View allAll Photos Tagged BINS
Ned likes to wait for the bin men - sometimes they bring him a carrot!
Created for the Vivid Art Group Contest Urban Surrealism
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Came across this set of grain bins - the fog turned the scene so mellow. I was tempted to do in B&W but the warm light filtering though was so lovely. Also, the dirt in front of the front bins in black seemed to make the bins run off the image edges, but the slight color change stopped that effect.
Jour de brume sur le phare de Binic / CĂ´tes d'Armor.
Mon site photo : www.fabricebertholinophotographie.com/
This photo was taken couple weeks ago down north country area.
Today I might be a bit busy so may be late to comment and fave your photos. So don't get upset if I not visit your photos yet! But I will promise to visit you once I free!! I would never missed your wonderful photos!!!
Again!! Have A Wonderful Weekend!!!
Interessant sieht sie aus mit dem Puschel auf dem Kopf.
Nur zum besseren Verständnis: Das ist wirklich von Natur aus mit dem Puschel auf dem Kopf.
They're all out today; black general waste, green recycling & brown garden waste - the latter fortnightly rather than weekly.
I really liked the way this bin stood out and the colour, as seen on a walk.
Pentax K3iii &20-40mmWR
On the side of a huge green metal waste bin. What happens when you ride your bike around the streets waiting to see something. The Burbs for ya. Happy Day.
This is a corrugated metal grain bin or corn crib. I looked up what the difference is between a silo and a grain bin.
“Grain bins and silos do not store the same products.
Grain bins store dry grain that will be used for animal feed, human consumption, or fuel. This includes, but is not limited to: shelled corn, soybeans, wheat, oats, barley, sunflower seeds, and flax seeds.
Silos store silage–typically something like green grass or chopped corn–which is fairly moist and is fed to livestock. The grasses or corn are more or less “pickled” so that they can keep for a long time and feed the livestock during dry seasons or other times when they have no other food to eat.”
www.adamsgrainbins.com/whats-difference-grain-bins-silos/
This grain bin has not been used in a long time. It is missing the door and has a nice rusty patina on the roof. The top of the roof has holes for aeration of the grain. You will also notice that it is covered in vines, a critical point that I had missed (and it is my Group). Luckily, Vince Montalbano (autofocus) pointed it out to me!
The Australian White Ibis (Threskiornis molucca ) is a native bird originally found in freshwater wetlands. Loss of wetland habitat over the last half century or so has seen an influx of these birds to towns and major cities, where they have adapted to urban environments. They have become quite fearless in scavenging food from people, prompting common reference to them as bin chickens. Ballina, NSW North Coast, Australia.
HD PENTAX-D FA 150-450mm f4.5-5.6
The name of my village, Markyate, refers to boundaries ('mark' and 'gate'). When you mark something out, you are drawing boundaries around it. Markers are signs pointing to these boundaries, many of them imaginary. There are plenty of these in the village.
This one, the rubbish bin, constitutes one of the strongest markers referring to the elapsing time - at least, when you are old as I am. The bins have to be put out weekly, and this is the rhythm of time you are part of, and this time is elapsing.