View allAll Photos Tagged GetOutside

© Ray Skwire

 

Thunder Over the Boardwalk 2022 | A Salute To Those That Served

At least there are still some places that remind you of what Florida used to be like. I so wish we could somehow return to the old Florida and leave this concrete jungle behind.

Before highways and railways, before pioneers....the land we know as the United States was truly a vast wilderness. To protect these last remaining areas, in 1984 Congress created the Paria Canyon - Vermilion Cliffs Wilderness. Coyote Buttes' outstanding scenery, desert wildlife, colorful history, and opportunities for primitive recreation will remain free from the influence of man and are protected in this condition for future generations. Its 112,500 acres beckon adventurers who yearn for solitude, scenic splendor, and the chance to explore one of the most beautiful geologic formations in the world.

 

A permit is required to visit Coyote Buttes. Due to overwhelming demand, Coyote Buttes North ("The Wave") permits are available through a lottery. For additional information visit www.blm.gov/programs/recreation/permits-and-passes/lotter....

 

Photo by Bob Wick/Bureau of Land Management.

Nikon D70S with Nikkor 18-105 f3.5-5.6

| 2014-12-7 | Imagining that you're taking it slow, and so tenderly till the feeling overflows - Domerie Divide Trail / 幻想著你不著不急,如此地溫柔直到情感洋溢 - 達莫利分水嶺小道

my old Nikon D70s with Nikkor 18-55 f3.5-5.6

Before highways and railways, before pioneers....the land we know as the United States was truly a vast wilderness. To protect these last remaining areas, in 1984 Congress created the Paria Canyon - Vermilion Cliffs Wilderness. Coyote Buttes' outstanding scenery, desert wildlife, colorful history, and opportunities for primitive recreation will remain free from the influence of man and are protected in this condition for future generations. Its 112,500 acres beckon adventurers who yearn for solitude, scenic splendor, and the chance to explore one of the most beautiful geologic formations in the world.

 

A permit is required to visit Coyote Buttes. Due to overwhelming demand, Coyote Buttes North ("The Wave") permits are available through a lottery. For additional information visit www.blm.gov/programs/recreation/permits-and-passes/lotter....

 

Photo by Bob Wick/Bureau of Land Management.

*some cars removed with Photoshop AI

 

"Rainbow Row is the name for a series of thirteen colorful historic houses in Charleston, South Carolina. The houses are located north of Tradd St. and south of Elliott St. on East Bay Street, that is, 79 to 107 East Bay Street. The name Rainbow Row was coined after the pastel colors they were painted as they were restored in the 1930s and 1940s. It is a popular tourist attraction and is one of the most photographed parts of Charleston.

 

Rainbow Row originally fronted directly on the riverfront of the Cooper River, but that land was subsequently filled in. Merchants constructed commercial buildings with stores on the first (ground) floor and living quarters above. Most of the buildings had no interior access between the first and second floors; exterior stairs were located in the yards behind the houses. In 1778, a fire destroyed much of the neighborhood, and only 95 to 101 East Bay Street were spared.

 

After the Civil War, this area of Charleston devolved into near slum conditions. In the 1920s, Susan Pringle Frost, the founder of the Society for the Preservation of Old Dwellings, now the Preservation Society of Charleston, bought six of the buildings, but she lacked the money to restore them immediately. In 1931, Dorothy Haskell Porcher Legge purchased a section of these, house numbering 99 through 101 East Bay, and began to renovate them. She chose to paint these houses pink based on a colonial Caribbean color scheme. Other owners and future owners followed suit, creating the "rainbow" of pastel colors present today. The coloring of the houses helped keep the houses cool inside as well as give the area its name. By 1945, most of the houses had been restored.

 

Common myths concerning Charleston include variants on the reasons for the paint colors. According to some tales, the houses were painted in the various colors such that the intoxicated sailors coming in from port could remember which houses they were to bunk in. In other versions, the colors of the buildings date from their use as stores; the colors were used so that owners could tell illiterate slaves which building to go to for shopping." (Wikipedia)

 

PLEASE, NO GRAPHICS, BADGES, OR AWARDS IN COMMENTS. They will be deleted.

Freedom

  

#bushcraft #wildcamping #camping #nature #instalike #camp #instanature #vscogood #outdoors #adventure #hiking #forest #modernoutdoorsman #wood #liveauthentic #mothernature #naturelover #backpacking #nature_seekers #wilderness #getoutside #survival #wildernessculture #campvibes #neverstopexploring #menofoutdoors #bluebirdoutdoors

#woodcraft

 

81 Likes on Instagram

  

Lake district still one of my favorite places to go

 

#bushcraft #wildcamping #camping #nature #instalike #camp #instanature #vscogood #outdoors #adventure #hiking #forest #modernoutdoorsman #wood #liveauthentic #mothernature #naturelover #backpacking #nature_seekers #wilderness #getoutside #survival #wildernessculture #campvibes #neverstopexploring #menofoutdoors #bluebirdoutdoors

#woodcraft

  

69 Likes on Instagram

  

Tyler State Park, Pennsylvania

© Ray Skwire

 

I had a whole two-day solo trip in mind today but compromised on time and chose a couple places I'd never been before, as far as I am aware.

 

So today, I visited Lehigh Gorge State Park and Buttermilk Falls but I must say that as nice as Buttermilk was, and I will probably post one or two pics of those falls as well, the minor falls on Buck Mountain Creek that parallels the road down to the Lehigh River were much more attractive to me.

 

There's more color on them, you can get closer, there's many more smaller falls you can shoot from a variety of different angles, and nobody was here to shoot these.

 

All in all, it was a good trip. Traveling through these historic train and coal towns and regions is always a good time, like driving in a time machine.

.

Three people hike at Vermilion Cliffs National Monument in northern Arizona.

 

Before highways and railways, before pioneers....the land we know as the United States was truly a vast wilderness. To protect these last remaining areas, in 1984 Congress created the Paria Canyon - Vermilion Cliffs Wilderness. Coyote Buttes' outstanding scenery, desert wildlife, colorful history, and opportunities for primitive recreation will remain free from the influence of man and are protected in this condition for future generations. Its 112,500 acres beckon adventurers who yearn for solitude, scenic splendor, and the chance to explore one of the most beautiful geologic formations in the world.

 

A permit is required to visit Coyote Buttes. Due to overwhelming demand, Coyote Buttes North ("The Wave") permits are available through a lottery. For additional information visit www.blm.gov/programs/recreation/permits-and-passes/lotter....

 

Photo by Bob WIck, BLM.

1 2 ••• 21 22 24 26 27 ••• 79 80