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Countless photos of my 'nothing spectacular' neighbourhood lakes aren't the result of hoping to get 'a better image this time'. I know my gear (and my skills) limitations.
I simply keep snapping because the lake looks so different each time, as if it's another place. And I'll keep shooting, apologies to those bored :(
(N.B. Spot the backside of a diving swan - a free bonus ;)
After countless failed attempts, this was the first time a butterfly gave me the chance. No setup, no plan—just a fleeting moment, and I seized it.
SN/NC: Aloe Barbadensis, Xanthorrhoeaceae Family
This sculptural succulent, Aloe barbadensis, is a powerhouse of natural wellness. Beyond its renowned ability to soothe skin, its clear gel is a cornerstone of the haircare industry. Prized in countless shampoos and conditioners, it hydrates the scalp, strengthens strands, and imparts a healthy shine. Known as both Aloe Vera and Babosa, this plant is a living fusion of botanical beauty and profound practical use.
Esta suculenta escultural, Aloe barbadensis, é uma potência do bem-estar natural. Além de sua renomada capacidade de acalmar a pele, seu gel transparente é um pilar da indústria de cuidados capilares. Valorizado em inúmeros shampoos e condicionadores, hidrata o couro cabeludo, fortalece os fios e confere um brilho saudável. Conhecida como Aloe Vera e Babosa, esta planta é uma fusão viva de beleza botânica e uso prático profundo.
Esta suculenta escultural, Aloe barbadensis, es un prodigio del bienestar natural. Más allá de su renombrada capacidad para calmar la piel, su gel transparente es un pilar de la industria del cuidado capilar. Valorado en innumerables champús y acondicionadores, hidrata el cuero cabelludo, fortalece las hebras e imparte un brillo saludable. Conocida como Aloe Vera y Babosa, esta planta es una fusión viviente de belleza botánica y uso práctico profundo.
Questa succulenta scultorea, Aloe barbadensis, è una potente fonte di benessere naturale. Oltre alla sua rinomata capacità di lenire la pelle, il suo gel trasparente è un pilastro dell'industria della cura dei capelli. Prezioso in innumerevoli shampoo e balsami, idrata il cuoio capelluto, rinforza le ciocche e dona una lucentezza sana. Conosciuta come Aloe Vera e Babosa, questa pianta è una fusione vivente di bellezza botanica e profonda utilità pratica.
Cette succulente sculpturale, Aloe barbadensis, est une puissance de bien-être naturel. Au-delà de sa renommée pour apaiser la peau, son gel clair est un pilier de l'industrie du soin capillaire. Prisé dans d'innombrables shampoings et après-shampoings, il hydrate le cuir chevelu, renforce les mèches et leur donne un éclat sain. Connue sous le nom d'Aloe Vera et de Babosa, cette plante est une fusion vivante de beauté botanique et d'utilité pratique profonde.
Deze sculpturale vetplant, Aloe barbadensis, is een krachtpatser van natuurlijk welzijn. Naast het vermogen de huid te verzachten, is de heldere gel een hoeksteen van de haarverzorgingsindustrie. Gewaardeerd in talloze shampoos en conditioners, hydrateert het de hoofdhuid, versterkt het de haren en geeft het een gezonde glans. Bekend als Aloe Vera en Babosa, is deze plant een levende fusie van botanische schoonheid en diepgaand praktisch nut.
Diese skulpturhafte Sukkulente, Aloe barbadensis, ist eine Powerquelle natürlicher Wellness. Neben ihrer bekannten Fähigkeit, die Haut zu beruhigen, ist ihr klares Gel eine tragende Säule der Haarpflegeindustrie. Geschätzt in unzähligen Shampoos und Conditionern, spendet es der Kopfhaut Feuchtigkeit, stärkt die Strähnen und verleiht einen gesunden Glanz. Bekannt als Aloe Vera und Babosa, ist diese Pflanze eine lebendige Verbindung aus botanischer Schönheit und tiefgründigem praktischem Nutzen.
这种形态优美的多肉植物——Aloe barbadensis,是天然保健的宝库。除了众所周知的舒缓肌肤功效,其透明凝胶更是护发产业的主力之一。在无数的洗发水和护发素中备受推崇,它能滋润头皮,强韧发丝,并带来健康光泽。被称为芦荟(Aloe Vera)和巴巴萨(Babosa)的它,是植物之美与深刻实用价值的生动融合。
この彫刻的な多肉植物、アロエ・バーベデンシスは、自然の健康の宝庫です。肌を鎮める効果で知られるだけでなく、その透明なジェルはヘアケア産業の主力です。数多くのシャンプーやコンディショナーで高く評価され、頭皮を保湿し、髪を強化し、健康的な輝きを与えます。アロエベラおよびバボサとして知られるこの植物は、植物の美しさと深遠な実用性の生ける融合です。
هذا النبات العصاري المميز، ألوي باربادنسيس، هو قوة في العناية الطبيعية. إلى جانب قدرته المشهورة على تهدئة البشرة، فإن هلامه الصافي هو دعامة أساسية في صناعة العناية بالشعر. يُقَدَّر في عدد لا يحصى من الشامبو والبلسم، فهو يرطب فروة الرأس، ويقوي خصلات الشعر، ويمنحها لمعانًا صحيًا. تُعرف باسم الألوفيرا والبابوسا، هذا النبات هو مزيج حي من الجمال النباتي والاستخدام العملي العميق.
Canyonlands National Park
Southeast Utah
USA
Best Viewed In Lightbox-
www.flickr.com/photos/42964440@N08/34916110210/in/photost...
This is one of the views I photographed in Canyonlands National Park, the last park I went to on my trip. The day was a little overcast. More images of the parks to come.
From Wikipedia-
Canyonlands National Park is a U.S. National Park located in southeastern Utah near the town of Moab. It preserves a colorful landscape eroded into countless canyons, mesas, and buttes by the Colorado River, the Green River, and their respective tributaries. Legislation creating the park was signed into law by President Lyndon Johnson on September 12, 1964.
The park is divided into four districts: the Island in the Sky, the Needles, the Maze, and the combined rivers—the Green and Colorado—which carved two large canyons into the Colorado Plateau. While these areas share a primitive desert atmosphere, each retains its own character. Author Edward Abbey, a frequent visitor, described the Canyonlands as "the most weird, wonderful, magical place on earth—there is nothing else like it anywhere.
Countless oil accidents cause the death of marine animals. Or ruptures of oil pipelines, spills or fires, the list is very long. When will we realize that money doesn't buy biodiversity, that the Sea from which life came to Earth should be better protected?
Innumerevoli gli incidenti petrolifici che causano la morte di animali marini. Oppure rotture di oleodotti, sversamenti o incendi, la lista è lunghissima. Quando ci renderemo conto che il denaro non compra la biodiversità, che il Mare da cui è arrivata la vita sulla Terra, dovrebbe essere maggiormente protetto?
www.nelcuore.org/peru-dispersi-in-mare-6mila-barili-di-pe...
www.tecnoseal.it/150-articolo-save-our-ocean-i-16-disastr...
gruppodinterventogiuridicoweb.com/2016/04/24/genova-petro...
❤Dear customers and friends,
After many years full of creativity, unique projects, and countless wonderful encounters that have made my shops so special, it's now time to say goodbye. The inworld stores will close at the end of Year.
Unfortunately, like I said already, I can no longer run the in-world stores. This decision is incredibly difficult for me, as the work and, above all, the connection with you all have always been very important to me.
And again I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for your many years of LOYALTY and the TRUST you have placed in me. You have made this place what it was, and I look back on a wonderful time.
Before I close our doors for good, I'd like to say a proper farewell: Starting now, there's 50% OFF EVERYTHING in the shop TOP STRIKER & RM ART OF POSES ! Come and grab your favorite items before the very last day. No group needed.
The sale runs until Dec 31th!!
I wish you all the best for the future, stay healthy and take care!
Enjoy and warm regards😊,
Roy
Landmarks
RM Art Of Poses : maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/The%20Grand%20Strand/48/60...
Top Striker: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Sardegna/166/88/1703
Top Striker Beauty: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Sardegna/162/109/1003
I crossed the Bridge of Lions countless times during my 4 days in Zaragoza, so at some point I decided to include it in one of my shots.
The Lions are the symbol of the town and from the bridge you can enjoy the best views on El Pilar. I was lucky enough to enjoy beautiful sunsets during my visit and it was wonderful to see the locals stopping on the bridge after coming back from work and enjoying the moment even though they must have seen it various times.
___________________
All rights reserved
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More about this image here
I have long thought that anyone who does not regularly - or ever - gaze up and see the wonder and glory of a dark night sky filled with countless stars loses a sense of their fundamental connectedness to the universe.
Bob Greene
The aurora borealis dancing in the night sky in Ólafsfjörður, North Iceland.
As you all know street running is by far my favorite subject, so of all the countless options THE one at the top of my list would be Conrail Shared Assets short stretch down Delmorr Avenue in Morrisville, PA. I tried to shoot this back in April 2021 on the same trip home but struck out, so wasn't sure if I should give it another go. I had intel that New Jersey Transit's Erie heritage painted GP40P had been assigned to the Atlantic City Line for the first time and that was an easy short detour. But I checked with a friend who gave me the intel that CSAO should be running down the street Sunday afternoon. I checked my driving time and it looked like I could make it by the time he said if I didn't stop so I figured I'd give it another shot.
So I wrote of NJT and anything else and highballed north. Two hours later just as I swung off the highway I heard Conrail MOR33 call the Amtrak dispatcher for light out of the yard toward the 'Old Line' and I knew I was in business. Five minutes later I was on South Delmorr Avenue scoping out an angle and 10 minutes after that I heard them blow for the crossing in front of Dairy Queen a quarter mile away.
CSXT GP40-2s 6238 and 6129 have a short four car train of edible oils in tow destined to the Primient bulk transload facility located in the former Tate and Lyle plant (originally an A.E. Staley corn refinery). This plant is the only reason this industrial track survives though back in the days of 'Big Conrail' and earlier Rogers Foam and Stauffer Chemical located just beyond Staley were busy rail customers as well.
What makes this spot exceptionally cool is not only is there a 500 ft stretch of street running but the road and rails of what CSAO officially calls their Delmoor Industrial Track run beneath the four track wide stone arch bridge which carriers Amtrak's Northeast Corridor across the Delaware River into Trenton. Trains cross it virtually non stop so you have very good odds here of getting an over/under though not this time...
Morrisville, Pennsylvania
Sunday March 31, 2024
Taken few winters ago on an office window... Catchin a drop involved countless attempts and countless counting of drop interval...
In life there are countless firsts and even more lasts...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Un6h5UpfD4c
The firsts are easy to recognise; when you’ve never experienced something before – a kiss, a new style of music, a place, a drink, a food – you know exactly when you are encountering it for the first time.
But lasts?
Lasts nearly always surprise us.
It’s only after they’ve disappeared that we realise we’ll never again have that particular moment or person or experience.
Frances de Pontes Peebles, The Air You Breathe
© All rights reserved Anna Kwa. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.
Glacial erratic, that is - one of the countless millions of rocks and boulders dropped on the prairie by receding glaciers at the end of the most recent Ice Age, about 11,500 years ago.
I used digital filters to create a pseudo-infrared look for this image. No idea why; I just liked it that way. The rock was off-centre in the original (horizontal) framing, so cropping square allowed me to place it where I felt it belongs. It isn't always possible to get everything right when I'm on location. I was "thinking in black and white", though.
This is the second image of a black and white set I have assembled to "reset" my own creative response to the wild (and not so wild) prairie at my doorstep. I'll be back to the birds and other critters soon enough. This current offering is about getting back to the basics (with or without filter effects). To clarify: take colour out of the mix and what do we have? Does the image hold up? Is it structurally (ie. compositionally) sound?
Photographed on the former Dixon Ranch in the West Block of Grasslands National Park, Saskatchewan (Canada). Don't use this image on websites, blogs, or other media without explicit permission ©2020 James R. Page - all rights reserved.
Exquisite vases on the wall parapets, aerial arches with baroque reliefs and countless statues of ancient Greek gods that adorn the courtyard territory consisting of several descending terraces became an additional decoration of the palace. The sculptures were an exact replica of the ancient sculptures of the Berlin Museum, with the only difference being that ours were gypsum, imitating marble. The park designer introduced his “zest” into the design of the territory. The trick was that the “female” figures were located from the southern part of the palace, where the bedchamber of Maria Feodorovna was located. Statues of male gods "dispersed" from the north side of the palace, respectively, from the side of the emperor's chambers.
Unfortunately, out of almost 30 figures, only six have survived to our times. Surprisingly, they are all paired: two satyrs, two chimeras and two sphinxes. The rest were irretrievably lost, dashing times of wars and revolutions did not spare them.
Вся придворцовая часть парка, занимающая около 1,5 десятин, была украшена скульптурами. Они были установлены вокруг дворца, на подпорных стенах, в нише второго этажа и на открытом в то время балконе. Всего было установлено 29 скульптур и 6 декоративных ваз. Согласно архивным документам, скульптуры изготовлялись из искусственного камня и отливались из гипса. Статуи из искусственного камня (их было 12) были выписаны через петербургскую фирму "Кос и Дюр" из Метлаха и обошлись в среднем по 250-300 рублей. Гипсовые скульптуры также были отлиты за границей и представляли собой копии статуй из Императорского Берлинского музея изящных искусств. Некоторые гипсовые скульптуры были окрашены масляными красками под цвет мрамора. Статуи изображали античных богов, философов, аллегории различных искусств и наук.
К сожалению, большая часть скульптур, украшавших дворец, не сохранилась. Некоторые из них были сделаны из недолговечного материала и уже к 1909 году были сильно повреждены, что вызвало необходимость снять их.
Некоторые из скульптур были утрачены уже в советское время.
Уцелело лишь 6 скульптур: два сатира, два дракона (иногда их называют химерами), два сфинкса. Последние, очевидно, были сделаны здесь, на месте, по моделям, привезенным из Петербурга и выполненным скульптором А.Г. Бауманом, работавшим над оформлением Массандровского дворца.
In the flickering glow of countless candles, shadows danced, and the night whispered secrets only the wicked could hear. Together, the demoness and the joker walked, their steps a symphony of chaos and darkness, as the world trembled beneath their silent laughter.
Taken at Naturally Naughty Photo Studio
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Coast%20of%20Passion/152/1...
Nel momento giusto dell'anno, ci sono girasoli a perdita d'occhio che ammantano i campi vicino Bologna.
Foto di qualche tempo fa
Buona giornata
#sunflowers #girasoli #bologna #campi #fields #yellow #agriculture #view #pattern
HBM! I have taken countless photos of this bench, which is usually occupied, in Humber Bay Shores Park West. I usually show the excellent view of Toronto's skyline but seen from this angle you can see the Public Boat Launch area and a cluster of condo buildings.
Best seen large by clicking on the photo. Thanks for visiting.
I have already visited countless times when shooting around Mt. Fuji
"Shiraito no Taki" in Fujinomiya City, Shizuoka Prefecture
The appearance of hanging innumerable threads to us
It brings a great refreshing feeling.
Moreover, most of the underground water flows directly from the cliff.
Minus Ion that is out and the surrounding area is always comfortable
Wrapped in.
I've had the pleasure of hiking the Narrows several times; I've also seen countless amazing shots of the reflected light casting its trademark warm glow on the canyon's distant walls. However, I don't recall ever seeing a scene like this one (whether live or in a photo). I was lucky enough to stumble upon this particular light show while hiking out of the Narrows during a November 2019 trip with Kevin Benedict and Sky Matthews.
While I cannot honestly say that this is the best of compositions, I can say that it is probably the best I could manage in my photogasmic panic that ensued once I stopped starring, closed my jaw and realized that I probably only had a few minutes at most to unpack my gear (which I had of course packed up thinking that I was done for the day) and set up before the lightshow disappeared for good.
All in all, I'm fairly happy that I was even able to fire off a few shots and get something in focus and usable. I cannot wait to see what surprises will be revealed the next time I have the opportunity to hike one of my all time favorite places.
I hope you enjoy the picture and as always, thanks for the time to look!
A closeup of one small corner of the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory at the New York Botanical Garden. I'm sure they know exactly, to the pane, how many there are, but I cannot even imagine. One interesting detail I never noticed before: The clips along the edge where the roof meets the wall, possibly tiny rain gutters, are miniature lion's heads. It is this kind of attention to detail that makes this Victorian-style greenhouse an architectural gem. The New York Botanical Garden, The Bronx, NYC -- February 16, 2020
In Explore for Flickr Social November 2024 Takeover, Black & White
Doc and I have spent countless hours aboard our boat, fishing for Alaskan salmon and halibut. On many occasions we have had some pesky seals join us - trying to get to our salmon as we were reeling them in. I caught this seal as Doc tried to drive him away from the side of our boat. He wasn't at all concerned - so we pulled anchor and moved to another spot in the ocean. Wherever seals are - you can bet that there are no fish in the same area. Even fish aren't that dumb. (Image best viewed large)
Posted for "Sliders Sunday" group "Processed to the MAX!" HSS!
(Explore May 9, 2022 #110)
**(Thanks to all of you who take the time to view and comment on my photos - I truly appreciate your kindness.)
Silent Winter
One of the countless moments permanently impressed in my mind during my journey in the frigid Canadian lands.
One of the few places I was where the silence is truly impressive and made your thoughts more intense and vivid.
For Processing Videos www.enricofossati.it/instruction
For Prints www.enricofossati.it/shop
In collaboration with Gitzo Leica Camera Lowepro LucrOit
Countless photos of food items from Borough Market.
This is also one of my most-appropriated images. Please ask before using it.
After countless steps, blisters, and moments of silence, I finally stand before the magnificent Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela — the heart of the Camino. The weight of the journey fades, replaced by awe and gratitude. The clouds, the stone, the centuries — everything feels alive here.
The Grand Canyon has been an elusive prey. I've made countless trips up there the past few years trying to get lightning on a good storm and been skunked every time. Last year I finally got a downburst right in front of me...but no bolts. A few years before I got some strikes out on the Little Colorado plateau, but nothing in the Canyon itself. Always a long trip to come home with little success.
Well that all finally ended Friday, and it was with this shot that I didn't even know I had captured until I was going through images in Lightroom. A perfect thunderstorm with a beautiful little strike hitting smack in the middle of an island plateau on the eastern side of the Canyon. I squealed a little bit when I saw this :)
The time-lapse of this storm exploding and dumping rain will be cool too, super stoked to have come away not only with some great stuff, but to have spent the entire day with my kiddos as well was well worth the time and sunburns!
Taken from a spot in the Humber Park, Toronto. I have taken countless photos from this one location. Best seen large by clicking on the photo. flic.kr/s/aHsjznx1cp
Thanks for visiting and commenting. #ourcanada150
Iceland is full of countless waterfalls, but this one is quite impressive. Háifoss, which is well named for its meaning "high waterfall", would be the second or third highest in the country. Lost in the middle of the desert and volcanic south of Iceland, it rushes 122 meters below at the bottom of a vertiginous canyon dug in the rock, in a great uproar.
L'Islande regorge de cascades innombrables, mais celle-ci est assez impressionnante. Háifoss, qui porte bien son nom signifiant "cascade haute", serait la seconde ou troisième plus haute du pays. Perdue au milieu du sud désertique et volcanique de l'Islande, elle s'élance 122 mètres plus bas au fond d'un canyon vertigineux creusé dans la roche, dans un tumulte mémorable.
Like countless other Brits, I get up stupidly early every saturday to do the weekly Parkrun www.parkrun.org.uk/
Walking towards the starting point, I was met with the sun peeking out from behind a clump of trees. I took a quick snap with my mobile phone and it turned out quite well.
I spend countless hours by the pond watching the dragonflies chase each other, most the males for territorial rights,
Males are certainly more than females, my best shots of them are taken in the afternoon,
My Waterlilies are always the same, I change one or two a year,
My favorite and great bloomer is Star of Siam,
From the same year.
www.flickr.com/photos/komotini49/19179919014/in/photolist...
Life has a way of pulling us in countless directions—its rhythm often loud, relentless, and overwhelming. In the middle of this chaos, quiet moments become not just desirable, but essential, grounding us when everything else feels unsteady.
Meditation and stillness offer a sanctuary—a chance to retreat into silence and reconnect with ourselves. Even just a few minutes of quiet can soothe the mind, reduce stress, and spark fresh perspective. The beauty of meditation lies not in escaping the world, but in re-entering it with calm and focus.
Whether it's a quiet corner of your home, a bench in a sunlit park, or the meditative glow of a candlelit room, having a dedicated space for restoration creates a powerful invitation to pause. It reminds us that we have permission to step away, to breathe deeply, and to simply be.
In these moments, we’re reminded that renewal doesn’t have to be grand or elaborate—it thrives in simplicity. A quiet walk, the hum of nature, or the soft cadence of a cat’s purr can replenish us in ways that go beyond words. Taking time to renew isn’t a luxury; it’s an act of care that enables us to move through life with resilience, purpose, and a sense of presence.
If there is one piece of clothing which countless people around the world are wearing in public in this health crisis, it is face mask.
Here, four washable and reusable clothe face masks are being dried in the sun.
Some big clothing manufacturers and a number of small tailoring shops in the Philippines have started making lots of protective face coverings not very long after many super markets had run out of face masks to sell during the early days of the implementation of the Luzon-wide enhanced community quarantine, which started last March 17. This is even though the wearing of face masks in public was not yet made compulsory by the national government.
Now, it is common to see people have them on, particularly those who go outside their homes to do some work or make trips to buy essential items.
Luzon is the largest and most populous island in the Philippines. The Zambales province is located at the western part of Central Luzon, which is one of three regions (out of the total six) which remains under complete lockdown until May 15.
Having photographed Mono Lake countless times, I headed there with the F4 crew in January to see if I could find a new way of photographing the spectacular tufa mounds.
While Nick, Adam and Thomas were busy working the beach with wide angle lenses, I opted for a different approach.
I felt that our landscape photography courses needed some diversity in the type of images we created so I decided to walk away from my subject.
After a short but steep hike in the fresh snow, I finally found the perfect viewpoint to survey those glorious sculptures as the morning light set them aglow.
Using a 100-400mm lens I had just enough reach to frame up this composition.
I had to use a ten-stop neutral density filter to force a long exposure of thirty seconds. This made the surface of the water smoother and less detailed which simplifies the composition and paints the scene with a relaxing mood.
As the sun rose over the horizon, the coyotes began their dawn chorus to usher in the new day and I breathed a very contented sigh.
Watch detailed videos showing exactly how I shot and processed this image by downloading the F4 ROAD TRIP over at f4roadtrip.com
Thanks for looking
Gavin Hardcastle
Just another frame of this colorful scene that has been done countless times but just always works. This is the former Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad station at Tobyhanna, 107.6 miles from Hoboken Terminal and the east end of the mainline which once stretched from the Hudson River to Buffalo.
Built in 1908 it saw its last regularly scheduled train (by then operated by Erie-Lackawanna) call around 1965 and then was abandoned not long after. Like the railroad, the depot is owned by the Pennsylvania Northeast Railroad Authority but is leased to and maintained by the Pocono Rail Historical Society and operated as a museum. It was restored beginning in 1995 and again hosts trains when occasional excursions arrive from Steamtown in Scranton.
Framed up in the background is Delaware-Lackawanna Railroad train PO74 rolling slowly in to town where they will switch for a while before continuing to over Pocono Summit and then down to Cresco.
The short train is led by DL 3602, a MLW M636 blt. Apr. 1970 as CN 2302 and still wearing weathered orange and black from its years in remote northern Quebec hauling iron ore on the isolated Cartier Railway. Trailing is DL3000, another Canadian expat MLW M630 blt. Dec. 1970 as PGE 706.
As for the railroad this was a busy heavy haul double track freight route under the Lackawanna and after 1960 the Erie Lackawanna until 1976 when the latter, by then bankrupt, was folded into Conrail. The big new government carrier had little use for either of EL's mainlines instead favoring former NYC and PRR properties. Around 1980 Conrail ran its last thru freight east over the Poconos from Scranton and like so many other northeastern lines its fate seemed sealed. The mainline sat moribund for nearly a decade (excepting some excursions in the mid 1980s by the original private Steamtown Foundation) while big blue continued to serve industries in Scranton until finally spinning off the trackage to a DL predecessor in 1991 and in 1992 the mainline saw its first freight trains as far as Tobyhanna after the line had been saved from removal by both Lackawanna and Monroe Counties. The following year the DL was formed and they have been the operator ever since with the underlying property owned by the Pennsylvania Northeast Railroad Authority since 2006 when the two counties merged their two independent rail agencies.
Unincorporated Tobyhanna
Coolbaugh Township, Pennsylvania
Friday October 24, 2025
Viele, viele, viele ... auf höherem Terrain 😛
Hieracium sabaudum
European hawkweed
Savoyer Habichtskraut
(DSC9673)
I've been tagged countless times - so I'll do another ten facts...
1. I have a subscription to GQ magazine. Because I am in love with clothes.
2. Prom is Saturday, I am excited, Morgan is not
3. I eat a lot more than appears so, once - I had twelve pancakes for breakfast
4. I like the people on flickr more than most of the people in my town.
5. If I could meet anyone on flickr I'd pick the people tagged.
6. Film photos are superb, and makes taking pictures way more exciting.
7. I'm going to college for writing
8 Because it is my dream to die penniless and insane.
9. I like doing Chinese fire drills a ton, especially at night.
10. You probably wouldn't like how mean i really am to people.
We, and countless thousands of Calgarians, headed to the mountains for the first day of our long weekend, our Victoria Day Weekend. The parking areas at trailheads were overrun, and so many just parked on the roadside. There were more people on our route than usual, but it was challenging enough that it didn't attract throngs. We thought there would be snow about, and luckily the snow at the top was strong and stable.
Having seen countless shots of WSOR passing Devils Lake State Park from many of you on Flickr, not to mention all the Chicago & North Western publicity shots taken here, it's been on my bucket list to GTS of the WSOR local passing through the park. Thanks to the help from Alex, the two Brad's and especially Jordan, who walked me to the spot and kept checking on this old man to make sure I wasn't having a heart attack, I was finally able to cross this one off the bucket list!
After a lot of creative exploration (and countless hours on Pinterest), I’ve decided to return to the Lookbook-style for my blog. As a true Libra, I love experimenting with aesthetics, and this time, I’m embracing a fresh take on fashion storytelling. Stay tuned for stylish snapshots, curated looks, and a renewed vision!
I.
DURA-B130
[TNK] RENCHII GOGGLES - DARKSIDE #18 RARE
[DELTA] ARMED SWEATER NEW! @ALPHA
[Traume] Cargo Shorts 02
Diaboli Design - Icestar
[KROVA] BAT-2
II.
DURA-U127
[Val'More] - OversizedBigBomber
CHAOS. dpmn baby tee
CHAOS. dpmn loose cargos
Semller - Triceratop High Boots Black
It only took hundreds of attempts, countless raspberries, several light adjustments and some shutter speed tweaks to get this berry shot.
Five little berries, to be precise, for today's Macro Monday "Five" theme.
Mexican Raspberries. Fast movers in the water, messier and bouncier than strawberries or bigger fruits.
They're also the sweetest raspberries I've ever tasted.
Happy Macro Monday!
(Note- heavily cropped to 3-inch rule. Click to see the uncropped version here:
www.flickr.com/photos/jarrard/51729349598/in/photostream/).
#MacroMondays #Five
Bryce Canyon National Park
Utah, USA
Like me, the countless hoodoos (that's what the sandstone formations are called) seem to be waiting patiently for the sun to break the horizon.
The photographer's dream is a beautiful early morning at Bryce Canyon National Park.
This August morning provided clouds and the rising sun finding an opening in the clouds, to enhance the hoodoos of Bryce Canyon National Park and provide some sky color.
Bryce Canyon is located in the state of Utah and is relatively close to Zion National Park. It was designated a national park during 1928. At 56 square miles, is smaller than many other parks, but is a gem with its countless colorful hoodoos. Its elevation is somewhat high ranging from 6,600 ft to 9,100 feet which causes it to have a cool climate. It was a refreshing mid-50s F the August morning we took this photo.
Nikon D800
Nikon 24-70 f/2.8 at 24 mm
1/13 sec at f/8 ISO 100
Single capture
August 2, 2016
© 2016 Ronald Drewnowski - All rights reserved. Any unauthorized use is prohibited.
I have seen a lot of waterfalls but this national park is something special...
Because of the spongy ground, the water can relatively quickly modify the stones and create new paths. So if you visit this place one year later, some new waterfalls will be there and some old ones won't carry water anymore.