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Old Fisherman's Cottage for Rent - West Coast of Scotland
This imaginary rental cottage on the west coast of Scotland is a charming, rustic building, nestled amongst the rolling hills and rugged coastline of the Isle of Bute.
The cottage is fairly well-equipped with some modern amenities. It has a small kitchen at the back, as well as unheated outdoor bathroom facilities. There is also a compact bedroom upstairs, where guests can fall asleep to the haunting sound of the wind and waves crashing against the shore. Warm extra bedclothes can be provided at no extra charge.
This is the perfect place to escape the hustle and bustle of modern life, a place where the stresses of daily life melt away, leaving only the wild forbidding landscape, the constant rain and the unrelenting swell of the sea.
Reduced rates for the winter months - September to May.
Imagined in Midjourney with additional work in Photoshop.
Panorama-10 photos en format vertical
... à l'heure bleue au bord du Rhin (frontière naturelle entre la France et l'Allemagne )
I've short-changed the elk rut in my photo stream so far this year, having posted only one shot. So here's the start of a short series to give that special event a little more attention.
Regular observers of the rut will recognize this posture by a bull when he is either charging another bull or gathering cows that have strayed too far. In this case it's the latter.
Bluebonnets taking flight.
Had serious problems logging onto Flickr yesterday. Seems to be working fine again now!
The Knight on Horseback mascot on a 1930 Willys-Knight 66B Plaid-side Roadster, body by Griswold with the Knight referring to the use by Willys in this top of the line model, of the quiet and reliable, but oilburning sleve-valved (as opposed to the usual spring loaded poppet valves used on most cars even today) invented by ........drum roll............American Charles Yale Knight. More much later when I put up the whole car.
AS ALWAYS....COMMENTS & INVITATIONS with AWARD BANNERS will be respectfully DELETED!
the Watchful above charges my dark and white matter on regular bases so i can mish mash lol.
i can go deeper about it, but everyone has their own theory, they're all right. I'm more bothered about how windows edit took my eyebrows 😁
short trip to the North Sea to recharge the battery and make my little kid happy - sunrise in Norderney, Germany IMG_8836-2_7D800
This smallish Monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) gathering pollen on this nascent flower along the 'Long Trail' at the Springfield Conservation Nature Center. Both sides of the trail are lined with 5-7 foot (~2 meters) tall flowers and scrub trees. Lots of American goldfinches and butterflies gathering for the end of summer.
Union Pacific Big Boy 4014 making a run through Texas. Standing less than 10 feet from the tracks, it was exciting getting surrounded by the billowing steam from this train as I quickly covered up my camera with my jacket after taking this shot.
A nervous mother grizzly, decided to bluff charge us through the water. A bluff charge is meant to scare or intimidate and is characterized by her head up and ears forward and bounding forward on her front paws, then stopping short. After 3 or 4 bounds she veered off and went back to her cubs. This was captured from a safe distance offshore with a long telephoto lens.
16/10/2021 www.allenfotowild.com
It's breeding season. I saw two pairs of Canada Geese standing in shallow water about 50 feet apart. I didn't pay much attention until they started barking. Suddenly, this goose charged across the water and attacked an individual in the other pair. They fought ferociously for a few seconds and then separated. The aggressor marched back to his mate and stood over her as if to prevent her from running away. Adult pairs are said to mate for life. Did she have second thoughts?
We're always smashing ideas together, colors, textures, builds, modifying and editing and all that other fun creative stuff that comes along with building a sim.
Nearly three months separates the photos in this composite. Yet it feels like much less in my increasingly contorted perspective of time. As a child I would sometimes spin in circles. I loved the momentary sense of imbalance before my senses fell back into rhythm. The passage of time gives me the a similar sense of imbalance. However these days the normal rhythm is never fully restored. I stumble from one season into the next with a failing sense of comprehension about the progression.
Photography at least provides me with a tangible set of way posts to mark my journey. My phone in particular offers an amazing visual tracking of life moments. I often cross through the camera roll quickly. It creates a weird motion blur where you can't really focus on a single image. Rather I discern only shapes and colors that correlate in part to the season in which the pictures were taken. Another trick is to zoom way out until hundreds of photos appear in miniature. Love seeing my recent life translated into to a mosaic, billions of pixels. Individually indiscernible, but collectively representing my daily experiences on the pathway of life.
Standing on the edge off this woodland pond the other day, I was struck by the cold and barren bleakness. I thought back to that brilliant October day when I stood in this exact same spot. The scene literally burst into vibrant and joyous color. This composite conveys that joy, but in a shocking, even disturbing juxtaposition. It put me in mind of the explosion of an underwater depth charge. Yet another unwanted time marker passing me by.
The ex-Delaware & Hudson RS3 4118 is gone, and the Anthracite Railway 1986 excursion are in the charge of an ex-Amtrak SW1. The train is seen crossing the trestle over the Hosensack Creek in Palm, Pennsylvania.
Charging up the grade at Racey, Quebec with no less than four SD40-2Fs and a GP38-3 for good measure, Central Maine & Quebec train no. 2 kicks up some snow as a signal maintainer watches on and gives a friendly salute.
BNSF 7959 charges up Winston Hill on the MRL 2nd Sub with a manifest in tow. You can see a portion of the train in the right hand side of the photo curving up the grade.