I saw the pine cone, too. The blog format site had a rotating image at the top, and when I grabbed it there was the steering wheel. Can’t believe the William Bush line. Odd choice of stock photo selections, lol. I guess they didn’t pay much attention to the template under such “pressure” to distance.
I saw the pine cone, too. The blog format site had a rotating image at the top, and when I grabbed it there was the steering wheel. Cant believe the William Bush line. Odd choice of stock photo selections, lol. I guess they didnt pay much attention to the template under such pressure to distance.They simply, in their infinite wisdom and technical prowess, put up a standard WordPress template and cut and pasted some of the language into the form of blog entries (thus the made up dates), then the url was redirected to the WordPress blog. That is only something that you would do if you had zero time to implement a change to a webpage, as it is very amateurish. Even a novice web designer could throw together a holding page of better design in under two hours. The images at the top are loading from WordPress, as part of the template design - I've seen it on hundreds of blogs.
The obvious attempt to deceive is the entry dates, IMHO. They try to give the illusion that the appropriate verbage has been on the site since 2011 - which we all know to be total rubish.