View allAll Photos Tagged HALYS
Divêt em kurd hev bigirî u yêk dest u can bîn..
Bi saxî yan bi fenayî pêkve em bi rumetîn..
Haware,, Haware ji hemî serok u rêberên kurda yêk bigirin wellat ketîye ber pêlên mezinên doşminan.
"Dilê min jî wek dilê hemî kurda ye "❤
Trump’s support for Erdogan’s plans in Syria has green-lit a Turkish genocide of the Kurds ǀ
When the Turks are “just passing through” a territory, sometimes they stay 500 years. Just ask the Bulgarians, who spent 500 years under violent Ottoman rule. And let’s not forget the Turkish genocide against the Armenians in the First World War that the Turkish state continues to vehemently deny to this day.
#Masoud Barzani tweets, “Dear President Donald J. Trump, please know that the people of Kurdistan have always pursued their just rights. The Peshmerga have defeated ISIS and are an effective part of the coalition against terror. The blood of the Kurds is far more valuable than money and weapons. Thank you.”
Tried something new today ! Vertorama`s , until a couple of days ago i had never heard of them, but thanks to Panorama Paul i have found something new to play with :)
Check out his stream , he has some awesome work !
A vertorama is basically a vertical panoramic stitch .
This image is made from two shots , one upper and one lower . i did take a total of nine shot for hdr vertorama`s but i thought id start with the easy stuff first , walk before i run type thing :)
The image size is 3794x3734 and the tiff file was around 81mb !
I read a great tutorial by SMGallery
Too big for big On Black, so try small on black :)
I`ll try and shoot something a bit more interesting next time :)
Located on the grounds of the Heritage Square Museum north of downtown Los Angeles, the Hale House, from 1887, is purported to be the most photographed house in L.A.
I'm not sure about this one, if it's too soft and too awful romantic
looking?
It came out a bit overexposed and therefore a lot of glowing halation in it.
Hales is a village and parish in Norfolk, the villages name means 'Nooks of land'.
The manor of Hales dates back to the Domesday book. From the 11th. century to the 17th. century, Hales manor was held by the De Hales, later Hales, family. Hales Hall was built in 1478 by Sir James Hobart, the Attorney General to Henry VII, he acquired the estate from Sir Roger de Hales. In 1666, the last Hales heiress was Lady Dionysia Williamson, who left her estate to her nephew John Hoskins.
Heckingham is a small village and parish in Norfolk, about a mile east of Loddon.
The sign is double sided, this side shows Hales St. Margaret’s church and the War Memorial.
Three hours into what will be a long shift, 73963 tops 73961 through Hale on 31 August 2020 with the 13:16 Derby to Crewe test train.
A replica of Hale o Keawe sits among palm trees and ki'i at the edge of the Pu'uhonua (Place of Refuge) in Pu'uhonua o Hōnaunau National Historical Park on the Big Island. In Hawaiian, Pu'uhonua means a place of refuge. Here for more than 700 years, ancient Hawaiians found sanctuary after violating the sacred laws of the kapu, which was then punishable by death. In the refuge they were prtected until they could be forgiven their tresspass. Hale o Keawe is located at the northern end of the eastern wing of the Great Wall that marked the Pu'uhonua. In ancient times the Heiau (Temple) served as a royal mausoleum, housing the remains of deified high chiefs. The powerful mana (divine power) associated with these remains served to sanctify and validate the existence of the Pu'uhonua. Genealogies and traditional accounts indicate that Hale o Keawe was likely built either by or for Keawe-i-kekahi-ali'i-o-ka-moku around A.D. 1700. The earliest western accounts indicate that in the 1820's the structure was largely intact with thatched hale, wooden palisade, and multiple ki'i. This indicates that even after end of the kapu system and the general destruction of heiau throughout the islands, Hale o Keawe survived largely unscathed, and continued to function as a royal mausoleum.
In 1829 Queen Ka'ahumanu ordered the removal of the remaining bones and the complete deconstruction of the temple. The platform itself survived until high surf, including at least two tsunamis in 1868 and 1877, caused extensive damage. By 1902 the site was described as a heap of stones with no definite lines. Since that time the platform was restored (1902), the area developed as a National Historical Park (1978) and replica of the heiau built (current version 2004).
GBRf Class 60 No. 60047 in previous owner Colas livery passes through Hale with 6E10, the 11:15 Liverpool – Drax Power Station loaded biomass working on 23rd January 2020.
Waimea Valley Botanic Gardens
"If John Walker had never done anything else, his work in creating hundreds if not thousands of new varieties of hibiscus would entitle him to the gratitude of the people of Hawaii." - John Walker obituary, 1928
The first half of the twentieth century marks the golden age for Hawai'i breeders like John Walker, who creates 2,500 new hybrids and sends cuttings from his personal collection around the world.
Pre-1950 Hawai'i hybrids, the theme of this section, are created by a large and diverse group of local breeders, from Matanai Kataka in Honolulu to Lucy Vrooman Cooper of Hau'ula's famed Cooper Ranch Inn.
Desired for their beauty and vigor, Hawaii hybrids are imported by botanical gardens and fellow breeders in Australia, Bermuda, Fiji, Panama, Sri Lanka, and the United States mainland.
John Walker's Hawaii legacy extends far beyond hibiscus hybrids. As the founder of Walker-Moody Construction Company in 1895, he builds many of O'ahu's most iconic
structures and public works, including Honolulu's original sidewalks, Honolulu Hale (City Hall), and the Kalãkaua Crypt at Mauna 'Ala, the Royal Mausoleum of Hawaii.
Born in Hiroshima, Matanai Kataoka is the first recorded Hawai'i breeder of non-Caucasian descent. Migrating from Japan in the 1890s, Kataoka works on a Kauai sugar plantation before moving to Honolulu and founding his own hibiscus and anthurium nursery.
70015 stands at Hale on 29 June 2021 with the 19:45 Tunstead to Wembley, pathed as a diesel locomotive with a trailing load of 2400 tonnes on this occasion. This was the second Class 70 through Hale in 15 minutes as it was preceded by 70020 on the 19:30 Brindle Heath to Runcorn Folly Lane. In addition, 70011 was working the Bredbury/Northenden waste trains and 70001 worked the 11:04 Hardendale to Tunstead, meaning that four different Class 70s appeared on the Mid-Cheshire line on this date, a record.
Double-header! 66748 leads 66715 through Hale on 21 May 2017 with 4M51 12:00 Milford West Sidings to Liverpool Biomass Terminal.
Cometa Hale Bopp, ripresa da Valmanera (AT) con Camera Baker Schmidt 20cm f/2
Pellicola Scotch Chrome 800-3200P (esposta a 1600 iso)
Posa di 60 secondi
Comet Hale Bopp, taken from Valmanera (AT), Italy with Astro-Camera Baker Schmidt 20cm f/2s
Film: Scotch Chrome 800-3200P (exposed to 1600 isos)
Exposure: 60 seconds
37219 tops 37099 through Hale on 2 October 2020 with the 21:00 Crewe to Derby R.T.C. I normally photograph these workings at Altrincham but on this occasion chose Hale as I was meeting friends in nearby "The Railway" pub, which had closed a few minutes earlier, as per the latest Coronavirus instructions. All very convenient really.
Hale Farm & Village is nuzzled within a gorgeous setting of Cuyahoga Valley National Park. This is an 3 image merged HDR.