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I was at my sister's house recently for a feast of food excellently prepared and smoked by her son. This tiny hut is on her property, and I believe it is where she raised most of her children, though she referred to it as an electrical house. The son with the huge smoker was better brought up than the rest, none of whom can compete with his ribs, brisket, chicken or sauces. The holes in the roof were caused as the kids grew taller. The roof moss was the only insulation and sometimes food.
Stored after an electrical fire about this time last year, S302 is seen at North Bendigo workshops on the 25/3/23 having lost its' engine and bogies to other units in the fleet.
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Electrical Tower - Martins Creek, PA - Minolta X-570 - Ilford HP5+ - home developed in D76 - scanned on Epson V600.
I liked the previous shot, but it seemed a little blah, so I spruced it up a bit. No longer real, just "based on a true story", as they say.
►aunque se prevén en España unos días tan inestables y locos como la propia primavera, aprovecho estas Margaritas del Cabo para desearos un feliz fin de semana!
►although it's expected in Spain a few days so unstable and crazy as spring itself, I take these daisies to wish you a happy weekend!
INDISPENSABLE VER EN GRANDE • INDISPENSABLE VIEW ON LARGE
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. 2010©jesuscm. All rights reserved.
The FXE units will have their controls, computers and electrical stuff installed in Ft. Worth before being shipped to Mexico.
Single phase "pole pig" transformer feeding my house and 3 neighbors. Pole is around 8" diameter, for scale.
G-WPDB built by Airbus Helicopters in 2015 owned by South Western Helicopters at Bristol Airport and operated for Western Power Distribution seen skimming the tree tops near Minworth whilst inspecting power lines, some very impressive low level flying.
Second floor of abandoned and decayed City Trust and Savings Bank (est. 1918)
Campbell, OH
The bank that occupied the first floor was frequented by steel workers at the Youngstown Sheet and Tube company.
Around 1977, almost all of the steel mills in the area (at one time steel mills lined 60 miles of the Mahoning River) closed down. More than 5,000 workers lost their jobs and the bank eventually closed. A dry cleaning company then occupied the first floor. Now, it is possible to visit the second floor of the bank which had been occupied by dentists, an X-ray company, the steel workers' union, and other businesses. (See below for info about tours.)
This bank building is close to the Steel and Tube Company Homes in Campbell, Ohio, which were constructed from pre-fab concrete from 1918 to 1920. The community is now designated as an historic site. A few of the homes are still occupied, but most are abandoned and in ruins. I will be posting photos of this site in my Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company Homes albums. (My albums are mostly in alphabetical order so that album will be on the last page of my albums.)
The site is open for tours on Sunday afternoons. You need to make reservations. For 4 hours, the cost is $20 which goes to the preservation of the site. You must sign a waiver of liability because some of the site is littered with trash, has steep steps, etc. You will be warned to look before each step and also that stairs or floors might be dangerous. (See ironsoup.com for more info on arranging a tour.)
See the album created by the Flickr member who conducts many of the tours: www.flickr.com/photos/148081906@N08/albums/72157694005721354