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For a good photo you go already once to the knees ;-)
The Zwiefalter Münster Unserer Lieben Frau is a baroque building that was the monastery church of the Benedictine abbey of Zwiefalten until 1803. It has been a parish and pilgrimage church since 1812. The Zwiefalter Münster is one of the largest churches in Germany.
Glasses: [Cinnamon Cocaine] - Soho Glasses @ InWorld/MP
Bag: [Cinnamon Cocaine] - Heart Bag @ InWorld/MP
Dress: .Safira. - Hara Dress [Fatpack] @ Uber
Pose: OMY - Christina ~Animated & Breathing @ InWorld
Dog: [Rezz Room] - Siberian Husky ~Animesh @ InWorld
~More info/photos on blog
(copy/paste in google. I can't add direct link)
Blog:https://myslphotocreations.blogspot.com/2021/04/899.html
Mandy couldn't believe that it was Monday already...anyone else feel the same way? Hope your Monday treats you well.
I was already leaving the park, because the light was fading away, when I saw this very little woodpecker moving fast in a very tall tree. I've tried to get a good shot, but, beyond being too high, it never stopped and this was the best I could do. This is just a poor record of the species, don't need to comment, my friends.
Kaeng Krachan National Park, Thailand
www.youtube.com/watch?v=GK14b-jo8Vs&feature=player_em...
"Heaven's Already Here"
Wake up to a new morning
Got my babe by my side
Now I won't yield to new warnings
'Cause I got my piece of mind
Who could bring me heaven
When heaven's already here?
No more living in darkness
Now that love lights my way
I don't need any new changes
To make me love today
~ Collective Soul ~
Lisa is difficult to photograph, as she doesn't care for my flash and often lowers her head. She's four years old, and was rescued from the streets of Christiansted, St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands.
Well! Shoot the rattlesnake already! No need to contemplate the meaning of the universe.
Taken just now at Copper Canyon. Windlight: TOR Scifi-Un Peinture (moved the sun from original position to the east to light up the sign)
Copper Canyon and Wind River is closing October 2nd. They are "Wild West" cowboy type builds. If you are interested in taking photos/videos there, better make it quick.
Copper Canyon
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Infinite%20Spirit/75/192/27
Wind River
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Infinite%20Spirit/134/50/1502
on my outfit:
"Selma"-Blush by *Rose's Design* (It's mesh so wearing M. I've had it awhile)
Kasimire Hair by TRUTH
Karol Sunkiss - DK BROWS by amara beauty
Thia Lips Toner 2 by Glam Affair
NOEL 3.1 head by lel EvoX
Lara V5.3 mesh body by Maitreya
Tessa Shape by WoW Skins (modified by me)
Ob das Schwein, das aus dem Fenster schaut wohl Babe ist?
www.youtube.com/watch?v=stqWWpwvrAo
Verwirkliche deinen Traum
Do you think that this pig looking out of the window, is Babe?
www.youtube.com/watch?v=yuzXPzgBDvo
Realize your dream
no winter, but already cherry blossoms in Darmstadt
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kapellplatz_(Darmstadt)
Okay, you've seen me, so go away already. Can't you see I'm hunting? You're scaring away my lunch, move along...
Thank YOU JESUS, for allowing me to find one so early this year. I think their adorable little owls. So I give credit where that credit is due, and it's not me and my ability to do anything. Yes really believe it was all the grace of God.
I was freezing in the cold winds searching for Sparrow Hawks, which I also love and with very little success I was packing it in, when for some reason I stopped to take in the view just before hitting the trail, when I happed to look down and to my left almost completely hidden in the grasses. There he stood looking up at me like I was about to step on him. How scary that must have been. Yep, it's all Jesus, every good thing is! ❤️🙏❤️
------------------------------ JESUS ✝️ SAVES-------------------------------
7 Therefore Jesus said again, "I tell you the truth, I am the gate for the sheep. 8 All who ever came before me were thieves and robbers, but the sheep did not listen to them. 9 I am the gate; whoever enters through me WILL BE SAVED. He will come in and go out, and find pasture. 10 The thief comes only to STEAL and KILL and DESTROY; I have come that they may have LIFE, and have it to the FULL. (John 10:7-10)
Jesus came to bring spiritual LIFE to the spiritually dead and set the captives FREE! FREE from RELIGION, ERROR and outright LIES, so they might serve THE LIVING GOD! In SPIRIT and in TRUTH! Because JESUS LOVES YOU! ❤️ ✝️ ❤️
For the best Biblical teaching in the last 2 centuries! Please listen to and down load these FREE audio files that were created with YOU in mind. It's ALL FREE, if you like it, please share it with others. ❤️
archive.org/details/PeopleToPeopleByBobGeorgeFREE-ARCHIVE...
CLICK THE LETTER "L" TO ENLARGE OR
CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO ENLARGE.
My THANK'S in advance to all who fave and/or comment on my photos I very much appreciate it! ❤️
© All Rights reserved no publication or copying without permission from the author.
After hiking back up the mountain to the Bear Creek Trail, I hiked 2 miles following the trail back down to Forney Creek and back up the Lakeshore Trail to the intersection of the old road leading up to Woody Cemetery, ~a primitive mountaineer cemetery (circa mid 1800's - 1920's). I had already decided on my way in that I would visit, so I swung up to the left on the trail and followed the old road up to the cemetery clearing on top of the mountain.
Hey, everyone!
The Anthem Event is already turning 3 years! Cheers!! <3
I'll be showing some of the new releases and exclusive cheapies for this round in the next posts. Make sure to step by the event, hope to see you there!
xoxo :*
Avatar
- LeLUTKA Ora Head 3.1 (by Jaden Nova)
- L'Etre - Yejun Skin Tone 02 Lelutka HD (by Dam1710 Resident)
- WarPaint* Primrose lips Lelutka EvoX (by Mafalda Hienrichs) [New @ Anthem Event]
- polar<3bunny. asteria face mark. white. eyeliner (by DudaAkira Resident) [New @ Anthem Event]
- MICHAN - Arabella Lashes Lel EVOx (by Meredith Evergarden) [New @ Anthem Event]
- Jack Spoon. La Boheme Freckles / 1 intense EvoX (by Steffy Ghost) [New @ The Fifty]
- DOUX - Nari hairstyle BLOGGER PACK (by Dam1710 Resident) [New @ HongDae]
- Avada~ Floraison Square Nails (by Stephanie Hexem)
- Izzie's - LeL Evo X - 03 Lips Concealer 70% (by Izzie Button)
- [Glam Affair ] Dalia - Asian Eyes - Beige (by aida Ewing)
- Banana Beauty: Ariel Eyes (by Mellysa Mayo)
- Jack Spoon . Moira Chest glitters -silver (by Steffy Ghost)
- Moonglow - Sweet Body Blush (by Loli Nori)
- Bold & Beauty :: Maitreya Shell - Normal V2 (by JourdanMcMillan Resident)
Style
- -Pixicat- Niom Dress / All (by areve Resident) [New @ Anthem Event]
- polar<3bunny. asteria halo mesh (by DudaAkira Resident) [New @ Anthem Event]
- Mon Cheri - Demi Platform Mules - Fatpack (by Freya Olivieri) [New @ Anthem Event]
- [ kunst ] - Evelyn Set necklace (by Kunst Himmel) [New @ Anthem Event]
- MICHAN - Michi Rings / Pastel Goth Pack (by Meredith Evergarden)
Pose
- Kirin - Sits Pose 2 (by Carolina Sautereau)
Scene
- [VOZ] Frame Neons Photo Booth / Blue (by Voice Zane) [New @ Anthem Event]
- +Half-Deer+ Sleepy Unicorn on Cloud Pillow - Rainbow (by Halogen Magic) [New @ Anthem Event]
- :::ChicChica::: Pink Lady dispenser (by Lilo Denimore)
- +Half-Deer+ Bubbles - Extra Big Group (by Halogen Magic)
P.S.: For more detailed credits and SLurls of the stores/events, please visit my blog (link in "About" tab) ;)
Tut tut, The things that go on behind you as you're eating lunch. 😳
YES, she's already told me to clean those windows!!
Another rose, but I am particularily fond of this one. I starts off with rather vivid orange colours and then slowly turns light and then darkish pink and red. All of these colours will shine brightly at dusk.
This flower has seen heavy rains before opening, which is why the outside is already decaying while the flower opens. This way you can spot most of the colours you would usually see over a normal flower's lifetime.
Photographing Aurora borealis is often waiting. At this time of year it is often already frosty and you have to wait for hours for Northern Lights to appear.
When the northern lights then appear the fatigue disappears when you get to experience that miraculous phenomenon again.
There were three bright nights this week and of course I was off-road.
Last sunday I took the caravan behind the car and I drove to a place where the northern lights are almost always seen in clear weather, so it was now. Then I set out to photograph.
The Aurora forecast looked good and every three night the northern lights were visible.
Nature is really beautiful when the clear night sky shines in the light of the stars and the crescent moon illuminates. That experience is always just as impressive and I love it.
I photographed the northern lights for three nights this week and the trip was a success.
Here is an example of a beautiful double arc of Auroras.
Press L and then F11 for a large view - then you can fully enjoy this picture!
Thank you so much for your views, faves and comments !
For more of my photos take a look at at my website: mikkoleinonen.com
© 2021 Mikko Leinonen. All Photos are copyrighted. All rights reserved. Pictures can not be used without explicit permission by the creator.
Alert and focused, the young lions fix their gaze on something in the distance, as if already practicing the watchfulness of adulthood.
It’s November 29th, 2024. Another day, another adventure. Started my morning off heading towards Buckhannon and the A&O in hopes of finding a rare daylight run on the west end of the railroad. Unfortunately that was out of the equation by time I hit the state line with West Virginia. So I called an audible and asked around to see what else might be out there in the coal fields. I got a hit on a train showing to be on CSX’s Coleman Sub near Somerset, PA, which is a pretty difficult piece of railroad to find anything moving, just one of those lines where have to be in the right place at the right time to luck into finding anything. So without further ado, I turned the car around near Morgantown, WV and beat feet eastbound towards the small town of Berlin, to investigate further. By the time I arrived much readily visible cut of cars were already finished being loaded which admittedly had me worried. Was this the last few cars to load? I don’t see any other cars visible in the small yard there. Thankfully that turned to not be the case due to limited capacity of the small yard below the loadout, the train had to be busted into 3 cuts for each half of the train to load it all. I was always reluctant to buy a drone for the longest time. Even after purchasing it I left it sitting in the box for months, debating if I really wanted to go down this route. Eventually I started to experiment with it and it completely revolutionized how I looked at things from the ground. Without the investment into a drone in this instance, partially at this location where PBS Coal’s Cambria loadout is not one that you can even get anywhere close to without trespassing onto mine property or neighboring private property. The drone does just fine at not stepping on anybody’s toes and I come away with some stellar shots of another coal operation I’ve been trying to photograph for a long time.
This photo is already in my photostream; however, I decided to edit it again and post it for you all to see.
The horse grazing is Molly and she was over 20 years old, sadly she passed away over the summer. She was one of the few horses that I felt comfortable riding. I am very sorry to say that Smokey has also died- a couple of months ago. He was over 30 years old, so I'm just glad that he had a long life. He made a wonderful subject staring at the camera in this shot. My daddy bought him for my little sister to learn to ride on a gentle horse; we had only had him for a few years. Both of these horses were so kind and gentle, and I loved them dearly.
I believe that, sometimes, you can see ART "already" even if the piece is still not yet finished ;)
For the finished piece=> www.saatchiart.com/art/Drawing-CARDINAL/980307/4713066/view
It's half term already for us folks and we are preparing for our first Thailand holiday tomorrow and I shall be away for the next week.
We have arrived in Thailand at a time of change for the local railways. There is enormous investment into new infrastructure in Bangkok and in the next 2-3 years public transport will look very different here. I am pleased that I can observe the old ways on the railways before they are gone forever. This is Bang Sue Junction station, soon to be replaced by an enormous interchange. The Buddhist monk really stood out when he crossed the track and although I'm not known for photoshopping in such a way this one just begged to be done.
Have a lovely week ahead folks - I shall be back next week with another Cornwall walk from 2017.
I always had the plan to post more shots of the wonderful Iskanderkul in Tajikistan, but it is already three years ago that I finished my trip through central Asia, and how the world has changed since then.
Beside this shot www.flickr.com/photos/115540984@N02/49221949713/in/photol..., that I posted a long time ago, there were many more.
This image was taken when we left early next morning. The scenery was gorgeous thanks to the light and the haze, and the lake got a wonderful turquoise color.
Iskanderkul is situated in the northwest of Tajikistan, in the Fann-mountains. I am not sure if it was named after Alexander the great, the stories are somewhat vague on this matter, but what is sure is that the dacha of the Tajik president is situated at the east end of the lake.
We spent two days at this lake, and although this scenery is fantastic it took me a lot of pictures to capture its grandness. Not only the lake but the surrounding mountains are so stunning you don't know where to look all the time. Enjoy!
20 September 2019 I came back from my journey over a part of the Silk Road to and through Central Asia. 4 months of traveling through 14 countries (Germany, Austria, Hungary, Romania, Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kirgizstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Iran) before I flew home from Teheran. An impressive journey in countries that are extremely beautiful, with lovely and welcoming people and diverse cultures and history.
Intense traveling with more than 20000 kilometers in our mobile home on sometimes roads that hardly could be called that way. We saw many villages and cities (some wonderful, others very ugly), countries that are transforming from the old Soviet era into something more related to older cultures and the way people live, often funded by oil readily available around the Caspian sea. We saw the amazing mountains south of the Black Sea, the wonderful Caucasus, and the high mountains in the far east close to China with peaks over 7000 meter, and not to forget the (Bulgarian) Alps!
We crossed the great steppe of Kazakhstan. a drive of at least 5000 km, the remnants of lake Aral, once one of the biggest lakes of the world, saw a rocket launch from Baikonur (this little part is Russian owned), we crossed many high mountains passes, and drove the breathtaking canyon that comes from the Pamir, beginning at ca 4500 meter, and going down for ca. 400km to an altitude of 1300 meter, driving for 100's of kilometers along the Afghan border.
And then the numerous lakes with all sorts of different colors from deep cobalt blue to turquoise, and one rare spectacle in Turkmenistan where a gas crater is burning already for more than 40 years. And finally and certainly not the least to mention an enormous amount of wonderful, hospitable and welcoming people. The woman often dressed in wonderful dresses, and bringing a lot of color in the streets of almost of all countries we visited.
I'm a thousand miles from what I had before
It's only now I realize where I'm from
Maybe I'm already home
Home is inside
Take it with me
Wherever the map may lead
I'll be where I have to be
www.youtube.com/watch?v=39VyP6iyXS8
Your life is supposed to be a journey from one unique place to another; it’s not supposed to be a merry-go-round that brings you back to the same spot over and over again.
Rachel Hollis
© All rights reserved Anna Kwa. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.
“Oh no here we go again. He’s finally lost it. Three shots already uploaded from that infernal ridge walk and yet he still manages to find another one to rattle on about!” is what you might be thinking. I’m starting to have the same thoughts myself. It doesn’t help that I’ve done so little photography since that adventure. Ok so there’s a van related wild camp caper on Dartmoor the week before last to report tales of yet to come, but I’m still to work those raw files into shape. The thing is, that afternoon on the high ground of the Brecon Beacons in South Wales brought one composition after another as the landscape gradually revealed new secrets with each phase of the trek. All of them taken with a lens that really deserves a bit more love in return for its efforts. This one brought the peaks of Fan y Big, Cribyn, Pen y Fan and Corn Du into a single frame, with an illuminated bonus foreground designed by the icy architects of this landscape to offset the four dark shrouds behind.
Like so many of us I started out with a modest assembly of tools for my induction into this world that we share. A midrange camera, a couple of reasonably price lenses sourced from your favourite auction site, a cheap tripod, an even cheaper bag and some very inexpensive filters that would be better suited as coasters for tea cups. And then I got carried away – a sorry tale of obsession, a descent of the senses so steep as to be matched only by the plummeting bank balance as a full frame camera and professional lenses were added to the bag, itself replaced by a new model of course. The cheap filters gave way to the same set that Nigel Danson swears by, and then of course a carbon fibre tripod was a must wasn’t it? Not long ago I looked at the collection, did some mental arithmetic, and decided it was best not to mention the final score to my better half, who has far more modest tastes. A new pair of knitting needles is as racy as she gets when it comes to freeing up budget for luxuries. When people take her to task on her innate sense of thrift, with metronomic consistency she replies with “how do you think I managed to retire in my fifties on what I was earning?” She has a point. You become so much wealthier by desiring less in life.
But in that bagful of precious things lies the lens that so often gets overlooked – only really brought into use at moments when lugging the others around is going to prove challenging. I think of it as my adventuring lens. After all I’d have needed a team of sherpas to roll my 100-400mm lens up the first slope of Fan y Big on a series of felled tree trunks if I’d wanted to take it with me. So for long arduous treks, the lightweight lens with the huge focal length gets its day in the sun; and the rain too for that matter. I used it a lot that day as you may already be aware from a surfeit of previous posts. When I uploaded the raw files from the hike onto my computer at home my first reaction was one of enormous disappointment – so many of them were fuzzy and grainy and I found myself heading down the familiarly dangerous route of eBay as I blamed the lens once more for its inadequacies, while stubbornly ignoring my own shortcomings. Misplaced vainglory is such an unattractive web in which to entangle oneself.
Eventually, after much soul searching and further experimenting at 300mm on the tripod in my living room I concluded that the maligned lens was entirely free of blame – it was me who was at fault. I resolved to learn to use it properly and stop poring over alternatives on the internet each time I fail. In fact it went to Dartmoor with me so you’ll be able to judge for yourself which one of us has performance issues to come to terms with in due course. I think we both know already it’s me and not the lens.
I’m sitting at my laptop in the aforementioned van, where the strains of the annual music festival that take place on the estate across the road from us are drifting across the trees towards me on the gentlest of summer evening breaths. It might be Razorlight; it might be Goldie Looking Chain I can hear, but this year the neighbours don’t appear to have been invited to the party in atonement for the interruption to our weekend peace so I’ve really no idea. I’ve moved on from indignation to indifference now. We didn’t really want to go anyway. At least it’s nearly over and it’s Bank Holiday Monday tomorrow with its stay of execution from the real world for one more day.
This might be the last image I post from that ridge walk, but the trouble is there’s at least one more of them jumping up and down in the shadows waving its arms about if I can drag another tale out of the adventure. For now I’ll work harder at familiarising myself with that lens.
Clifton, Arizona, USA. Once a booming copper mining town but now mostly declining or already in decay and the majority of people and business have moved just up the road to Morenci. The Freeport McMoRan copper mine located in Morenci is one of the largest in the world
Cliff dwellings along the San Francisco and Gila Rivers are evidence of an advanced civilization that existed long before Caesar ruled Rome. Many specimens of pottery and stone implements are still to be found in these ancient dwelling places. In the mid-1500s, both Fray Marcos de Niza and Francisco Vasquez de Coronado passed through the area, following the San Pedro north to the Gila River. Geronimo was born in 1829 near the confluence of Eagle Creek and the San Francisco and Gila Rivers.
In 1856 the first mineral discoveries of the Morenci/Clifton area were found by California volunteers pursuing Apaches, and conflicts between the Apaches and advancing Anglo settlers touched off a 26-year-long war. Mining for gold and silver began in 1864, followed by copper in 1872, and the mine at Morenci quickly grew to become the largest copper producer in North America. Clifton's population ballooned from 600 in 1880 to 5000 by 1910, and it quickly earned its reputation as the wildest of the "Wild West" boomtowns. Neighboring Morenci was swallowed up by an open pit mine in the 1960s, but Clifton was preserved, and today Chase Creek Street is still graced with lovely Victorian-era buildings from the town's halcyon days as the place to quickly make and lose a fortune.
In 1983, Clifton survived two nearly fatal blows, first a nearly three-year-long strike that began on June 30, 1983. Then later that same year, on October 2, 1983, Tropical Storm Octave sent 90,900 cubic feet of water per second into the San Francisco River, which burst its banks, destroying 700 homes and heavily damaging 86 of the town's 126 businesses.