View allAll Photos Tagged Cary
1070 Western Gauntlet opens up on the approach to Castle Cary with 11.30 Paddington to Penzance service. 21/9/1974
Cary Area Emergency Medical Services
Cary, North Carolina
2010-2016 Ford F-350
Division Chief, District 5
Retired 1st Sgt. Jerry Bowers, 440th Army National Guard, bows his head during a Veterans Day Remembrance at Veteran's Freedom Park in Cary.
Products of the Cary brick company are strewn about the ruins of their brickyard near Hudson, N.Y.
That round thing between the A and the R on the bricks in the left stack is a rope over a pulley … it was the symbol of the Common Brick Manufacturers Association.
47816 'Bristol Bath Road Quality Assured' pauses at Castle Cary on Thursday 7 June 2001 with 1C56, FGW's 1633 Paddington-Penzance service.
The current Westbury yard super shunter 60039 Dove Holes was given mainline duty with a stone working from Whatley Quarry to Exeter Riverside and return seen here 6C28 passing the attractive station at Castle Cary enroute to Westbury.
Another view of central Delray looking east from the corner of Jefferson and Cary. The RenCen and the Ambassador Bridge can be seen in the distance.
Foggy, misty evening in Cary, NC with our famous fountain as the main subject. These are 6 second exposures.
50 016 Barham (Thanks Nodding Pig ) shunts a rake of ZHV Dogfish wagons to the rear of the platform at Castle Cary, viewed from our HST speeding us to Newbury.
47832 'Tamar' hammers through Castle Cary with 1C33, FGW's 1233 Paddington to Exeter St David's service on Thursday, 7 June, 2001. The line on the right goes to Yeovil Pen Mill, Dorchester and Weymouth and was singled in 1968. A colour version of this photo can be seen on my SmugMug site here: glenbatten.smugmug.com/Routes-1/Westbury-to-Taunton/i-cT6...
Cary came into my studio and was so much fun to shoot. Her facial expressions and attitude completely made my day.
Near Park West Village
Red Sky..? Why?
Weather systems typically move from west to east, and red clouds result when the sun shines on their undersides at either sunrise or sunset.[5][citation needed] At these two times of day, the sun's light is passing at a very low angle through a great thickness of atmosphere commonly known as The Belt of Venus. The result of which is the scattering out of most of the shorter wavelengths — the greens, blues, and violets — of the visible spectrum, and so sunlight is heavy at the red end of the spectrum.
From: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weather_lore#True_lore.2C_and_why