furry ears to protect them from the cold Canadian winters.

    Intelligent, sweet, and sturdy, Ojibwe Spirit Horses make ideal therapy animals and close companions.

    According to the Ojibwe Horse Society, “DNA evidence shows they are different from European-introduced horse breeds in distinctive ways that made them an integral and harmonious part of the North American boreal forest.

    The Ojibwe Horse has been known by several names, including the Lac La Croix Indigenous Pony or Indian Horse. In Canadian government archives they were commonly referred to as Indian Ponies. They are noted as Critically Endangered on Canada’s Conservation List and are believed to be the only surviving horse breed developed by Indigenous peoples in Canada.
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  • Gardens

    9 agosto 2025, Canada ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    There are five public areas to visit at the Central Experimental Farm. The Arboretum and Ornamental Gardens are cared for by the Friends of the Farm volunteers under the expert direction of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada staff.

    Located on 64-acres of rolling land between Prince of Wales Drive and the historical Rideau Canal system, the arboretum was developed to test the hardiness of woody plants in the Canadian climate. With a variety of micro-climates and showcasing a range of woody plants, the collection contains around 4000 specimens.

    The Dominion Arboretum displays a wide range of well-established trees and shrubs, some dating back to 1889. Because the Dominion Arboretum is north of the 45-degree latitude, it is considered to be the most northerly Arboretum on the continent.

    Garden Unique features: A unique space in the heart of Ottawa - 15 min drive to the centre.

    A Significant Contribution - Ornamental Hybridization
    For almost 100 years from its founding in 1886, the Central Experimental Farm of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) provided ornamental plant research information that was important to Canadian gardeners and the development of Canada's horticultural sector. Isabella Preston, A.P. Saunders (who worked in Clinton, NY), and Felicitas Svejda improved ornamental plants for home and civic gardens using hybridization - combining different plant varieties to create new strains better suited to Canada's climate.

    CANADIAN ORGANIC GROWERS (COG)
    DEMONSTRATION GARDEN
    • This garden was started in the spring of 1990 It is an on-going project designed to demonstrate how to garden successfully without chemical fertilizers/ and pesticides. Alternative techniques are used to create a healthy soil, control weeds, pests and diseases, and maintain a balanced environment in which plants can thrive. The different sections of the garden show how these techniques can be used for growing fruits, vegetables and ornamentals.

    The Friends of the Central Experimental Farm (FCEF) is a volunteer organization helping to care for the Arboretum, the Ornamental Gardens and other public areas of the Central Experimental Farm in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Our goals are to preserve, maintain, protect and enhance this beautiful and historic green space, enjoyed by residents and tourists alike. Your FCEF membership, volunteer work and support of FCEF fundraising efforts help us accomplish our goals.

    National Historic Site
    In 1998 the entire Central Experimental Farm was declared a National Historic Site, a place ‘of profound importance to Canada.' These sites 'bear witness to this nation's defining moments.' Read the Central Experimental Farm National Historic Site Management Plan here.
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