View allAll Photos Tagged Drones,
Common Drone Fly (Eristalis tenax)
Have a fab FriYay and a happy weekend everyone.
Happy Fly Day Friday!
As I was down taking the other shot I posted Dave had his drone flying in the sky to catch the Emerald Isle coming out of the channel and heading back to Beaver Island. Photo by Dave.
Job 8: Another of Tra's loser jobs,... temp drone delivery person for Amazon. This lasted one day
05: BOILDEGG NEW NEO TOWER WHITE
Animated Urban Pigeon by
Butanik83 - Wasp Backpack NEW @ CYBER PUNK EVENT
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Flair%20for%20Events/120/1...
NOMAD // Old Radio Tower
Cardboard Box [DBy Mesh]
::GB::Cyber Elysion Pants (Belleza) Silver NEW @ CYBER PUNK EVENT
::GB::Cyber Elysion Vest (Belleza) Black NEW @ CYBER PUNK EVENT
[The Forge] Cypher Helmet .NEW @ CYBER PUNK EVENT
:::SOLE::: SA - Armtech Mk.4 (White Black) NEW @ CYBER PUNK EVENT
r2 A/D/E sasa gloves[white]Maitreya
Radio-TV_relay by SebastianGeneticGFX Resident
08 Action Used Cars - Dish Rust
.SHI Caleb Boots
RO Combat Bento Pose NEW @ CYBER PUNK EVENT
Drone Fly (Eristalis tenax)
I have seen more of these Drone Flies so far this season than I have seen in previous years.
Back after I pick up the kids from school, for the last time this year, six weeks of Summer holidays start now!
Captured with my Drone - DJI Mini Pro 4; West coast of the Island; limits of Mellieha.
Thank you for your time to view.
Drone shot of the Hohenzollern Castle in Germany.
Thank you very much for your comments and faves, very much appreciated!
Dave flew his drone and captured some images from the west side of the Lighthouse which is incased in ice. This is from the side the waves hit the most. That's allot of ice already but Friday we are to reach up to 45* and if we get some sun this ice will be falling off.
Drone show at Han river in Seoul. Never saw one of those before. Interesting but probably better for video than photography.
I went into my garden this morning hoping to find something exciting to shoot that is alive and only came across one drone fly so shot it. I took some pictures yesterday of a bush and only when looking at it on the computer I spotted a Lady Bird. Now if only I had spotted it on the camera! Well the summer is still to come so hopefully I will find more exciting things in my garden to shoot like lady birds, butterflies and creepie crawlies...lol
Gleich am ersten Abend unseres Spanienaufenthaltes besuchten wir eine Burgruine, diese hatte ich mir schon zu Hause als Spot ausgesucht.
On the very first evening of our stay in Spain we visited a castle ruin, which I had already chosen as a spot at home.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
NO GROUP INVITES
This one was a bit high up, but I liked the way it looked against the blue sky! HFDF have a great day and weekend ;0)
Drone Haven is one of those rare places that feel like a dream made of detail, humor, and heart. Sadly, this unique sim will close its doors on April 13th.
If you haven’t been yet – now is the time. If you’ve been – maybe go one last time. I did.
the place: Drone Haven
My husband Dave took this DRONE shot.
I'm standing on the end of the pier where I took the previous picture.
Welcome in Drone Haven!
This beautifully crafted sim is full of details and surprises! There’s so much to explore. Pro tip: Visit the Survivor Camp and take the tour!
picture taken on Drone Haven
Photo By: Cate Infinity
Shot in Second Life Official Viewer in Ultra. No edit.
Location: Drone Haven
Backstory: Drone Haven, a city long abandoned by humanity, stands as a haunting testament to the fleeting importance of humankind in the grand narrative of nature. Rusted skyscrapers rise from fractured earth, their decayed frames wrapped in vines and moss, bearing witness to nature’s quiet reclamation. Faded posters and graffiti whisper a warning from a forgotten era: “The End is Near!” On the city’s outskirts, a survivalist camp briefly clung to life. Dreamers and pragmatists built it as humanity’s final stand, cultivating gardens and creating shelters in defiance of the inevitable. Yet disease, dwindling resources, and discord proved stronger than their resolve. The camp fell silent, overtaken by creeping greenery, its remnants a poignant symbol of resilience overshadowed by decline. At the city’s heart lies the ruins of a once-famous butcher shop, its walls weathered and its windows shattered. Moss softens its rusted fixtures, and vines snake through every crevice. Outside, the grim message echoes: “The End is Near!” This decaying relic serves as a stark reminder of human hubris and the fragile nature of survival. Amid the ruins, drones roam like spectral caretakers. Left by their creators, these machines continue to perform their programmed duties, planting native flora during their annual Echocycle rituals. They maintain Drone Haven as a paradox—a city simultaneously embodying human ambition and nature’s enduring dominance. Yet even the drones are not eternal. As creations of humankind, they too are bound by the finite nature of energy. Like their creators, they will eventually exhaust their resources and cease to function. This juxtaposition—humanity’s ephemeral existence and its legacy in the mechanical species it forged—underscores the fragility of all things, natural or artificial. Drone Haven whispers a layered tale: a reminder that humanity, for all its self-importance, is but a fleeting presence in the face of nature’s vast, enduring cycles. In its rusted beams and flowering vines, it reflects on collapse, resilience, and the inescapable truth that all energy is finite and ultimately consumed.
First drone flight of the year, guess I'm a little off of my game. I forgot the holder for my phone and had to balance the phone and controller....too many things to focus on. Still, I did get a couple of shots. This is YSB52 shoving up to Haven.
Here at Drones-Gone-Wild Recovery Center we believe that not all drones are created evil. Some just "accidentally" clicked on that thing while updating there software files online, and happened to become infected with malicious viruses that sometimes cause them to disrespect the fundamental laws of robotics. When drones start to head down this dark path - a drone rehabilitation center is the answer to bring there systems back in check and restore normal operation. All of our programs are facilitated by a friendly drone reconstruction expert who will inevitably restore them to functioning members of society.
Couple drone/bot ideas spiced up with a quick backdrop and ridiculous story.
Photo By: Cate Infinity
Shot in Second Life Official Viewer in Ultra. No edit.
Location: Drone Haven
Drone Haven stands as a somber monument to humanity’s fleeting reign, a forsaken city overtaken by the relentless march of nature. Towering, rusted skyscrapers—once symbols of progress—now crumble into the earth, their skeletal frames bound in a suffocating embrace of vines and moss. Faded posters and the echoes of forgotten graffiti serve as grim premonitions: “The End is Near!” On the fringes, a last-ditch survivalist camp briefly defied extinction. Dreamers, with fragile hope, planted gardens and built shelters in a futile act of defiance. But disease, depletion, and discord swiftly snatched away their fleeting defiance, leaving only silence and creeping green. At the city's heart, the butcher shop—a relic of human industry—stands decayed and broken. Its walls, softened by moss and pierced by vines, speak of a once-vibrant world now swallowed by time. The eerie message lingers: “The End is Near!” A grim echo of human ambition, now lost in nature’s quiet dominion. Among the ruins, drones—mechanical phantoms—still wander, remnants of their creators' ambition. They dutifully plant life during the Echocycle, maintaining the city as both a testament to human legacy and nature's quiet triumph. But even these tireless machines, bound by the limits of their energy, will one day cease. The paradox is clear: humanity’s imprint, though indelible, is as ephemeral as the machines it birthed. Drone Haven whispers a haunting truth: humankind, for all its perceived significance, is but a fleeting echo against the eternal backdrop of nature’s vast, unyielding cycles. In the city’s rust and bloom, it mourns the inevitable collapse, the fragility of life, and the inescapable reality that all things—natural or artificial—are bound to fade into silence.