View allAll Photos Tagged Carrying
Carrying route branding for Timeasver route 900, West Midlands PTE MCW Metrobus 2782 (B782 AOC) waits in Pool Meadow Bus Station, Coventry, before going on stand for its return journey to Halesowen.
“We carry in our hearts the true country
And that cannot be stolen
We follow in the steps of our ancestry
And that cannot be broken” The Dead Heart - Midnight Oil
I hope everyone in Australia gets a chance to watch the documentary The Last Quarter even though it is heartbreaking viewing.
I hope people listen to Adam Goodes in retrospect as the events unfold and hear his gentle, proud voice of reason trying to be heard over the collective voice of the privileged white pack who continued to deny that racism played any part in their behaviour.
In keeping with trying to capture the little Church in all sorts of weather, I visited this morning as the thick veil of fog was starting to lift. I thought about how sad I am that this land, on my patch, will soon be gone. Still feeling shattered from the documentary, I reflected on the unimaginable horror and loss that our First Nation people encountered and still do some 200 years later. Not just a little patch of land down the road, but the loss of an entire country and way of life. And then to keep paying the price over and over again because of the colour of your skin.
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www.news.com.au/sport/sports-life/director-wants-australi...
I intended to post another photo of this yesterday which would've coincided with Guru Purnima (a festival dedicated to offering respect to all the spiritual and academic gurus.)
This beautiful image depicts Laxmi (centre), both the consort and the divine energy (shakti) of the Hindu god Vishnu .... 'she who leads to one's goal'
Left is Ganesha, God of new beginnings, wisdom and luck and remover of obstacles.
Right is Saraswati, Goddess of knowledge, music, art, speech, wisdom, and learning (thanks to Two Cups Studio for the clarification and translation.)
I found this upside down among the plants in my front garden on Sunday evening. I'm the last house on my road so things sometimes get blown into my garden, though this is a more unusual and welcome find.
It's printed onto some kind of metallic laminate paper and needed some cleaning up.
Where it came from is a bit of a mystery.
I didn't post the original photo that I'd taken yesterday because I hadn't shot the level straight, and by the time I'd adjusted it, it'd lost some of the top of the circle and I was also very tired from working in school.
The flowers are a particularly beautifully scented Phlox, given to me by a late friend.
Alexander Dennis E400ER City PA23 is seen on Botanic Road in Glasnevin with a T shape Ad for Virgin Mobile Network
Last week the frogs (Pelophylax esculentus) in the neighbourhood woke up from their winter hibernation.
I have seen this moment for several years, but this year it was a gathering of immense proportions, with two days of frogs coming from all directions jumping towards the pond.
The females were ennourmously big with eggs and carrying their mate on their backs. It's a very positive sign to see as in the past years the species had a difficult time.
PB_M5482-2- Canon EF180mm
-Robert Plant "Carry Fire"
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z4UD8DKAu04
I sit and wait for you
like so many others do
Just like they do for me,
well, so I do for you
I carry fire for you
Here in my naked hands
I bare my heart to you
If you will understand
I was a stranger here
inside your promised land
That turned me inside out
and turned me upside down
I carry fire for you
Here in my naked hands
I bare my heart to you
If you will understand
Just like, just like, just like I scar you
Just like, just like, just like I scar you
I'm reaching out for you
across broken days
All through the gathering years
beyond these lonely ways
I carry fire for you
Here in my naked hands
I bare my heart to you
If you will understand
Just like, just like, just like I scar you
OBSERVE Collective
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germanstreetphotography.com/michael-monty-may/
Everyday carry (COVID edition)
A selections of items always on my person.
Kershaw 1660 Leek Ken Onion design pocket knife (kershaw.kaiusa.com/leek.html)
Surefire Sidekick 300 lumen keychain light (www.surefire.com/products/illumination/flashlights/sideki...)
Leatherman Style PS pocket multitool - approved for air travel (www.leatherman.com/style-ps-831488.html)
Shrunk copy of CDC proof of vaccination
Background: Cloth mask printed with a VFR aviation chart centered at Whitman field in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, home of the annual Experimental Aircraft Association "Airventure" gathering (www.chartitall.com/product-page/sectional-chart-face-mask)
We will carry the laughter and silly times she instilled in us over the years and continue to tell her stories.
You were a good bean, Kanj.
Hold your friends tight.
Tell them you love them.
We never have long enough.
If you would like to share your memories and stories of Kanje, you can do so here.
Visit La Saucisserie.
I don't think Aiko was too thrilled on this enormous hike we took, so he gave me this look several times....
I realized at least that carrying a cam is no problem on long hikes, I thought actually it would be a burden.
But I guess my EvaThrilled feelings took the weight.
It was sooo fun to click with a real cam 😂
And all this thrill thanks to my FlickrFriend 🙏
279/365
Hope you guys had a good day! :)
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Those traveling by canoe up the Ottawa River can use utilize this underpass to carry their canoes to the Mattawa River, located a short distance from the passageway, and avoid the strong currents at the juncture of the Mattawa and Ottawa Rivers.
Transport for Wales continues its testing of the Class 231 FLIRT unit seen here at Brithdir with 3R07 11:59 Rhymney North GF to Rhymney North GF.
You are at the edge of one of the most ecologically important places in Banff National Park.
Wetlands are scarce in the mountains. Water seems to be in a hurry to get somewhere else.
Glaciers deposited massive amounts of gravel, sand, and silt in this broad valley and its tributaries. In the 15,000 years since the glaciers retreated, annual flooding by the Bow River and its tributaries has carried much of the loose material into the relatively flat valley floor. Here, the river slows and as a result, its ability to carry sediments dwindles. Over time, the valley has filled with stream-borne sediments. Today, the Bow River meanders across a wide, well-watered floodplain atop those deposits.
These low elevation wetlands offer a longer growing season for plants and animals than valleys higher in elevation. Rich silt soils are more productive than the rockier soils on higher slopes.
Biological diversity and productivity, make these montane wetlands unique in the Rockies. Here you can see the boreal toads, Wilson's Warblers, beavers muskrats, and a variety of rare species.
Wildlife that travel widely depend on these wetlands for survival from the elk herds that winter here to the grizzly bears that sometimes fish for spawning while suckers in the Spring, to the migratory birds that arrive for the summer.