View allAll Photos Tagged HTT

[SOOC, f/1.4, ISO 100, shutter speed 1/1600]

 

Rusty Equipment

HTT 487 SR487. 1946 AEC Regal/Weymann. One of 74 new to Devon General from 1940, this was part of first batch received and was 1 of 6 exchanged with Leicester Corporation Transport for 6 of their AEC Regent 2 double deckers in 1952. History then lost until later found in derelict condition & patiently restored and is a licensed service bus. Ron Greet, Ipplepen. Kingsbridge running day 17-9-22.

We had left the Trent & Mersey Canal and we were heading back to Marbry Country Park, where we spotted this Telegraph Pole

Sorry couldn't resist the title., check out the sign. Could've been worse, I had thought about calling it Dead End :) HTT everyone !!

(It was a quick drive by snap so not perfectly focused)

A lot of telegraph poles.

A view from under some willows at Magor Marsh.

 

Happy Telegraph Tuesday.

Happy Textural Tuesday ;o)

The two main boundary markers used locally - stone wall and barbed wire fence! Shot with the Sony RX100

My Textural Tuesday set here: Elisa Textural Tuesday

 

Across the Pond

 

[SOOC, f/1.4, ISO 100, shutter speed 1/640]

Black and white capture as the moon rose above power pole wires.

There is massive blasting and earthmoving here.

[SOOC, f/5.0, ISO 100, shutter speed 1/500]

The source of his tongue-licking remains visible on Mr. Grigsby's paw. These guys love it when I come home with 125 pounds of BaRF that needs to be scooped into smaller containers to freeze. So many helpers those days.

 

[SOOC, f/1.6, IS 400, shutter speed 1/400, +1/3 EV]

[SOOC, f/4.5, ISO 100, shutter speed 1/250]

959 HTT SN 959. 1962 Albion Nimbus NS3AN/Harrington B31F in Teignmouth on 2B. A photo from late Phil Holley collection. Withdrawn May 1972.

An old telegraph pole cut in half and used in the garden to tie washing lines to the weather vein used to be straight but last winters storms gave it a good old battering we fared better than our neighbour who lost their roof!

I deliberately skipped over (well drove past without stopping) the painted flour mill at Murrumburrah, the queer other half of Harden. Imagine the absurdity of skipping through Murrumburrah; especially at my age!

 

Instead I left it until Gidginbung before I issued my warning about painted things. Note, that as a bit of a pedant I have made no attempt to make a verb of the noun mural to describe this odd practice.

 

Though not to my taste, here's an example from Lake Cargelligo. It's the work of some dude who has applied his "art" to silos elsewhere. Look it up for yourself. I'm not that interested.

Yes... that's Happy Telegraph Tuesday for those that don't know.

A visit to Lake Meadows Farms here in my hometown of Ocoee, Florida. I spent the lunch hour there eating chicken and cheese curds. Went home with some extra cheese and batter to make my own, of course I used up the eggs on a delicious pound cake. Those are fried pickles in the top right hand corner.

 

The skin on the tenders was a good texture in my mouth. My interpretation of Texture Tuesday. Texture impacts the way food looks and tastes, and how it feels your mouth. All ingredients have some kind of texture, but the way a chef layers ingredients with different textures can set a dish apart.

Common Fence Point, RI

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