View allAll Photos Tagged Cutter
Vienna Zoo has a great leaf-cutter ant colony, with a maze of transparent pipes around the room where visitors can watch them carrying bits of leaf and twig to their nest.
See this cutter in use in a veggie chili bento at my blog: happylittlebento.blogspot.com/2012/02/veggie-chili-phoeni...
I actually just posted these so you can see what I use for the pepperoni and whatnot. These are the smallest shape cutters I've been able to find (outside of craft punches). My boyfriend is listing this set on ebay later today.
It's almost in my "Junk yard sexy" set but not(^_^;) because it's not a junk at all. Actually it's a big (nearly 3 feet in diameter) cutter.
A vintage chaff cutting machine being demonstrated at Helmsley Steam Rally 2013. Chaff cutters were used for cutting hay and straw into shorter lengths for animal feed purposes etc.
Finally no more plastic containers. I guess you never know how much stuff you have until it is all up on a wall.
USCGC Sycamore (WLB 209) transits a fjord during a Search and Rescue drill as part of Exercise Argus, near Nuuk, Greenland, June 15, 2023. Exercise Argus is a joint search and rescue and marine environmental response exercise that includes assets from the United States, Denmark, Greenland, and France.(U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Ryan Schultz)
U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer 1st Class Gordon Kristopher dons firefighting equipment during damage control training on the mess deck of Coast Guard Cutter Bear (WMEC 901), Atlantic Ocean, July 9, 2022. Kristopher is an operations specialist aboard the Bear. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Matthew Abban)
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. - Coast Guard Cutter Legare transits the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal, Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2008. The Legare is one of six 270-foot cutters home ported in Portsmouth, Va. (U.S. Coast Guard photo/Chief Petty Officer Chris Kluyber)
Bedfordshire and Luton Fire and Rescue. Training for their every day eventualities. The Cutters and Spreaders were shot with Red Watch and Dunstable and the Bronto was with Green Watch in Luton.
Various cutters from left to right:
Universal cutting frame
Internal cutting frame
Eccentric cutting frame
Internal cutting frame
Vertical cutting frame
U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer 2nd Class Marcos Collazo, a boatswain’s mater aboard USCGC Bear (WMEC 901), helps Ens. Peyton Bowler, boarding team member, aboard a commercial fishing vessel prior to commencing boardings, Atlantic Ocean, July 23, 2022. The Bear and its crew are deploying to support the Northern Atlantic Fisheries Organization, deter illegal fishing and increase maritime domain awareness in tandem with its partner nations. (U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Matthew Abban)
Back in the day we called these Revenue Cutters with the prefix HMRC. An extremely sort after posting. When Customs and Excise was absorbed into the Inland Revenue in pursuit of enhanced efficiency to become the HMR&C we know and love today the boats became plain Customs Cutters with the prefix HMCC. Subsequently the Border Agency was spun out of HMR&C and so they changed again to plain Cutters prefixed HMC. Of a Dutch design and build (Damen) in 2001 they were good for 26 knots when new with an endurance of 14 days or 1750 nm at 12 knots. HMC Seeker was first in a class of four and is ‘armed’ with a foredeck fire monitor.