View allAll Photos Tagged Burnham
I'm hoping to get back there sometime in the coming week to capture the best of the autumn colour which was just building on this visit - if there are any leaves left on the trees - or sunshine.
It was a high tide tonight and although the sunrise was never going to happen, it was a good opportunity for some long exposures. I have kept with the blue cast of the Big Stopper as I feel it suits the monochromatic feel of the scene.
This is 180s at f/8 ISO200. Shot just before sundown.
Crab pots at Burnham Overy staithe. I was amazed to read that given the chance, the edible crab can live for 25 years, and some have been found much older, almost centurions. The specimens caught off North Norfolk are some of the best for taste in the UK, and that is attributed to the fact that they feed over clean sea beds of chalk and flint, in relatively shallow waters.
Now long gone from CP's system, this MP15AC works a yard job over Burnham Bridge at the east end of Muskego Yard.
CP 1447
The Juniata Valley rolls through Kish Park in Burnham, Pennsylvania with two cars for Standard Steel.
This is the village where Admiral Lord Nelson was born and grew up. It was decidedly quiet on this Sunday morning when we walked through
The Flatiron Building-nicknamed Burnham's Folly-was designed by Daniel Burnham in the Beaux-Arts style. Built in 1889, it was the first edifice built in which the stone outside walls did not bear the weight of the building. New York.
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A walk with some Windsor Photographic Society members around Burnham Beeches in the hunt for some nice samples of fungi. Shot taken on iPhone 16 Pro Max with lighting from an LED torch.
My first photographic trip to Burnham on Sea Lighthouse, I will return !!! I hoped there would be more water but I never knew the best hight for the tide. Lucky to have had some good light and cloud patterns so I will be posting more from this shoot....
Had a lovely few days down in Somerset. This is one of those rare occasions were everything seems to come together!
Popular hostelry in the centre of Burnham Market. Horatio Nelson is on the pub sign, and a lifesize model of him out the back. This is after all, Nelsons county. He was suprisingly short in stature!
Posting a couple of images from Burnham Beeches from the late Autumn. Colour all gone now, of course.
just another harbor shot in the city as we head for another gorgeous sunset here in Chicago...pls. View On Black