View allAll Photos Tagged Development.

High density

Packed stack

Seasonal distribution

The colour version of "the machine that ate the earth" at Ocean Reef Marina :-) The colour in the bright summer morning light were outstanding

One of the most common and widespread sparrows in North America. Fairly large with a long, rounded tail. Overall coarsely patterned with gray and brown, usually with more reddish-brown wings and tail. Look especially for thick brown streaks on the underparts and a broad dark mustache stripe. Significant variation in plumage geographically: relatively pale and rusty in the southwestern U.S.; blacker streaking in California; overall dusky in the Pacific Northwest. Larger, longer-tailed and usually more rusty than Savannah Sparrow. Found in a variety of scrubby habitats both near and far from human development, especially edges of fields, often near water. Listen for husky "chimp" calls and melodic song with chips and trills. (eBird)

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Always happy to see a Song Sparrow. This one is in fresh breeding plumage and looks great against the pale grey background of the Ottawa River.

 

Andrew Haydon Park, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. May 2024.

Knapp village, Perthshire, Scotland.

Over fertilized plants may be beautiful but are otherwise useless, like people whose energies are devoted so completely to their appearance that there is no other development.

~William Longgood

Further development and change of perspective, in life and in creativity is always a gain for yourself and also for the people with whom you are in communication. The photo is a small project in which new ideas were implemented. Thank you for the support and implementation by my friend.

Yesterday I posted to Substack a bit of writing (and audio) about why we embrace the imperfections of film photography.

 

Few things exemplify that as much as expired film developed in ECN-2. Here, there's color shifts and probably some odd development quirks. There are white specks all over it as well, though I don't remember why.

 

I shot this in 2021 and developed it that autumn. I don't know why it took me this long to share it. Probably because of the specks and shifts.

 

These imperfections, well, looks like I haven't quite embraced them. But it's still kind of a cool photo. And a wonderful place.

 

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'Without a Rudder'

 

Camera: Mamiya RB67

Lens: Mamiya-Sekor 3.8/90mm

Film: Agfa XRS1000; x-1999

Process: DIY ECN-2

 

Wyoming

July 2021

A new industrial development on the edge of town

Set in a gated community amidst nurturing green and the white glory of the pagoda dogwood, this condominium birdhouse development offers luxury apartments and stylish single homes. It is situated in the Children's Garden of Ellyn's LOST GARDEN.

 

NOW! What are YOU doing about the latest iteration of Flickr??

** SmugMug - who conjured up that name?! From having looked it over, I can't see staying. To me, it seems that too many things are happening at once!

Spotted from a moving tour coach.

 

Ocean-front property... anyone?

 

Have a fantastic day, everyone...

“With fantastic direct sea views.”

 

Hythe, Kent.

Der Friedhof der Dampfrösser

...as in I'm pretty sure being upside down is good for their brain development. Don't quote me on that though. Unbelievably this is my fifth explore in 5 days!!!!!

New housing development, same old questions.

Enderby Wharf, Greenwich, South East London.

Junge Eichel

Young acorn

 

Canon 6D

Sigma Macro 105mm F2,8 EX DG OS HSM

ISO 3200

F 8.0

 

Fomapan 200

The always changing skyline of Perth. Here new buildings near the zoo.

I really do not enjoy the process of taking sunset photos, having to be in the perfect place, at the perfect time is something I have difficulty with - and my lens being incompatible with (sensibly priced) filters doesn't exactly help either, but all in all despite the bitching, I'm pretty happy with how this one came out.

▒▒▒▒▒ [Radio Transcript: Delta Team Report] ▒▒▒▒▒

 

[14:23]

TL: This is Delta Team, reporting in from Lower Sector B. We've located Harvey. Over.

 

C: Confirm, Delta Team. - You found him? - What's his status? - Over.

 

TL: Negative. Target is deceased. No immediate threats in the area. We are securing the perimeter. Over.

 

C: Copy that. - What's the condition? - Over.

 

TL: It's not good. He's in a janitor's closet, approximately five by five feet. The body’s been here for... a while. —Lines up with the three-week timeline since he went missing. Cause of death looks like blunt force trauma. Over.

 

C: Understood, Delta Team. - Anything else at the scene? - Over.

 

TL: Yeah… It's strange down here. The closet's filled with some sort of webbing, - like fine silk threads. - It's almost too dense to be natural. And there are these white moths everywhere. - Over.

Affirmative. - Based on what I’m seeing, this is ground zero for whatever's happening with the moths. They’re concentrated here, moving in and out of the webbing like it’s part of their habitat. It’s… unsettling. -Over.

 

C: Moths?? - We’ve had scattered reports of them in other parts of the building... Are you saying they're originating there? - Over.

  

TL: That’s a solid ‘maybe,’ Command. The air feels — how do I put this? — wrong. Like it’s heavier here. Lemegeton Team Beta thinks a psychic disturbance is tied to the murder. Whatever happened, it’s not natural. - Over.

 

C: Do you suspect any connection between the webbing, the moths, and Harvey’s death? - Over.

 

TL: Negative. - The moths aren’t aggressive, just... ominous. But I recommend a containment protocol. This isn’t something we want spreading. - Over.

 

C: Understood. - Any immediate threats in the area? - Over.

 

TL: Copy that, Command. - We’ll stand by. - Delta Team out.

 

▒▒▒▒▒ [End of Transmission] ▒▒▒▒▒

Future Africa's business management associates provide outstanding services inclusion to certify professional information management is present in every work. Our business associates and the management collaborate for a successful investment in Africa. Check our information management associates in business page now.

 

Visit the page: Business Development Partners

The development road at Ocean Reef Marina. This is a temporary access road that I use to access the site.

Observation in Development

Observation ID: 909

Observation Data ID: 2243

Norad ID: 40928

Ground Station: 13

Start Datetime: 2017-01-24T14:15:18Z

End Datetime: 2017-01-24T14:26:33Z

Transmitter ID: jtYNPDnTgVFswZdLNijeWV

Audio File: ogg file

Past observations of 40928: production - development

This is where Black Swamp meets future residential development. That is the You Yangs in the distance where i took this image

294-2631

Farmstead near Durnamuck, Highlands

View of Cabot House development (with green roof)

Tucked into the mountains of Iwate Prefecture near the under visited, stunning Sanriku Coast in eastern Japan is the Iwate Development Railway.

 

Established in 1939, the railway operated passenger and limestone transport from its mine in Iwate Ishibashi, to the cement plant at the port city of Ofunato for a total of 11km in length. The line suffered severe damage during the March 11, 2011 earthquake and tsunami. In fact, photos of debris covering the top of this bridge can be found online. The railway was brought back just 8 months after the quake and has been going strong since.

 

Two trains, pulled by DD56 Centercabs, shuttle 18 car limestone trains back and forth from the mine to the cement plant around 12-18 times a day. Here a midday empty train crosses over the Sakari River bridge bound for the mine for another load of rocks.

 

Iwate Development Railway

IDR DD56-01

Ofunato, Iwate Pref., Japan

Excerpt from winterstations.com:

 

One Canada

 

Design Team: University of Guelph, School of Environmental Design & Rural Development – Alex Feenstra, Megan Haralovich, Zhengyang Hua, Noah Tran, Haley White & Connor Winrow, Lead by Assistant Professor Afshin Ashari and Associate Professor Sean Kelly (Canada)

 

Description

The Indigenous Peoples in Canada are an inspirational example of resilience due to their ability to withstand adversity and persevere through generations of oppressive colonial policies. Historic injustices persist, including the effects of cultural genocide from the residential school system of Canada. Here we symbolize bridging the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Peoples through gathering. Accomplished through the support of the seven grandfather teachings, represented by the seven rings of the installation, that originated with the Anishnabae Peoples, passed down through generations that ensures the survival of all Indigenous Peoples: Wisdom, Love, Respect, Bravery, Honesty, Humility, and Truth. Orange represents the National Day of Truth and Reconciliation, and the reality that the support of non-Indigenous Peoples, as Indigenous Peoples assert rights to self-determination, will strengthen relations and begin to redress the historic wrongs. Orange is displayed in the ropes where the pattern pays homage to the creation of drums, where the ropes were weaved to honour culture. The installations flow towards the lifeguard stand reinforces the strengthening of the relationship and that the protection of Canada hinges on the unity between peoples. We aim to symbolize movement to a new relationship, one based on mutual respect that honours Indigenous treaties and rights. The road forward is long and nonlinear, but we commit to take the journey together.

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