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Lemaire Channel is one of the scenic highlights of Antarctica. It leads to Petermann Island, a favourite port of call for expedition cruisers but it is often blocked by icebergs.
#AbFav_MODES_of_TRANSPORT
We were crossing the Channel, getting OFF the Island that is England, for work(?) and play... seeing family and friends, my beloved Flanders... and new places... what could be better?
The Channel has traffic on both the UK-Europe and North Sea-Atlantic routes, and is the world's busiest seaway, with over 500 ships per day.
Between Ostend in Belgium and Dover, there used to be a regular service, alas no more...
Golden light on the Ferries
Thank you for your time and comments, greatly appreciated, M, (*_*)
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Ferries, two, ships, "golden light", sun, sea, Channel, North-Sea, traffic, strait, colour, horizontal, "Magda Indigo"
Channeling my inner witch with a touch of glamour ✨ Spooky vibes, lace, and a dash of magic for this Halloween season. Ready to cast some cute, yet creepy spells under the blood-red moon! 🔮🎃
Infrared Channel Swap (using the GIMP)
Panasonic ZS5 w/full spectrum conversion
720nm #infrared filter
#infraredPhotography
This shot was taken the night of the full moon down at Portarlington with the moon just peeping up on the horizon behind the green marker. The clouds were nothing like the night before and so I just concentrated on the markers instead.
"Same Bat time, same Bat channel." This phrase was said at the end of every tv show on the original Batman series. Now it is often used to refer to an occurrence that has an identical time table as a previous one. Interesting how some expressions get started only to become part of our everyday phraseology. I say this because today's post is the same time and place (channel) as yesterday's post.
Take for example the decades old phrase, "the hole 9 yards". Many wonder why it is not 10 yards, thinking the phrase is from football. Rather, it has nothing to do with football and everything to do with the length of ammunition in the wing of a WWII Spitfire. While strafing the enemy, pilots would say, "give him the hole 9 yards."
Mouth of the River Nene
Tycho Wing the fourth (1794-1852) was Surveyor to the Duke of Bedford, and made a considerable name for himself, earning the nickname “King of the Fens”. Sometimes in the company of John Rennie and Thomas Telford, Tycho surveyed the Nene River outfall and surrounding marshes. The Nene River mouth is known as Tycho Wing's Channel, and the area on the east side of the river is Wingland, or Wingfield.
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Lagerstroemia commonly known as crape myrtle (incorrectly or less commonly spelled crepe myrtle, and often referred to in technical literature as crapemyrtle), is a genus of around 50 species of deciduous and evergreen trees and shrubs native to the Indian subcontinent, southeast Asia, northern Australia, and parts of Oceania, cultivated in warmer climates around the world. It is a member of the family Lythraceae, which are also known as the loosestrife family. Crape myrtles are chiefly known for their colorful and long-lasting flowers which occur in summer. Most species of Lagerstroemia have sinewy, fluted stems and branches with a mottled appearance that arises from having bark that sheds throughout the year. Flowers are borne in summer and autumn in panicles of crinkled flowers with a crepe-like texture. Colors vary from deep purple to red to white, with almost every shade in between. 51606
The English Channel also known simply as the Channel ( La Manche in French ) is a narrow strip of the Atlantic ocean separating southern England and Northern France, at its narrowest here it is just 21 miles to France.
It is also one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world.
Photography © Jeremy Sage
taken@ Buddha Garden