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A Spring view coming home from work today. I drive this way all the time but it never fails to provide some new scenes! I can't wait to get out and get some pics! I went into Missoula today and seen so many things I'd like to photograph...so maybe this weekend if the weather cooperates!!! Have a nice evening everyone! :) Maybe one of these days I'll catch a sunrise!!!
Sometimes it's a challenge. He's pretty hardheaded and it's like arguing with a Tea Party conservative.
After turning at Fabyan, 252 leads her train back home toward North Conway, seen here just east of Fabyan depot.
... to a care home. I've deliberately obscured the patient's face and the ambulance registration number.
I don't think enough people realise just how lucky they really are.
The brakes are starting to heat up as CN 5563 South dives into the Lake Superior Basin., approaching Waldo, MN on Labor Day 2011. CN 5563, DMIR 404, and 407 have Minntac pellets for Two Harbors just 7 miles ahead. The 5563 will stop in a few miles, just south of Waldo, to recharge the air, before heading down the steepest part of the grade on the old southbound main into the yard.
...straight from the heart .....heart shaped leaf of the Wild Yam that is :)
Remembering Bryan Adams
Remembering Michael Kiwanuka
Remembering Vandenberg
Remembering HEART !!! :)
Remembering Elton :)
Remembering Crazy Heart Soundtrack
Remembering Toni Braxton
Remembering Taylor Dayne
Remembering Survivor
Remembering Madonna
Remembering Miranda Lambert
Remembering The 1975
Remembering Juice Newton
Remembering Bonnie Tyler
Remembering Celine Dion
One more from Heart :)
Remembering Neil Young
In Search of Spring Beautys in the Woods of Virginia.
IMG_9189
Phase1 - Flashover Training, Kentucky Fire Commission, State Fire Rescue Training.
We came across this training in Newport, Kentucky. They told us we were free to photograph and one fireman helped us get up close. Approximately ten firemen stayed in a smoke filled box for about a half hour.
The sun setting means evening is coming and it triggers the wildlife to make ready for night. There is a corn field just over the trees and it is getting filled with Canada Geese looking for scraps of food left from the harvest. There are still a number of ducks on the lake enjoying the evening. The humans will be heading home for a warm evening of food and TV.
An image may be purchased at edward-peterson.pixels.com/featured/evening-is-coming-ed-...
Discl.: photos belong to Tendres Chimeres (www.etsy.com/fr/shop/TendresChimeres)
Heaven - that's the name of this little highly poisenous cutie ^^ ... made by the french BJD artist Tendres Chimeres
isn't this the cutest mushroom you have seen?! ^^
it was love on first sight <3 ... luckily he wasn't sold at L-Doll ... or I would never had the chance to adopt him <3 ... some of his brothers are still in her shop! Also her awesome Al'vins (baby fishes) and Zouis (bigger fishes) and even "unicorn" fishes ^^
many million thanks to mimmeli kitten - without her I wouldn't have seen her art and never got my little Mushy ^^
"Thousands of tired, nerve-shaken, over-civilized people are beginning to find out that going to the mountains is going home; that wildness is a necessity." — John Muir, "Our National Parks" (1901)
While we often spend weeks planning our outdoor adventures as a grand departure from daily life, John Muir completely inverted this directional vector by suggesting that heading into the wild is actually the act of returning *home* to our most elemental baseline. We operate within two very different worlds—the built environment of predictable routines and schedules, which can easily leave us "over-civilized" and drained, and the biological home of open trails and rugged terrain that demands our full physical presence and restores our mental bandwidth. The true value of Muir’s philosophy is revealed not at the summit, but during the descent and the inevitable return to our everyday addresses. Moving through the wilderness functions like a geometric coordinate transformation: you return to the exact same physical routines, responsibilities, and schedules, but your internal axes have been fundamentally realigned. By stepping into the mountains, you shed the manufactured urgency of modern life, allowing you to shake the trail dust off your gear and walk back through the front door carrying a quiet, resilient clarity that transforms how you navigate the ordinary world.