View allAll Photos Tagged Elbow

Here is a peek-a-boo shot through a sprawling tree beside Crum Elbow Creek as it winds through the Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site in Hyde Park, NY, October 6, 2023. Even if you don't go for a tour through how the rich-and-famous lived in the 19th century, the grounds here are incredible. The bridge design is a common one that you will find on old carriage roads, such as in Acadia National Park, ME.

If you haven't been to a fighting match before, you are missing out on some serious visceral atmosphere. Aside from act of eating and breathing, nothing connects you back to the beginning of humanity like a nice fist fight.

Descent from Rainy Ridge in Kananaskis.

Plaza de la Cultura, San José, Costa Rica

After a very yummy lunch with a friend, the road took me down to Elbow Falls. Such a wonderfaul day!!

CP 240 takes the sweeping 90-degree curve alongside Elbow Lake approaching Vergas. This has been on my list of location for a while. Prior to this, I had never shot anything south of Detroit Lakes on the Detroit Lakes Subdivision.

After a very yummy lunch with a friend, the road took me down to Elbow Falls. Such a wonderfaul day!!

I noticed the coffee cup while I was processing the shot! Van Houtte if you look at the full rez

Rhine river near Rumikon, Switzerland.

Explore 383 on Saturday, September 20, 2008

 

two asymmetrical elbows carry the bridge running diagonally over the channel Rhein-Herne.

The Bundesgartenschau 1997 made possible the conversion of the site of the former Nordstern pit into a landscape park. The special thing about it is that the mining past of the location was included in the park’s design. New orographic conditions were created, buildings maintained and converted. The Nordsternpark is freely accessible as a commercial park in the north and a landscape park in the south.

Beautiful Kananaskis area of Alberta!

Signs of the past: Hautean Mike Rowe discovers rare lettering on Oak Street building

 

By Mark Bennett

The Tribune-Star

 

TERRE HAUTE — Mike Rowe knows the rush of discovery.

 

He once unearthed a long-lost recipe for his hometown’s trademark beer, revived the town’s old brewery and gave Terre Haute its first sips of Champagne Velvet in a half-century. Popular leisure spots such as Mogger’s Brewery, the CV Tap Room, Stables Steak House and the Brew Haus all trace their rebirth to Rowe’s passion for restoring relic buildings.

 

He’s part carpenter, part archaeologist, in a way, of Hautean history.

 

Rowe recently found another gem. On a similar mission for a group of local investors, he and a crew began peeling metal siding off the old Bent Elbow Tavern at 831 Oak St.

 

Before they began working, the two-story, corner building looked indistinct, to the untrained eye. Vertical aluminum sheets wrapped its exterior. Dated paneling masked the interior walls.

 

Rowe had a hunch this place, dating back to the turn of the 20th century, held some hidden beauty. He’s a student of the legends of Terre Haute’s brewing district and its heyday in the 1930s, ’40s and ’50s. The old tavern at 831 Oak held a spot in that vast legacy. As those legends tell it, the massive Champagne Velvet brewery that stood right across Ninth Street supplied that bar with its own pipeline of CV beer, flowing from the vats, under the road and into the tavern’s taps. The brewery tabulated the bill by reading a meter, almost like the gas company would do.

 

So, this place’s past has some color.

 

That’s the part Rowe already knew.

 

The surprise came when he and his crew began pulling down the aluminum siding. Starting on the northeast corner, they stripped the sheets off the east wall, the one that once faced the old brewery. After a couple pieces came down, one of the guys spotted something and hollered at Rowe.

 

There was some lettering on the grimy, shielded bricks.

 

“I saw the ‘R’ and then ‘E,’ and I said, ‘OK, Vanna, give me another letter,’” Rowe recalled, grinning like Indiana Jones.

 

What they found is a scarce, surviving “ghost sign,” explained Andrew Conner of Downtown Terre Haute Inc. In the early half of the 20th century, businesses used their buildings’ brick exteriors as a canvas for painted wall advertisements.

 

“As time goes by, the buildings just disappear and the paint fades,” Conner said. “Those are getting rarer and rarer.”

 

The ghost sign at the tavern, fittingly, promotes the beer pumping straight from the brewery to its taps. With a mix of black, white and colored paints, it urges passers-by to: “Drink Champagne Velvet Beer.” Just to emphasize the message, the word “beer” is repeated, not so subliminally, in larger, block, black letters. At the bottom is the slogan, “Bigger Beer, Enjoy the Mellow Strength.” Just above the ad is the name “Andy Byrne.”

 

Byrne ran a grocery store at 831 Oak St. in the 1920s, according to research by Terre Haute historian Mike McCormick. Then, around 1933 or ’34, Byrne’s place became a saloon, McCormick said.

 

The wall advertisement probably got painted in the 1930s, Rowe estimated.

 

Rowe plans to have the sign professionally restored.

 

It is one of the few ghost signs remaining in Terre Haute. The most visible survivor is a tobacco wall advertisement, featuring a frog, on the side of the Copper Bar at 810 Wabash Ave. Another can be found at 120 S. Eighth St. on the former WTHI Radio building.

 

The wall ad isn’t the only element worth saving at the old Oak Street tavern, also once known as the Crown Lounge. The roof’s 22-inch overhang offered Rowe a hint of its architectural roots. “I said, ‘I’ll bet this is an outstanding Italianate,’” Rowe said.

 

The decorative brackets had long been removed, but Rowe found some antique brackets similar to the building’s original design and soon had replacements up.

 

Inside, Rowe and his team have taken the remaining, original dark wood and filled in its missing gaps with matching replacement pieces. The woodwork stretches from the floor to the ceiling high above, and some of the original window frames are still in place. On the interior side of that east wall, wood covers a large opening that once looked out at the cavernous factory across Ninth Street. That neighboring facility housed not only the CV brewery until the mid-1950s, but later the Chesty’s Potato Chips factory. Employees at both businesses often finished or started their workdays (or both) with a stop at the tavern.

 

“Those people would pour out of the plant into the bar,” Rowe said.

 

Over the years, the soot from the city’s once-busy industrial district stuck to the tavern’s brick exterior. That sticky dust still clings to those walls. The gritty silhouettes of long-gone window shutters linger.

 

Rowe intends to clean and tuckpoint the brickwork.

 

Though the final use of the revitalized building will be up to the owners, GLX Enterprises, Rowe said it likely will be available by lease as a two-level tavern, or a first-floor tavern with second-floor apartments.

 

He’s motivated by the challenge of taking an apparently nondescript, withering building, and rediscovering its classic virtues.

 

“With this project, there were a lot of people who thought [the tavern] should just be pushed over,” Rowe said, chuckling. “That kind of made me want to do it more.”

 

The ghost sign is one of Rowe’s inspirational rewards. In an odd way, that less grand, utilitarian metal siding inadvertently saved the wall advertisement it was meant to cover up.

 

“It’s that post-Prohibition, post-1932, pre-World War II kind of thing,” Rowe said, walking around the sidewalk at the corner of Oak and Ninth streets. “I don’t know how long it’s been covered. If it had been exposed, it’d be gone.”

 

By the time he’s finished, any ghosts of the tavern’s patrons would recognize its features.

 

“My thought is,” Rowe said, “to just take it back to where somebody from 1910 could walk in, and it would look familiar to them.”

 

Mark Bennett can be reached at (812) 231-4377 or mark.bennett@tribstar.com.

This commercial fishing boat looks like it hasn't been taken out for a long, long time. Maybe it just needs a determined fisher and some elbow grease, haha.

Seen at Finn Slough.

Brown Pelican limbering up for a launch on Horsepen Bayou.

Another shot from the trip to Elbow Falls. Years ago kids would jump off the rock ledge on the upper left into the ice cold water. No one was jumping on this morning.

Pretty little waterfall along the Elbow River in Kananaskis. It was a lovely, peaceful morning and we had the area to ourselves. Beautiful spot, will have to go back!

Third Street, Gowanus. Brooklyn, NY

Little Elbow Park, Alberta

Devils Elbow Bridge

 

By Matthew Kent

 

Friday, August 21, 2009

 

Waynesville, Missouri — Pulaski County Commissioners learned Thursday that the county won't be receiving grant funding for the Devils Elbow Bridge.

 

Jack Kearbey, area specialist with the USDA Rural Development, informed the commission it didn't make the cut. Grant funding would have paid for engineering fees toward the bridge, according to Eastern District Commissioner Bill Farnham. Farnham said the next period for re-applying for the grant would be in October and said it was “disheartening” that no grant funding was received.

 

The bridge, which has been listed in poor condition by the Missouri Department of Transportation for at least two consecutive years, has been looked at by the County Commission, but a cost of $1.6 million has been cited to correct the deficiencies at the aging bridge. It was built in 1923 and was declared obsolete in 1942 when a new one was built.

 

In April, the Commission approved a contract with Springfield-based Great River Engineering for pre-engineering work on the bridge for $99,938. That was 75 percent covered through a grant with the USDA, while the other 25 percent was covered by the Off-System Bridge Replacement and Rehabilitation (BRO) program, which provides funding for counties through MoDOT for the replacement and rehabilitation of deficient bridges.

 

Source: Waynesville Daily Guide

 

North side of the bridge looking south (looking westbound)

 

20090923_0024a1_800x600

YaY i met a likeminded Linden tonight!

So i needed to get a picture of the two Mohawks and 2 rats on the shoulders :))

His name is Elbow Linden and he is a Fresh Sler ( a nice way to say he is a noob :)) )

Wonderful mossy velvety green tree limbs on a misty morning on Dartmoor. One of them resembling an elbow! Stay safe, keep bumping! 😉

Ross giving a demo of

a hockey move that has

become Canada's

rallying cry against

U.S. tariffs.

 

seen in Steveston BC.

So glad we did the short hike to Elbow Lake. Spectacular!

 

www.instagram.com/justpeachy/

I'm pretty sure I posted a similar image of the falls at the beginning of the year, but I liked this one so here it is!

 

100 X 65 B&W

  

Centipede Elbows.

 

Wysokie spacery rozproszone katastrofy pogardliwe pioruny urażone smutki szanse królewskie płomienie najdroższe działki złoty wojownik mylące trąba powietrzna,

sciúradh rathúna cróga dochracha maraíodh intinn stoirmeacha borrtha saighdiúirí tobann lámha gan chosaint díograis dochreidte damhsa iontais,

brame vicissitudini linee di marmo antichi controlli nemici della fragilità leggi percussive rivoluzione affermazioni percorsi sotterranei dinamiche passaggi,

feltételezve az összeszerelési javaslatokat, varázslatos írásos kifejezéseket terminus könyveket, elhanyagolva a halálokat, reflexív leírások, amelyek bizalommal botlik a káros harapásokat,

смелые войны неопределенные валы изогнутые глаза истолкованные компаньоны залитые дрожь слепые сердца мщение сражения бескровные трупы сжимали плечи,

犯罪の漸減クラウスは静かな丘を信じない星を広める黒い明日騒々しい混乱飲酒障害恐ろしいためらい自信を持って感情を略奪仲間思いやりのある思いやりを略奪する同志病.

Steve.D.Hammond.

Jardin des Tuileries, Paris I

Playing with some processing

The gentle flow of water through the trees. wont be long before its all frozen over for another year.

Curva del Carro

Elbow Beach - Paget, Bermuda

Che and I went to Elbow falls over the weekend... cold :)

Capture Xbox One X / Ride 2

Newport Street Gallery.

 

Happy 2017!

Elbow, Het Patronaat Haarlem 09-11-2008

 

Too good and too beautiful

The Orion Constellation over Elbow Falls.

Getting better at Night photography. The minute long exposure meant that the stars have started to develop light trails and appear fuzzy. It was just too cold to sit out and do a proper "star trails" image. Loving the smooth water though.

With today's spring like temperatures, it was perfect for a trip out to Elbow Falls.

1 3 5 6 7 ••• 79 80