View allAll Photos Tagged High

Walters GMC platform truck makes a fine sight as it examines high voltage cable lines. location unknown.

Episcopal High School

Graduation Weekend 2021

COPYRIGHT REBECCA DROBIS

Another shot of the bus station featuring high heel boots and flares and a more detailed view of the booking office and waiting room, plastered with posters featuring trips to Symonds Yat and other exotic locations!

 

I have so many stories about those days, I could probably fill a book. The time when all the wheels fell off my bus to Exeter would probably be a winning tale!

A very rare photo of Sparrows Lorain 875 & Coles Centurion together on route to a job. The picture was posted along time ago & of very poor quality, i have tried to improve the image as it is worthy of a second airing.

Episcopal High School

Graduation Weekend 2021

COPYRIGHT REBECCA DROBIS

East High School celebrates their graduation commencement ceremony at the Knapp Center on Saturday, May 26.

High Tatras - Saturday:

 

Climbing up to Chata pri Zelenom pleso (1550m), conquering a peak: Jahňací štít (2230m) and discovering a lake (Velké Biele pleso) & a small pass: Kopské sedlo (1750m)

 

www.strava.com/activities/652454120

   

The wind was steady and strong on Destin, Florida's Miramar Beach as TS Debby approached and that made for perfect kite flying. I loved this Flag-inspired coloring against the clear Florida sky.

Supporting The Hunna on their tour.Shot at Birmingham o2 Institute for Birmingham Review.

experimenting with high speed sync with my 580EX II and 430 flashes

High End Cigars is a new up-scale specialty tobacco retailer with a fresh new take on the classic tobacco shop.

highendcigarsnj.com

DuPont State Forest

 

www.sussmanimaging.com

 

Follow Sussman Imaging on Facebook at www.facebook.com/sussmanimaging

Tyler Street's Christian Ponce is chased down by Pine Drive's Zachary Lee on Friday night during the two school's six-man high school playoff game in Temple.

High School Night is a coming of age event that has two goals: first help students prepare for young adulthood by bringing all of them together to practice the proper social graces and decorum in a formal setting. Second, here is when grade ten students formally pass their responsibility as leaders of junior high to the next generation of grade ten leaders.

 

Photos by May Francisco and Rodrigo Pellazar

High Rigg is a small fell located in the English Lake District, approximately three miles southeast of the town of Keswick. It occupies an unusual position, surrounded on all sides by higher fells but not connected by any obvious ridge. This separation from its fellows ensures that it is a Marilyn.

My beautiful wife in a high-key portrait. Thank you love for your infinite patience.

 

Strobist Info:

1 YN 560 at 6/8 power behind subject for background 1 YN 560 shoot through umbrella from above.

NIsqually National Wildlife Refuge

This school is located in Hunter, Kansas. Not a whole lot left in town. Wonder how big it was in it's prime.

Photos from backstage at the Ann Arbor Dance Classics performance of the Nutcracker on Saturday December 8th and Sunday December 9th, 2018 at Milan High School (Milan, Michigan). This is only from the second act because I was on stage for the first act. The Nutcracker was Composed by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.

Demoss's Birthday Party, 2/25/05

High Tech - Best of Maui 2010

New York, 18 July 2016 - HLPF

"Early Action toileave no one behind:Delivering for the worlds poorest people" (took place at UNCA)

Photo: Freya Morales / UNDP

My lens was zoomed to the max, this is an incredibly high mast, the seats suspended from chains and are rotating VERY fast. I told my wife I would try it if she would...thank heavens she said NO!

With 27 acres of woodland, water gardens, and a collection of rare, exotic and award-winning plants, High Beeches Garden is a botanical treasure trove, and one of Sussex's finest gardens. High Beeches Garden is home to a plant collection that includes specimens from many parts of the world. It's a hidden gem in the High Weald of West Sussex. A botanical treasure trove and classic English idyll make it one of the finest gardens in the South East.

Seasonal mystique

Whether you want a quiet stroll through the glades of a beautiful Sussex garden, somewhere to watch the wild life or marvel at some magnificent plants High Beeches is a harmonious sanctuary at any time of the year.

Immerse yourself in bursts of colour and perfume as Summer flowers bloom, or view the breath-taking colours of Autumn.

 

A unique and ancient Wild Flower Meadow in Sussex

 

Plant Life, the wild plant conservation charity, has named High Beeches as one of the 7 great gardens to see wild flowers www.plantlife.org.uk/wildflower_garden.

The Wildflower Meadow, or Front Meadow, at High Beeches has been called a meadow since l848, when Sir Robert Loder bought ‘The Beeches’ and in all likelihood was a meadow long before that. It has not been cultivated for at least 80 years and grazing ceased in about l980. The only plants introduced are some narcissi cultivars in about l980 and the original clump of native birches has been replaced with the existing one. Evolving endlessly, some years it is a mass of ox-eye daises and other years the buttercups predominate. Recently the cowslips, Primula veris, the Common Twayblade, Listera ovata, and the Devilsbit Scabious, Succisa pratensis have been on the increase.

The meadow slopes to the southwest and the soil is slightly acid. There are 46 species of wildflower and 13 species of grasses, sedges, rushes and ferns to be found, which have been identified by Arthur Hoare of the Sussex Botanical Recording Society. The meadow attracts a huge number of insects including butterflies and moths.

The meadow is a Site of Nature Conservation Importance, SNCI, one of over 300 in West Sussex. There are 11 plants which are indicators of ancient meadow land, all of which are to be found at High Beeches and they are: Sweet Vernal- grass, Red Clover, Ribwort Plaintain, Red fescue, Crested Dog’s Tail, Red Fescue, Cock’sFoot, Yorkshire Fog, White Clover, Bird’s-foot-trefoil, Common Bent and Common Knapweed.

 

Maintenance: The grass is cut in August and the hay removed by mechanical means.

The heavy horses from The Working Horse Trust then harrow the meadow to removethe thatch, scatter seed and open up the sward to enable the wildflowers to seed successfully.

Through the Seasons: In April the first meadow grasses flower, one of the first is the Sweet Vernal-grass, Anthoxanthum odoratum followed by the Meadow Foxtail,

The first colour to be seen is yellow from the cowslips then in May the buttercups start to flower followed by the Yellow Rattle, Rhinianthus minor agg., Meadow Vetchling, Lathyrus pratensis and Common Bird’s-foot-trefoil, Lotus cornicula. Late May and June sees the red of Red Clover, Trifolium pratense, pink of the Common Spotted-orchid, Dactylorhiza fuchsia and the whites of the Oxeye Daisy, Leucanthemum vulgare and the Lesser Stitchwort, Stellaria graminea. Later in the summer/early autumn the beautiful Devilsbit Scabious, Succisa pratensis gives parts of the meadow a purple haze.

Many of the wildflowers and grasses in the meadow provide food for the numerous insects, butterflies and moths. Amongst them bees, including Bumble Bees, and hover flies feed on Bird’s-foot-trefoil, Knapweed, Clover, Selfheal, Betony and many more. Cock’s Foot is an important food for the caterpillars of the Ringlet and Large Skipper butterflies. The caterpillars of the Small Skipper feed on Yorkshire Fog and Common Sorrel is a food source for the Small Copper butterfly. Other insects to be seen in the meadow include spiders, beetles, damsel flys, grasshoppers, crickets, ladybirds and dragonflies.

 

www.highbeeches.com/

Paul J Urban, Susan Jane Vendetti, Marie A Viercek, Anna M Viggiano, Richard L Walker, Mary Ellen Walsh, Lauri I Watts, Bruce J Weaver, Stephen R Welsh, Shelley B Wetmore, Victor P Whitaker, Patricia M Whitfield

1 2 ••• 65 66 68 70 71 ••• 79 80