View allAll Photos Tagged Bearing

Gelder rose berries with colourful autumn leaves.

Morus Bassanus

 

Flying over the Staple Newk colonny, Bempton Cliffs, Yorkshire UK

HSS! Hope you all have a wonderful and blessed Sunday. Thank you for stopping by!

 

Texture by Me and Fractlius

 

Copyright © 2014 Wendy Gee Photo~Art

This image is protected under the United States and International Copyright laws and

may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without

written permission.

Nordic Bearing and Maslack Supply on Riverside Drive In Mountjoy Township in the City of Timmins in Northeastern Ontario Canada

HTmT 😊😊😍

 

Thank you for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day! ❤️❤️❤️

Walking through the Autumn woods.

shot with a fujifilm x-s10 and a pentax smc 55mm f1.8 m42 lens

Late evening golden sun on a series of cantilever supports holding up some air-conditioning units.

"#06" "Diagonal" "116 Pictures in 2016"

An alternative perspective of the load bearing cable stays on the Samuel Beckett Bridge in Dublin that joins the south side of the River Liffey to the North Wall Quay in the Docklands area

idk I just like this look a lot

 

The vines entangled in the fence have the Autumn berries.

A Royal Tern zooms by, bearing a gift for it's mate.

270° towards that puddle ahead. Let's go!

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

A Royal Tern with a fresh catch.

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Press 'l' (small-L) to see in full size and best quality.

Press 'Esc' to go back.

202011214_005_Harvey_2

Bringing some water home for preparing the evening meal. Carabane island. Casamance river estuary. Senegal.

C-GGMM, a Quest Kodiak 100 Series II, landing on runway 33 at Toronto Buttonville Municipal Airport in Markham, Ontario.

It was arriving exactly 30 minutes before sunset.

Canon FD 35mm f2 + Vivitar 2X Macro teleconverter

This is a focus-stack of six images.

I caught this bee leaving the "Butterfly love" lotus' bloom. Unlike most water lilies whose blossoms lie on or just above the water garden's surface, the lotus blossoms rise 3-4' ( 1-1.3 m) above the water level.

Storm approaching Lincoln Township Beach.

This could be the end of an era. Whilst shooting for this weeks theme my beloved, but slightly elderly Alpha A99 threw up a “steadyshot malfunction” error that won’t clear. It will still shoot, just have to cancel the warnings and obviously don’t get the steadyshot functionality, guess I’ll just have to wait till Black Friday to see what offers pop up!

 

We’ve been together since 2012, it’s going to be hard to let go.

 

#InARow

 

HMM

Sponsors

BIPOLAR//Miran Dress @ C88

 

Wearing

Ayashi//Snowy Hair

  

"Queen Anne’s Lace is so adaptable that in some habitats it crowds out native species that can’t compete with its vigorous growth. Many people consider Queen Anne’s lace an invasive weed (it is listed as a noxious weed in at least 35 states), but it is used by some native animals for food. It is a host plant for eastern black swallowtail caterpillars and many butterflies and adult bees and beneficial insects utilize the flower nectar. To reduce the spread of this plant, remove the seedheads before they mature."

 

hort.extension.wisc.edu/articles/queen-annes-lace-daucus-...

For Halloween this year, I asked my hairdresser to make me look like a star....someone famous in movies or TV.

He asked me who I had in mind.

I told him I'd leave that up to him.

I wish I'd known how fond he was of Marge Simpson.

 

Thank you all for bearing with me thru this annual fit that comes over me, and for your views and comments. You are patient.....you are wonderful.

 

Our former on premise office manager wasn't very encouraging of kids being out and about even tho it's a cul de sac with wide expanses of lawn and no thru traffic.

So there's hardly been any trick or treaters on Halloween.....last year I got none.

We have a new manager and she sent out a notice that if we wanted to hand out candy, come to the office and pick up a sign for our door that welcomed them. The hours would be 2-8 pm.

It lets everyone know it's allowed and whose door to knock on.

I'm hoping I get a little parade tonight, tho the weather isn't so good.

But I'm really pleased to see the change of attitude.

 

Happy Halloween, everyone.

A male yellow-hooded blackbird surveys its small territory!

Probably the pollen bearing males. Like the cedar cones and the rose petals there is a pervading spirality, in this case to optimise pollen cell packing.

Architectural detail at Paddington railway station.

Cap Rouge, Quebec City, Canada

 

First permanent establishments

 

In 1635, the first seigneurie was granted on the territory of Cape-Rouge, but revoked the following year by the Company of One Hundred Associates. However, by 1638 Paul Le Jeune, a missionary Jesuit, had noted in The Jesuit Relations the presence of some families in the valley.[1] Between 1647 and 1652, the seigneuries of Maur, on the west, and Gaudarville, in the east, were established on the territory. From that moment, based on taxable citizens, the settlement on the lands of Cap-Rouge are established. The village formed is served by the parishes of Ancienne-Lorette in (1678) to the north; of Saint-Augustin in (1691) on the west; and of Sainte-Foy (1698) in the east.

 

Geography

 

The beach of Plage Jacques Cartier and the cliffs of Cap-Rouge.

 

The name of Cap-Rouge, meaning "red cape", comes from its cliffs facing the Saint-Lawrence river and made of schist rock bearing a reddish tint. The other main topographic feature of Cap-Rouge is the Rivière du Cap Rouge valley where are concentrated some historic buildings as well the archeological remains of a pottery workshop active from 1860 to 1892. It is believed that until the end of its operations the workshop mainly used imported clay rather than the local one, which has a rather red hue.

 

The Cap-Rouge area is located to the south of the Canadian Shield and Laurentian Mountains, at the confluence of the geological regions of the Saint Lawrence Lowlands and of the northern Appalachians. It mostly sits at the western foot of the Quebec promontory, in the way of the Logan's Line - an inactive fracture in the Earth's crust first documented by Sir William Edmond Logan.

Gull hanging on the stiff breeze, in total control and taking stock of its space.

Canvey Island, Essex UK

 

Cropped and added a little warmth

There is not a particle of life that does not bear poetry within it.

---Gustave Flaubert

Street scene, Tacoma Washington

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