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I so want this! The lightpost musicians are animated! Seen at Harshlands shop in Harmonious Glade.
Photo location: Harshlands shop in Harmonious Glade by Kadaj Yoshikawa & Janire Coba.
Store List with direct slurls:
fantasyfairesl.wordpress.com/store-list-2025/
Store shopping guide, also with direct slurls:
fantasyfairesl.wordpress.com/shopping-guide-2025/
Fantasy Faire 2025, a benefit for the American Cancer Society, runs until May 8th (per the signs located at each region's landing point).
Scene from LIberty Memorial in Kansas City. These light posts are pretty substantial. Building in background is the Power & Light building.
My love for Venice is immeasurable.
I help aspiring and established photographers get noticed so they can earn an income from photography or increase sales. My blog, Photographer’s Business Notebook is a wealth of information as is my Mark Paulda’s YouTube Channel. I also offer a variety of books, mentor services and online classes at Mark Paulda Photography Mentor
All images are available as Museum Quality Photographic Prints and Commercial Licensing. Feel free to contact me with any and all inquiries.
Follow My Once In A Lifetime Travel Experiences at Mark Paulda’s Travel Journal
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HIT THE 'L' KEY FOR A BETTER VIEW! Thanks for the favs and comments. Much Appreciated.
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All of my photographs are under copyright ©. None of these photographs may be reproduced and/or used in any way without my permission.
© VanveenJF Photography
Lake Okeechobee locally referred to as "The Lake", "Florida's Inland Sea", or "The Big O", is the largest freshwater lake in the state of Florida. It is the seventh largest freshwater lake in the United States and the second largest freshwater lake (the largest being Lake Michigan) contained entirely within the contiguous 48 states. However, it is the largest freshwater lake completely within a single one of the lower 48 states. Okeechobee covers 730 square miles (1,900 km2), approximately half the size of the state of Rhode Island, and is exceptionally shallow for a lake of its size, with an average depth of only 9 feet (2.7 metres). The lake is divided between Glades, Okeechobee, Martin, Palm Beach, and Hendry counties. All five counties meet at one point near the center of the lake.
The name Okeechobee comes from the Hitchiti words oki (water) and chubi (big). The oldest known name for the lake was Mayaimi (also meaning "big water"), reported by Hernando de Escalante Fontaneda in the 16th century. Slightly later in the 16th century René Goulaine de Laudonnière reported hearing about a large freshwater lake in southern Florida called Serrope. By the 18th century the largely mythical lake was known to British mapmakers and chroniclers by the Spanish name Laguna de Espiritu Santo. In the early 19th century it was known as Mayacco Lake or Lake Mayaca after the Mayaca people, originally from the upper reaches of the St. Johns River, who moved near the lake in the early 18th century. The modern Port Mayaca on the east side of the lake preserves that name. The lake was also called Lake Macaco in the early 19th century.
On the southern rim of Lake Okeechobee, three islands—Kreamer, Ritta, and Torey—were once settled by early pioneers. These settlements had a general store, post office, school, and town elections. Farming was the main vocation. The fertile land was challenging to farm because of the muddy muck. Over the first half of the twentieth century, farmers used agricultural tools—including tractors—to farm in the muck. By the 1960s, all of these settlements were abandoned.
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This was taken Saturday evening a few minutes before sunset.
Omar and I decided to get out of the scorching San Gabriel Valley and head for much cooler climate. It was a great idea and we had a blast.
Shot at the Grand Avenue Section of the Avenues Mall in Kuwait. This section carries out spectacular design and decorations that is so refreshing and pleasing whether you are there during the day or spending the evening.
Avenues Mall, Kuwait
(From Wikipedia)
The Reservoir was built between 1858 and 1862, to the design for Central Park of Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, who designed its two pumphouses of Manhattan schist with granite facings. It was never a collecting reservoir; it replaced the smaller, nearby Receiving Reservoir. It received water from the Croton Aqueduct and distributed it to Manhattan. It was decommissioned in 1993, after it was deemed obsolete because of a new main under 79th Street that connected with the Third Water Tunnel and because of growing concerns that it could become contaminated. It was renamed in honor of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in 1994 to commemorate her contributions to the city, and because she enjoyed jogging in the area, which lay beneath the windows of her Fifth Avenue apartment.
“The-Eye-of-the-Moment-Photos-by-Nolan-H.-Rhodes”
www.flickr.com/photos/the_eye_of_the_moment
nrhodesphotos@yahoo.com
Please don't use this image without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
I was taking an evening walk at Spring Lake Park when these two cats passed me. This was originally a color image.
The calm after the storm
ODC - In the Dark
Thank you in advance for your views, comments, and faves. They are much appreciated!
The corner of 7 Ave and Macleod Trail SE, viewed obliquely downward from a window in the old Central Library.
C. J.R. Devaney
The Daily Shoot #377: Go for an unusual point of view and make a photograph that can only be made from that viewpoint.
Submitted to Monthly Scavenger Hunt Clue #18 "Azure"
"Somliga går i trasiga skor", andra slänger upp dem i en lyktstolpe.
Mitt bidrag till Fotosöndag med temat "trasig"
Another shot of one of the two towers and cables of the Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge in Charleston, SC, USA.
same spot as this, different day.
The winter sunsets have been so beautiful lately. I wish I was at the right place at the right time - but I always seem to be stuck in my car when they explode into color.
Aw well, Happy Hump Day people! : )