View allAll Photos Tagged Cleanup
I spend Saturday at my friend Mike's house, demolishing what's left of one of the six buildings he lost to a recent tornado. We had to cut it up and pack it into a big dumpster.
Young Makushi clean up mangoes that have fallen from the tree outside St. Isadore Catholic Church in Communidade Raposa.
The aftermath of peanut butter dripping off a spoon.
Stop on by Zachary and Henry's blog: bzdogs.com - The Secret Life of the Suburban Dog
Kiev 88
Shanghai GP3 100
100iso
Rodinal 1+50, 15 minutes
Epson 4490 scan @ 100% 2400dpi
15 second exposure, f/16
Taking part in an active environmental community is paramount which is why we not only organise our own beach cleanup events but also help out whenever we are invited to join other organisations or groups who organise events which share our goals and dreams!
Here we see volunteers and workers working to set out oil containment booms to keep the oil from spreading.
January 22, 2015: Winter surf and high tide resulted in messy saltwater inundation and beach erosion at the Fairmont Orchid, Mauna Lani.
Winter surf is a problem every year, but this is the worst hit we've seen on this stretch of shoreline since we opened this hotel for Ritz-Carlton 26 years ago - even worse than the tsunami that shuttered Kona Village in March, 2011. The difference was wrap-around wave action: this was a direct straight-on hit and the ever-rising high tide. We simply cannot deny climate change - it is very real, and shoreline developers best take heed.
Illustrated blog post: www.managingwithaloha.com/seek-bigger-visions/
1 man fishing out garbage in a polluted river thousands of miles long. That's the Chinese river cleanup method. Believe it or not, it has been announced earlier this year that the Chinese government will spend $175 billion US on environmental cleanup over the next five years. Yes, this is their money hard at work! Boy am I glad I don't pay taxes in China.
American Rivers' National River Cleanup program helps cleanup the trash from the Potomac River. Find an event near you at www.americanrivers.org/cleanup
April 2012
Cleanup operations began on 2 October. By the time this photo was taken, the rubble had been removed and placed in the shell of the building, and workers were nailing up plywood to prevent entry to the rubble.
Hundreds of volunteers helped beautify several Dallas ISD schools on Thursday, April 14, 2011, leading up to Earth Day. The project was sponsored by the Environmental Protection Agency and DART, which bused the volunteers to 10 district campuses. Volunteers added mulch and landscaping, as well as cleaned up trash at Winnetka Elementary School. (Official Dallas ISD photo by Todd Overman)
This official Dallas ISD photograph is being made available only for publication by the Dallas Independent School District, news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, e-mails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of Dallas ISD or any of its staff acting on behalf of the district.
The 2005 International Coastal Cleanup was a huge success! Find out more about the event by visiting www.coastalcleanup.org.
cabenoenvironmental.com/ - CABENO provides fuel, oil or any hydrocarbon emergency cleanup services. Our process is truly unique to the emerging fuel & oil spill cleanup market; it represents a paradigm shift in how the process is provided, what products are used, and how inexpensive the service is. Most of our calls are within the 1-gallon to 350-gallon spill; however we can and will respond to larger spills either independently or as part of a larger response team. Our crew and equipment is available 24/7/365. Contact us for more information!
A UPRR crew using a rail crane to lift and remove a portion of a signal tower that was demolished by a train derailment that collapsed the UPRR bridge over Shermer Rd, and killed two individuals
Over 60 City College students initiated a beach cleanup at Lauderdale-by-the-Sea today. Nearly a dozen local residents joined the students in removing several hundred pounds of trash and garbage from the sand and sea grass. By doing this, the students restored the environment and protected humans and wildlife from harm.
While gathering and planning the cleanup under the pavilion, the students' professionalism and commitment drew comments from onlookers. Many bystanders complimented the students, asking for information about them and City College.
The next beach cleanup will be Saturday, June 18th at 8:30am followed by an end of term Beach Party.