View allAll Photos Tagged Beulah
Beulah Street Wharf.
Beulah Street, Kirribilli.
Sydney
Photographed at dusk.
Saturday 15th July, 2023.
My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L lens.
Processed in Adobe Lightroom and PhotoPad Pro by NCH software.
A Legacy 'Candy' filter from the Flickr Photo Editor.
This little village in Northern Michigan is loaded with small town charm. Definitely puts you in the Christmas spirit!
Another picture from this cute little town in Northern Michigan. I love going to all the shops there and just taking in the scenery.
Well it's my favourite wharf in Sydney.
Located at Beulah Street, in Kirribilli.
Harbour action 24/7. On this occasion a very crowded Fishburn Catamaran (Sydney Ferry) is scurrying back to Circular Quay from its trek to Mosman and Cremorne Point.
So to accompany this chilled image of Sydney harbour, here's the ultra cool UB40 with their distinctive version of 'Light My Fire' (the classic song by 'The Doors'):
www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgE10UVYPnM
My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L IS lens.
these were submitted to frace faces and one was in the november issue
era Baroque
dressAurelia
skin Terri_Adamo(Radiant)
hair curl up and dye
Beautiful Beulah.
The Beulah grain elevator was built in 1927 and closed in 1978 when the adjacent rail line was closed. It was used by a local farmer's cooperative until 2000.
Beulah, Manitoba, Canada.
I wrote a blog post about this trip in February/March 2022. If you'd like to see some behinds the scene shots, video and read some stories about how I shot these images, take a look.
I love photographing on the Canadian Prairies and I've been travelling there to do so since 2013. If you'd like to see my other Prairie images, feel free to take a look at the album.
At one time, grain elevators could be found every 8 to 10 miles along every railway line in western Canada. That allowed most farmers to make a round trip to an elevator to deliver and sell their grain with a horse and wagon in one day. From that elevator the grain would be shipped to ports on the Great Lakes or the west coast, across Canada and around the world. Grain elevators started appearing across the Prairies in the late 19th century, and the number of grain elevators peaked in 1938, when there were nearly 6,000 primary (country) elevators in the Prairie provinces. Many factors led to the decline of the primary elevator: the Depression, increased mechanization, improved roads for transportation, rural depopulation, the closing of branch lines of the railway and the buying out or merging of the grain companies and the building of large, concrete grain terminals. In 2022 only around 120 old wooden elevators still survived in Manitoba. Many of the old, wooden elevators have been destroyed – burned down, struck by lightning, demolished - but some of them still remain - weathered but beautiful and stalwart.
Sources: Dommasch, H. (1986) Prairie Giants. Saskatoon: Western Producer Prairie Books and Jourdan, T. (2022). Disappearing icons. CBC News. www.cbc.ca/newsinteractives/features/manitoba-grain-eleva...
A different angle on beautiful Beulah. Even though these country elevators were built to standard plans, wind, rain, snow and time have given them all unique and individual looks (and personalities, if you ask me). I like Beulah a lot - enough to publish two images of her from the same shoot (first one here). Even her different faces have different personalities.
The Beulah grain elevator was built in 1927 and closed in 1978 when the adjacent rail line was closed. It was used by a local farmer's cooperative until 2000.
Beulah, Manitoba, Canada.
I wrote a blog post about this trip in February/March 2022. If you'd like to see some behinds the scene shots, video and read some stories about how I shot these images, take a look.
I love photographing on the Canadian Prairies and I've been travelling there to do so since 2013. If you'd like to see my other Prairie images, feel free to take a look at the album.
At one time, grain elevators could be found every 8 to 10 miles along every railway line in western Canada. That allowed most farmers to make a round trip to an elevator to deliver and sell their grain with a horse and wagon in one day. From that elevator the grain would be shipped to ports on the Great Lakes or the west coast, across Canada and around the world. Grain elevators started appearing across the Prairies in the late 19th century, and the number of grain elevators peaked in 1938, when there were nearly 6,000 primary (country) elevators in the Prairie provinces. Many factors led to the decline of the primary elevator: the Depression, increased mechanization, improved roads for transportation, rural depopulation, the closing of branch lines of the railway and the buying out or merging of the grain companies and the building of large, concrete grain terminals. In 2022 only around 120 old wooden elevators still survived in Manitoba. Many of the old, wooden elevators have been destroyed – burned down, struck by lightning, demolished - but some of them still remain - weathered but beautiful and stalwart.
Sources: Dommasch, H. (1986) Prairie Giants. Saskatoon: Western Producer Prairie Books and Jourdan, T. (2022). Disappearing icons. CBC News. www.cbc.ca/newsinteractives/features/manitoba-grain-eleva...
love this sim next to Ivalde - Brumm is so creative.
this snow glow is at the top of the mountain - thats me in it wearing Anina (Ivalde)my Zero hair fromt he CSR stamp thingy and Ashia Tomsen goth skin - thankfully though shes close the store in SL shes got all her stuff on rez. - worth a visit here - its a nice place
The former Beulah Chapel (1899) in Admaston Township near Renfrew, Ontario, Canada.
It belonged to the (Men's) Holiness Movement, which has its roots in Wesleyanism, which sprung from early American Methodism.
Regarding the Holiness Movement's origins in eastern Ontario, which is where this chapel is located, research shows that Ralph Cecil Horner, born in 1853 in Shawville, Quebec, died in 1921 and is buried in the Merivale Unitied Cemetery in Ottawa; and brought the Holiness Movement Church, which he founded in 1897, to the Renfrew area.
In 1916 criticism of his leadership among Methodists, resulted in schism, and Horner founded the Standard Church of America.
I visited Beulah twice on this trip. On this first visit, the road was covered in snow and the fierce wind (which made the windchill feel below -40C) had carved these beautiful patterns in the snow. Lovely Beulah, I thought, deserved a third showing with this image.
Beulah, Manitoba, Canada.
I wrote a blog post about this trip in February/March 2022. If you'd like to see some behinds the scene shots, video and read some stories about how I shot these images, take a look.
I love photographing on the Canadian Prairies and I've been travelling there to do so since 2013. If you'd like to see my other Prairie images, feel free to take a look at the album.
At one time, grain elevators could be found every 8 to 10 miles along every railway line in western Canada. That allowed most farmers to make a round trip to an elevator to deliver and sell their grain with a horse and wagon in one day. From that elevator the grain would be shipped to ports on the Great Lakes or the west coast, across Canada and around the world. Grain elevators started appearing across the Prairies in the late 19th century, and the number of grain elevators peaked in 1938, when there were nearly 6,000 primary (country) elevators in the Prairie provinces. Many factors led to the decline of the primary elevator: the Depression, increased mechanization, improved roads for transportation, rural depopulation, the closing of branch lines of the railway and the buying out or merging of the grain companies and the building of large, concrete grain terminals. In 2022 only around 120 old wooden elevators still survived in Manitoba. Many of the old, wooden elevators have been destroyed – burned down, struck by lightning, demolished - but some of them still remain - weathered but beautiful and stalwart.
Sources: Dommasch, H. (1986) Prairie Giants. Saskatoon: Western Producer Prairie Books and Jourdan, T. (2022). Disappearing icons. CBC News. www.cbc.ca/newsinteractives/features/manitoba-grain-eleva...
This is Beulah Reservoir in Southeast Oregon. It is very remote and has a lot of natural beauty and wildlife.
if your an Ivalde fan then you have to pay a visit to ~Aurora Borealis~
dress - Cosette (Ivalde)
Jewelry Belgian Chocolate (~Aurora Borealis~)
Skin - Celebrity ( Chai)
Hair - Ruby (Truth)
dress-Ivalde 60s Udela
skin -Chai nutmeg/lavender
hair Aiiyana/blackberry
jewelry - BAX_boho collection
- www.kevin-palmer.com - This was a highly unusual weather event called a derecho. Derechos are a long-lived wind storm that may travel across multiple states and cause widespread damage. They occur a few times a year in the Midwest or Eastern US. What was unusual about this derecho is that it began in Utah at 9AM. Normally the Rockies disrupt organized storm systems, but this one had no problem plowing 750 miles all the way to North Dakota. Hundreds of wind reports ranged from 60 to 110 mph. I intercepted the squall line near the Wyoming/South Dakota border. The severe thunderstorm warning mentioned a storm motion of 100 mph which was a bit difficult to comprehend. I tried to make it to a mountaintop, but then had to go with plan B, which turned into plan C which was pretty much the side of a road off of I-90. The shelf cloud was very ominous. The air was notably calm and quiet just before it struck. One mountain after another vanished into the rain and dust. Then seconds later the wind was roaring and I couldn't even stand up straight.