Just off the coast of Sydney, in New South Wales, Australia, the surf crashes over this cluster of rocks, sending an oceanic Valentine"s Day card to a lucky bird—or photographer—flying overhead. We"ll take nature"s love letters wherever and whenever we can find them. But what makes February 14 the day we celebrate love? Some claim Valentine"s Day has its roots in an ancient Roman fertility festival called Lupercalia that included goat sacrifices and a lottery that paired off eligible men and women. Others argue that the holiday began with early Christians celebrating a martyr named Valentine. Chaucer romanticized the day with a poem about two birds mating for life. No matter its pagan or Christian origins, in the modern world, Valentine"s Day is celebrated most everywhere as a day devoted to love.
An oceanic valentine
Today in History
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Montreux, Switzerland, and all that jazz
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Islands that turned the tide
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Fiesta at Siesta
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Wallabies at sunrise, Australia
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Happy Lunar New Year!
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Red Planet Day
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The moon rises for Mid-Autumn Festival
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Celestial Spain
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Ravens
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Sweetheart Abbey, Scotland
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Celebrating Minnesota’s statehood
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World Art Day
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World Space Week begins
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Tolkien Reading Day
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Traveling warblers
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Three Natural Bridges, Wulong Karst, China
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Independence Day of the Argentine Republic
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Necropolis of Dargavs
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Atrani, Amalfi Coast, Italy
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Tesla, the visionary
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Taiwan yuhinas in Alishan National Scenic Area
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A rock in a wild place
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Bohemian Switzerland
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It s Coffee Day
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Tough turf
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Time to count some birds
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White Sands National Park turns 90
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Punakaiki on South Island, New Zealand
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Papa was a flightless bird
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Al-Khazneh in Petra, Jordan
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

