View allAll Photos Tagged GrandFinale
Three Tornado GR4 jets taxiing back to their hangar at RAF Marham after taking part in the diamond 9 flypasts over the airfield and RAF Cranwell. The Tornado was retired by the RAF on 14th March so this was possibly the last flight of the aircraft seen in this photo.
Tornado GR4 ZG752 taxis at RAF Marham after leading the diamond 9 flypasts over the airfield and RAF Cranwell.
GRAND FINALE (Part 3 of 3)
Week 52
The series "Reflections through the Seasons"
As seen in the little garden, reflected in one of the buildings in Toronto.
This is really it! After a small entr'acte, I'm happy to welcome you into the concluding part of the Grand Finale of my year project!
You know, I'm very lucky with the final week; it was predicted be all cloudy, rainy, gloomy... but instead we had all sunny spells I needed for Finale! :-) Thanks to the heavenly office - they changed their mind and shifted all the rainy weather beyond the project on the next week! :-)
I took this photo in the end of the final week, on October 17, which is exactly one year of the project, because I started it on this very date a year ago. You may see that first photo below in the comments for comparison. It's interesting how the colour pattern differs this year - most of the plants seem to be in summer mood yet :-) and we can see that some colours are speeding up, some are slowed down...
Thank you for joining me in the Grand Finale! See for more treats in the comments below! :-)
In case you missed the first and second parts of the Finale, please have a look on them - there are surprises there :-)
If you are new to my Reflections series, you are welcome to look through the set or you may like to see it as a slide show.
PS: Hope, you are enjoying this finale and everyone is having a great weekend!
It was busy week for me with new releases (will tell later), so the entr'acte was slightly longer that I wanted :-) See you in your streams or mine! :-)
A colourful Autumn everyone! :-)
"Every time we see Saturn in the night sky, we'll remember. We'll smile. And we'll want to go back. #GrandFinale #GoodbyeCassini " @CassiniSaturn team
Parts of the stage rise up to the ceiling, confetti flies, lights flash, fire shoots and fireworks explode...this was an insane finale! You can actually see some fire behind them in this photo, along with sparks from the fireworks...a bit of everything here!
PNC Bank Arts Center, Holmdel, NJ
The crowd goes wild as confetti rains down during Mumford and Sons' encore; closing out the final day of Montreal's 3-day Osheaga Music Festival. If you want to see the mayhem in real time, here is the video I shot at the same time: youtu.be/vUiZ4MhwMb4 Camera in one hand, cell phone in the other... The confetti starts at 2:45. A truly joyous moment.
Had all but decided to forego the local fireworks show this year. Felt as if I had done all I could do creatively over the years in terms of photography of these events. And lately I'm avoiding situations that cause me to feel that I'm simply going through the motions. That said, fireworks are irresistible and this opportunity comes around only once a year here in the village. As I gathered up the camera and tripod, I had the inspiration to use a long abandoned house as my foreground...two of my favorite things in a single frame! I worked out the details in my head as I walked toward the venue. The geometry was perfect with the front of the house aligned perfectly with the fireworks launch point. I had photographed this place last December (linked below) and it looked as lonely as ever. Tall weeds formed a perfect foreground element. A sodium streetlight behind me cast a ghastly orange glow adding to the surreal effect. I could hear people, many people, off in the distance, but was completely alone here in front of the house. I setup the camera just as the first rockets exploded overhead. The thrill factor was enormous. Being here somehow made the show seem even grander than it was. It was that compounding effect I've felt before over having discovered something that no one else had, and being able to capture it with the camera. Best fireworks show ever!
Camera Tech: didn't realize until last evening that you need to turn off the long exposure noise reduction setting for fireworks photos. That setting works fine, however it doubles the time required to take a photo. You just haven't got that kind of time to waste during a show like this. I captured many more shots during this show, and there really wasn't that much noise anyway. Keep the ISO on the low side, or else noise will be a problem. Aperture near f8 and exposure time ranging between 8 and 15 seconds worked well for me. Much longer than that and the fireworks tend to be overexposed and you lose the definition of the light trails as they tend to go all fuzzy. Try to compose shots with the camera facing opposite the direction of sunset as you might end up with too bright of a sky. There's considerable light in the sky here now well past 10pm.
With this view, Cassini captured one of its last looks at Saturn and its main rings from a distance. The Saturn system has been Cassini's home for 13 years, but its journey will end on 15 September.
Cassini has been orbiting Saturn for nearly a half of a Saturnian year. This extended stay has permitted observations of the long-term variability of the planet, moons, rings and magnetosphere, observations not possible from short, flyby-style missions.
When the spacecraft arrived at Saturn in 2004, the planet's northern hemisphere, seen at the top here, was in darkness, just beginning to emerge from winter. Now at journey's end, the entire north pole is bathed in the continuous sunlight of summer.
Images taken on 28 October, 2016 with the wide angle camera using red, green and blue spectral filters were combined to create this colour view. This view looks toward the sunlit side of the rings from about 25 degrees above the ringplane.
The view was acquired at a distance of approximately 1.4 million km from Saturn. Image scale is 80 km/pixel.
The Cassini mission is a cooperative project of ESA, NASA and the Italian space agency ASI. The image was published today as the Cassini weekly image.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
The spirits are materializing for our FINAL week of the MadPea Spooktacular Halloween Hunt!
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✧ Earn DOUBLE ectoplasm hunt points! More points mean more prizes!
✧ ALL Shadow Seeker episodes playable! Episode 5 later today!
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NOW is the time to join the ghost hunt! Details here ☞ www.madpeagames.com/
A short story about this image (in italian):
aliveuniverse.today/speciale-missioni/sistema-solare/cass...
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech - Processing: Elisabetta Bonora & Marco Faccin / aliveuniverse.today
New Year Fireworks, Dublin Ireland 2026
To the incredible creative community on Flickr, happy New Year! As we step into 2026, may your lenses find the perfect light and your portfolios grow with stories worth telling. Whether you’re chasing the golden hour or capturing quiet, candid moments, I wish you a year of sharp focus, stunning compositions, and endless inspiration. Here’s to a picture-perfect 2026 for us all!
Space Science image of the week:
The international Cassini mission is drawing to a close in spectacular style: diving between Saturn and its innermost rings and exploring uncharted territory like never before.
The final set of five dives even dips the spacecraft into the top of Saturn’s atmosphere, giving Cassini’s instruments the chance to make the first direct sampling of the planet, studying its chemical composition and analysing its temperature at different altitudes. The dives will also provide close-up images of the planet’s atmospheric features, including its polar vortex and aurora.
Cassini is just completing its third of such atmospheric ‘dips’, and towards the end of the final orbit, will make a distant flyby of Titan, at 119 049 km on 11 September. But this will still be close enough to set Cassini on its final trajectory into the planet’s atmosphere, concluding its 13-year odyssey in the Saturn system.
Additional details of the mission’s grand finale will be presented by NASA tomorrow in a dedicated media briefing, scheduled for 18:00 GMT / 20:00 CEST.
The image shown here was captured during an earlier dive between the planet and its rings, at a distance of approximately 1.1 million kilometers from Saturn on 13 May. It shows the thin sliver of Saturn’s 86 km-wide moon Prometheus lurking near ghostly structures in Saturn's narrow F-ring. Many of the narrow ring’s faint and wispy features result from its gravitational interactions with Prometheus.
Most of the small moon’s surface is in darkness because of the viewing geometry: Cassini was positioned behind Saturn and Prometheus with respect to the Sun, looking towards the moon’s dark side and just a bit of the moon’s sunlit northern hemisphere. Detail in the sunlit side of the rings shows a distinct difference in brightness between the outermost section of Saturn’s A ring (left of centre) and the rest of the ring, interior to the Keeler Gap (lower left).
The image was first released on 7 August 2017.
The Cassini mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA and Italy’s ASI space agency.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Space Science image of the week:
In a fitting farewell to the planet that had been its home for over 13 years, the international Cassini spacecraft took one last, lingering look at Saturn and the splendid rings during the final leg of its journey and snapped a series of images that has been assembled into this new mosaic.
The mission concluded on 15 September with a planned dramatic plunge into the planet’s atmosphere. Two days earlier it captured wide-angle images to cover the planet and its main rings from one end to the other. The moons Prometheus, Pandora, Janus, Epimetheus, Mimas and Enceladus also make a faint appearance in the background. Can you spot them? (Click here for a labelled version of this image.)
The image shown here has been brightened to reveal the details of the moons and rings; the original natural colour view can be found here.
This view looks toward the sunlit side of the rings from about 15° above the ring plane. Cassini was 1.1 million km from Saturn, on its final approach to the planet, when the 42 red, green and blue images in this mosaic were taken. They were combined and mosaicked together to create a natural-colour view. The image scale on Saturn is about 67 km/ pixel. The image scale on the moons varies from 59 km/pixel to 80 km/pixel. The Sun-planet-spacecraft angle is 138°.
The Cassini mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA and Italy’s ASI space agency.
The image was first released on 20 November. Read the full story via the NASA website.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
2014-07-03 8362-CR2-L2
Fireworks at South Haven Michigan, I like how you can see all the people taking photos of the fireworks,
This spectacular image was part of a series of photos taken during the grand finale (during the last minute) of the amazing GlobalFest Team Japan fireworks display last Thursday night.
It was held at the lovely Elliston Lake, so not only did we get the amazing explosions in the sky, we got wonderful reflections in the lake water as well!
Hope you have all had an excellent weekend and wishing you all the best in this upcoming new week!
Space Science image of the week:
Until the arrival of the international Cassini–Huygens mission at Saturn in 2004, much about the gas giant, its intricate ring system and enigmatic moons was a mystery.
On 14 January 2005, the mystery as to what lay beneath the thick atmosphere of Saturn’s largest moon Titan was to be revealed as ESA’s Huygens probe made the first successful landing on a world in the outer Solar System.
During the two-and-a-half hour descent under parachute, features that looked remarkably like shore lines and river systems on Earth appeared from the haze. But rather than water, with surface temperatures of around –180ºC, the fluid involved here is methane, a simple organic compound.
One set of images taken by Huygens is pictured here showing the view from 2 km altitude. It is in Mercator projection, so the N–S/E–W directions cross at right angles but surface areas appear distorted.
Huygens touched down on a frozen surface littered with rounded pebbles, and continued to transmit to its mothership for 72 minutes before Cassini dropped below the horizon. The stream of data returned from the surface provided a unique treasure trove of in situ measurements that scientists are still mining today.
In its 13-year odyssey of the Saturn system Cassini made 127 close flybys of Titan, including radar-mapping its surface – even before Huygens’ descent – and finding numerous hydrocarbon lakes and seas, evidence for a global ocean of water beneath its thick crust, and an atmosphere teeming with prebiotic chemicals. Titan’s atmosphere is thought to be similar to early Earth’s before life developed, and thus can be seen as a planet-scale laboratory to understand the chemical reactions that may have led to life on Earth.
Cassini also watched Titan’s seasons change over time, including the development of a swirling vortex and clouds of methane rain that precipitate onto the surface.
Titan has also acted as a gravitational slingshot for Cassini throughout its mission, setting it on course for exploration of the Saturn system. Tonight (19:04 GMT) Cassini will make its last, distant, flyby of Titan, dubbed the ‘goodbye kiss' by mission planners, taking it 119 049 km from its surface.
The flyby seals Cassini’s fate, causing the spacecraft to slow down slightly in its orbit around Saturn and lowering its altitude over the planet. Thus it will plunge into the atmosphere, disposing of the spacecraft in the safest way possible to avoid an unplanned impact into a pristine icy satellite, such as ocean-bearing Enceladus.
More about the mission Grand Finale.
More about discoveries at Titan, via “Cassini prepares to say goodbye to a true Titan"
More from ESA's Archive of Cassini-Huygens discoveries.
The Cassini–Huygens mission is a cooperative project between NASA, ESA and Italy’s ASI space agency.
Credit: ESA/NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
Saturn's active, ocean-bearing moon Enceladus sinks behind the giant planet in a farewell portrait from the international Cassini spacecraft.
The image was taken on 13 September 2017 and is among the last images Cassini sent back.
It was taken using Cassini's narrow-angle camera at a distance of 1.3 million km from Enceladus and about 1 million km from Saturn. Image scale on Enceladus is 8 km/per pixel. Images taken using red, green and blue spectral filters were assembled to create the natural colour view.
The Cassini–Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA and the Italian Space Agency.
Read the press release here.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
This monochrome view is the last image taken by the imaging cameras on the Cassini spacecraft before the mission concluded on 15 September. It looks toward the planet's night side, lit by reflected light from the rings, and shows the location at which the spacecraft would enter the planet's atmosphere hours later.
The view was acquired on 14 September 2017 at 19:59 GMT (spacecraft event time). The view was taken in visible light using the Cassini spacecraft wide-angle camera at a distance of 634,000 km from Saturn.
The Cassini–Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA and the Italian Space Agency.
Read the press release here.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
This image of Saturn's outer A Ring features the small moon Daphnis and the waves it raises in the edges of the Keeler Gap.
The image was taken by the international Cassini spacecraft on 13 September 2017. I is among the last images Cassini sent back to Earth.
The view was taken in visible light using the wide-angle camera at a distance of 782 000 km from Saturn. Image scale 4.3 km.
The Cassini–Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA and the Italian Space Agency.
Read the press release here.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Legacy Name: 5h4 (Sha Fairey Darkness)
Title: Miss Elegance Malaysia 2022
Grand Finale
Challenge Theme: Formal
Description Here:
Dreaming of success seems easy in the imagination but very difficult to implement in the real because you need to earn it as fighting in the war. However, Miss Elegance Malaysia is tended to create a styling as the one who wont the victory. Inspired by the sequin fashion Sha, choose Elie Sabb Spring 2019 Couture Fashion Show as her guideline to find the perfect dress on marketplace. This formal dress is made from 60% sequins sewn on high quality fabric. Sha chose a color palette that is soft and natural because she wants to convey that something soft does not mean they are weak and easy to breaks. The design of the dress shows it all how brave the person who able to style it. Sha featured an elegance and sexy style in her formal theme this time. Not to be forgotten, she did her hair neatly and matched it with a headpiece that has elements of the Chinese culture in Malaysia.
OUTFIT:
═════════════
Dress: [hh] – Zariah Gown Sequin
Headpieces: *Tentacio* - Yun Headpiece Gold
Earrings: Lazuri Classic Pearl – Matching Drop Earrings
Bangle: [Al Hanna] – Elena Outfits – Elena Bangle L
Ring: Violet Seduction – Hera Ring - White
Shoes: .::E.D.D.A::. – Jimena Crystal Heels
Nails: LOTUS – Marbleous Nail 04
Hair: Sap – {Invest} Hair Bun
Eyeshadow: IDTTY FACES – Loose Leaf 1
Lipstick: TOP1SALON – HD Shy Lipstick - Sunny
Fireworks at Magic Kingdom at Disney World, Florida taken from a hotel balcony 12 floors up.
Copyright © 2011 Val Blakely
In this curious view, Saturn looms in the foreground on the left, adorned by shadows cast by the giant planet’s rings. To the right, the rings emerge from behind the planet’s hazy limb, stretching outwards from Cassini’s perspective.
At the time the images in this mosaic were collected, on 28 May 2017, Cassini was looking over the horizon just after its sixth pass through the gap between Saturn and the rings as part of its Grand Finale. The mission would eventually conclude on 15 September 2017, by plunging into the planet’s atmosphere.
The view is of the rings’ unlit face, where sunlight filters through from the other side. The part of the planet seen here is in the southern hemisphere.
The Cassini mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA and Italy’s ASI space agency. The image mosaic was first released on 16 October 2017.
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Operations image of the week:
May and early June were busy months for NASA’s Cassini orbiter, as a series of complex link-ups with ESA and NASA stations supported ‘radio science’ as part of the mission’s Grand Finale.
In radio science, specialists analyse the signals transmitted by Cassini to Earth to extract important information on how gravity affects the craft’s motion or how matter through which the signals travel affects them.
Cassini is focusing on probing Saturn’s interior by mapping the planet’s gravity to an unprecedented level of detail, and determining the rings’ total mass to help understand how they formed.
This striking image was taken by Cassini’s two cameras. It is possible to see the outer edge of the Encke Gap in the outer portion of Saturn’s A ring. The uneven patterns in the ringlet appear and disappear through the gravitational influence of moon Pan, orbiting in the gap.
Cassini is providing insight into how and when the rings formed, as well as their relation with Saturn and its moons. The team working on these new fundamental measurements is all European.
The observations require a meticulous sequence of contacts with ground stations, making use of five NASA Deep Space Network antennas plus ESA’s Deep Space Antennas at Malargüe, Argentina, and New Norcia Australia. Some of these link-ups with Cassini will run for over eight hours.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
This image of Saturn's northern hemisphere was taken by Cassini on 13 September 2017. It is among the last images Cassini sent back to Earth.
The view was taken in visible red light using the Cassini spacecraft wide-angle camera at a distance of 1.1 million kilometres from Saturn. Image scale is 64 km.
The Cassini–Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA and the Italian Space Agency.
Read the press release here.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
This image of Saturn's rings was taken by Cassini on 13 September 2017. It is among the last images Cassini sent back to Earth before concluding its mission on 15 September.
The view was taken in visible red light using the Cassini spacecraft wide-angle camera at a distance of 1.1 million kilometres from Saturn.
The Cassini–Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA and the Italian Space Agency.
Read the press release here.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Another shot from the intense and very cool (if ridiculously short, as I mentioned in my description of my upload from yesterday, the Calgary Stampede Finale Fireworks show only last 3 and a half miutes!) fireworks display on the last night of the 2014 Calgary Stampede.
This was taken right near the very end of the display, and the sky was just filled with gorgeous colours and explosions!
Hope you are all having an excellent week so far!
Processed using calibrated red, green, and blue filtered images of Saturn taken by Cassini on September 13 2017.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI/CICLOPS/Kevin M. Gill
This is a combination of shots from the fireworks that were set off at a Halloween Festival in Goodyear, Arizona. These would have been used on the 4th of July, but due to bad weather, the event was cancelled. The City of Goodyear decided to shoot them off during a Halloween Festival. That was actually better.......it was much cooler and hardly anyone around the area where we parked to view them! Hope you like this creation of shots.
UK N. Somerset - Weston-super-Mare. Fireworks on the beach, the grand finale. Cars pulled over onto the pavement to watch the display.
Processed using calibrated red, green, and blue filtered images of Saturn taken by Cassini on September 13 2017.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI/CICLOPS/Kevin M. Gill
See more and purchase prints at TheObsessivePhotographer.com(click here)
Taken at Walt Disney World's EPCOT after a full day of rain. This is completely untouched, it made the rainy day stay all worthwhile.
Before concluding its mission on 15 September 2017, Cassini captured one last view of a lone ‘propeller’ feature, one of many such small-scale dynamical features created by small moonlets embedded in the rings as they attempt, unsuccessfully, to open gaps in the ring material.
The image was taken on 13 September 2017 with the wide-angle camera at a distance of 676 000 km from Saturn. Image scale 3.7 km. It is among the last images Cassini sent back to Earth.
The Cassini–Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA and the Italian Space Agency.
Read the press release here.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Lake Shawnee, Topeka, KS - We started our summer vacation out with an American Independence Day Fireworks Show in Topeka, Kansas. This image was captured during the show's finale but the entire city was ablaze with fireworks for many hours starting even before it was fully dark. From what I gather, such fireworks are legal in Kansas and thus the city was blanketed with such amazing displays just about everywhere we went. I may just have to spend July 4th in Kansas again some year ...
One of Cassini’s last views of Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, before the mission concluded on 15 September.
The image was taken on 13 September from a distance of 774 000 km from Titan. The image scale is 5 km/pixel. The image has been enhanced to partially see through the haze.
The Cassini–Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, ESA and the Italian Space Agency.
Read the press release here.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Legacy Name: 5h4 (Sha Fairey Darkness)
Title: Miss Elegance Malaysia 2022
Grand Finale
Challenge Theme: National
Description Here:
Malaysia is unique because of the diversity in races, religions and cultures. As a result of the diversity, Malaysian produce a very unique element that other countries don’t have. Malaysians embrace each other’s culture and religion. Therefore, we live in peace and tranquillity. Miss Elegance Malaysia create a styling to present the diversity of Malaysian culture. The three main culture that is Malay, Chinese and Indian can be seen in her ‘Songket’ woven clothes and her golden jewellery. Not to forget Miss Elegance Malaysia Sha, walking on the runway like a Traditional Asian Queen with the red Goddess Touch Halo from CURELESS, to mixed with the metaphor of Malaysian Spirit that represent by the tiger that known as ‘Harimau Malaya’.
OUTFIT:
═════════════
Top: {B} – Ratu Kebaya Black
Dress: ::Smexy:: Songket Tapis Straps Dress
Pareo: ::Smexy:: Songket Pareo
Headpieces: - shanghai – Nyamph Crown
Head Flower: *LODE* - Head Accessories – Hibiscus (Red & Orange)
Earrings: Zaara – Kalki Earrings - Gold
Necklace: Zaara – Kalki Necklace - Gold
Tikka: Zaara – Shairi maang -tikka – (Head Jewel) White
Nose Ring: Zaara – Shairi nosering – white
Hands & Legs bangle: FAON – Malaysians All Jewels Custom for Sha
Shoes: AZOURY – Happiness Does Not Wait - Red
Nails & Ring: PENDULUM – IX - Gold
Hair: tram – K0925
Eyeshadow: Banana Beauty – Mia Eyeshadow
Lipstick: WarPaint – Dulcet Lips HD – set 2
Halo: CURELESS [+] – Pygmalion’s Bride / Goddess Touch Halo - Red
Fan: Bauhaus Movement – 04// Liang Fan
Tiger: JIAN – Tiger Collection Box
Credit to the amazing poses by Fairey Poses.
On the way home we were still talking about the restaurant we had stopped at for dinner earlier in the evening - apparently, two staff hadn't shown up for work and the owner was on her own to cook and serve. We were honestly a bit annoyed by the lengthy delay in service but she was a lovely person, apologetic, and besides all that, the food was good. And then we ran into this scene close to home and realized we would have missed it completely if we hadn't been delayed. My wife said it was a grand finale to our holidays! indeed it was.
The grandfinale, Bristol, I had the pleasure of linking CHEO, the man is a genius at his style, attention to detail is a must, right up my street...
Top day, great laugh, can't wait to set foot down there again.
Big ups.
Disney's Magic Kingdom ~ Disney World
Cinderella Castle ~ Orlando, Florida
Fireworks Series ~ May 2014
(click more comments to see 24-shot series)
Fireworks Show: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wishes:_A_Magical_Gathering_of_Disn...
The last light of the day sets the redrocks aglow - Sedona, Arizona
Looks better >> Viewed Large On Black
© All Rights Reserved
Saw a bunch of fireworks last night...it was really cool because the Ferris wheel was right next to em lite up. but all of the pictures with it in it were blurry =P
stupid camera
Here's a mosaic of Saturn made from raw images acquired by Cassini on Sept. 13, 2017, as it was on its way toward its dive into the planet's atmosphere. These images are uncalibrated for color but were acquired in visible-light RGB filters.
The mosaic comprises 7 color composites, each a stack of three images taken in red, green, and blue channels. They were adjusted for brightness and color to be fairly uniform across the whole view.
This will be our last close-up image of Saturn for a long time.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute/Jason Major
The fireworks in Disneyland is a must see, along with the process of finding the right spot to watch and the croud etc. This past visit as we walked out of California Adventure, we run into the best spot, of course you can't hear the music that go along with it, but it was splendid, no crowds and just beautiful.
Ver los fuegos artificiales en Disneylandia es un evento que no se puede pasar por alto, junto con la aventura de buscar un lugar entre la multitud, En nuestra ultima visita descubrimos este lugar , saliendo del parque California Adventure, claro que no se pude escuchar la musica, pero no habia casi gente y el espectaculo fue bello.
:)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=fPgqRGd49zU
This is my first attemp at fireworks.
Este es mi primer intento de fuegos artificiales.