Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
In general, a saddleback is the shape of a saddle.
The tower at the west end has a saddleback roof.
The tower has a saddleback roof and may have been built in the 13th or 14th century.
The mountain was formerly known as Saddleback, due to its shape.
He performs and releases music under the name of Saddleback.
"We'll cut on up across that saddleback there and then down into the next valley.
Churches that use his programs maintain no ties with Saddleback.
The tower is in two stages with a saddleback roof.
Saddleback Island is the largest member of the group.
The briefcase was a bit too small, so Saddleback sent their overnight bag for me to try out.
In the case of Saddleback, they are a vivid red in colour.
Saddleback Maine, a ski area, is located on the north face of the mountain.
He also is a former owner of Saddleback in Maine.
On top of the tower is a saddleback roof.
At its summit is a saddleback roof with gables to the north and south.
He earned a degree in liberal studies at Saddleback.
Valentine had never kissed a woman from saddleback before.
The mountain is the site of Saddleback ski resort.
He never liked providing these kinds of saddleback opinions.
The building is topped with a saddleback roof with red tile.
The grey saddleback roof features two wooden dormers, one on each house.
The tower has a saddleback roof topped by a flèche.
The most conspicuous feature from a distance is the distinctive saddleback tower.
The track near the summit of Saddleback Mountain is very steep.
Saddleback did not build its first permanent building until it had 10,000 weekly attenders.
You can stay at Tieke Kainga, but full marae protocol must be observed.
On reaching the forest he found a nest of a tieke in a hollow tree, from which he obtained some young birds.
The two tieke settled briefly on Moutohorā before returning to Cuvier Island.
The conservation programme has reintroduced native species like the North Island Saddleback (Tieke).
It is centered around Tieke Marae, a converted Department of Conservation tramping hut.
Fresh from his battle to ensnare the sun, a thirsty Maui (a virtual demi-god in Maori folklore) asked the Tieke to bring him some water.
Prior to European colonisation, Tieke was a major trading center on the Whanganui River as well as a place of learning and a fortified Pā.
It is now used by the Department of Conservation as a safe haven for endangered birds such as Tieke (Saddleback) and the Kakapo.
The Saddleback or Tieke (Philesturnus carunculatus) is a previously rare and endangered New Zealand bird of the family Callaeidae.
Today Tieke Kāinga is home to an extended family whose members trace their ancestry to pre-European Tieke.
Forty North Island saddleback (tieke) were transferred from Cuvier Island (Repanga), off the coast of the Coromandel Peninsula, to Moutohorā.
The entire Callaeidae family of New Zealand, comprising the Tieke (also known as the Saddleback), the Kokako, and the extinct Huia, are also known as wattlebirds, but are unrelated to this genus.
In the 1990s the Department of Conservation began levying a toll on river users to maintain its huts and services, and in September 1993 Te Whanau o Tieke Māori reclaimed the land, occupying the hut and converting it into a Marae.
The Kōkako appears to be a remnant of an early expansion of passerines in New Zealand and is one of three New Zealand wattlebirds of the family Callaeidae, the others being the endangered Tieke, or Saddleback, and the extinct Huia.
The land surrounding Tieke became part of the Whanganui National Park when it was created in 1986 and, as part of the series of facilities they provided along the river, the Department of Conservation built a large hut at Tieke.
Whilst the land is still formally disputed, the Department of Conservation and the Te Whanau o Tieke Māori have developed an amicable and co-operative relationship, working together to upgrade and maintain facilities at Tieke Kāinga.