View allAll Photos Tagged Channeling
The same view, with a 50mm prime to take in a bit more of the sky.
The sun had set about 20 minutes earlier over my right shoulder and the light in the water was being reflected back from the clouds above.
The first visit back to my favourite beach since our holidays, and it didn't disappoint. All to myself, and the beach sported a different look with all the pools and drainage channels. A sign of big seas and strong winds. Refuge is a track by The Antlers, and this beach has always been a refuge for me, a place to think, and to lose yourself.
The Belleisle cable ferry keeps this part of the river open. Some winters, the channel is notably narrower than this!
First winter photo session this season. I will record a video tutorial using this photo. I think it's interesting because it wasn't wintery at all. No snow at all. I will post in on my website and on my YT channel
Bedford Channel in Fort Langley British Columbia Canada. Photo taken with an Olympus OM1 on Ilford FP4 film.
After nearly ten hours sailing we have arrived. Devonport dead ahead. But first we have to navigate the narrow channel in the Mersey River. For the crew of the bridge, who do this all the time, this is like a walk in the park (let's hope one day we don't have to explain this metaphor to our children).
You can see a solitary fisherman sitting in his dinghy just outside the channel lines, and some more people on shore. Up in the bridge (I'll tag it) the Captain watches as the Spirit of Tasmania I enters the final approach.
My interview on Google Local Guide Connect
All Photos Are Copyright To Paul Saad , Unauthorised Use Is Not Allowed Without Prior Permission. © Some rights reserved ©
Towards the end of our trip south through the Lemaire Channel, cloud descended over Booth Island, the light got beautifully soft and this image and the next few were taken. This was shot at nearly 9pm. Most people had gone inside for dinner, and just me and JP (John Paul Caponigro) remained on the top deck of the ship. This isn't everyone's light or conditions, but we both loved it. Eventually JP went down and I was up there alone. It was one of the memories from the trip that will stay with me always.
The Lemaire Channel, Antarctica.
I made a short film of what I saw in Antarctica. If you'd like to see it, head over to YouTube or you can watch it here on Flickr.
If you'd like to see all my Antarctica images together, you can visit my Flickr Antarctica album.
I wrote three blog posts about this amazing trip to Antarctica. If you'd like read about the trip and see some more documentary/BTS images, you'll find the blog posts here:
shrank my fave human baby sock pattern to 3 wee sizes plus managed 2 sizes of sweaters - now to block whew!
bjtales Mouse, Wiggs Teeny Gracie, & bbflockling Wren wondering where is their underWHERE??
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Oh, it's Christmas time, mistletoe and wine
Children singing Christian rhyme
With logs on the fire and gifts on the tree
A time to rejoice in the good that we see
A view of the Bristol Channel from Dunkery Hill, the highest point in Exmoor National Park, Somerset.
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The purity of a waterfall. A sign of light, poetry and hope, against darkness.
Which in its own way symbolizes the desire, now perhaps utopian, of an Italy that will hopefully soon emerge from the medieval nightmare in which the current government has made it sink.
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©Roberto Bertero, All Rights Reserved. This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media without the explicit written permission of the photographer.
Santa Cruz Island, Channel Islands National Park
Canon EOS 550D with Canon EF-S 15-85mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM at f=15mm, Av=9, Tv=1/800 and ISO=400
This is part of the channel that goes beneath the London Bridge in Havasu City, Arizona. We stayed on the top floor in the condos you can see to the right. I was waiting for that ferry to take me over to the California side of the lake, enjoying an adult beverage and the sunset. I usually hate waiting but for some reason I didn't mind this.
Have a great weekend!
Cape Elizabeth, Maine.
Portland Head Light is a historic lighthouse in Cape Elizabeth, Maine. The light station sits on a head of land at the entrance of the primary shipping channel into Portland Harbor, which is within Casco Bay in the Gulf of Maine. Completed in 1791, it is the oldest lighthouse in Maine. The light station is automated, and the tower, beacon, and foghorn are maintained by the United States Coast Guard, while the former lighthouse keepers' house is a maritime museum within Fort Williams Park.
Construction began in 1787 at the directive of George Washington, and was completed on January 10, 1791, using a fund of $1,500, established by him. Whale oil lamps were originally used for illumination. In 1855, following formation of the Lighthouse Board, a fourth-order Fresnel lens was installed; that lens was replaced by a second-order Fresnel lens, which was replaced later by an aerobeacon in 1958. That lens was updated with a DCB-224 aerobeacon in 1991 (Wikipedia.)
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From a wonderful Autumn walk this afternoon, the Fort to Fort trail along the Bedford Channel of the Fraser River, looking across from the Fort Langley side to McMillan Island.
Left click on the photo and/or the two way arrows in the upper right corner for a larger view.
Thank you, your views, favs and comments are greatly appreciated!