View allAll Photos Tagged Logging,
Petit train de grande vitesse. Going up the line in fine style on the Viseu de Sus logging railway.
Romania. March 2015. © David Hill.
Sába loves it. Going up there means she'll get some treats for posing, and those vantage points are naturally preferred places for dogs. Well, not for enjoying the panorama better, but you know, sniffing and looking around from up there is much more interesting for a dog. She's a 7 yrs old cane corso female, by the way.
70 812 is about to depart Kingmoor Yard running 89 minutes late.
Owing to failure of freight 6K05 between Carlisle and Appleby on the Settle & Carlisle line. Train 6J37 the 12.58 Kingmoor Yard to Chirk was held back in the yard then required to run with a reduced load as it was diverted via the West Coast mainline. The train left with half its usual length and is seen running through the Up Departures Sidings about to pass 66 165 which was waiting to run light engine to Warrington Arpley LIP as 0K27 vice no traffic for 6K27 to Crewe.
Defined as fallen trees that provide “ecological facilitation” as they decay, nurse logs offer seedlings shade, nutrients, water and protection from disease and pathogens, thus nurturing and making way for the new generation.
Deep in the forest, there is always life after death. Nature truly does seem to have it all figured out.
The Carlisle-Chirk timber train - running substantially early - at Smardale, surely one of the UK's most idyllic photographic locations. 60025 does the business. 17th July 2017.
This old home in Utica, Mt catches my eye each time I have driven past it. It is made from large milled logs, but the owners put in a bay window at one time.
Second Beach in the Olympic National park on the Washington coast. This log was tossed around by wave after wave and while it danced around, I tried to capture a photo of the golden light the sun was giving in the distant.
This log couldn't of been in a better place, perched right in front of a cascade that had been formed after all the rain we have had.
Part of a massive log pile at Dunedin, NZ awaiting shipment to China.
Fujifilm X-E2 body and Fujinon 55-230 zoom.
The forecast of some impending wet weather means that I will probably have to curb my weir wading for a while! This was made a few days ago at Beeston Weir, when there was a nice balance of water flowing over it. I managed to reach this stranded log and set up my tripod on some solid ground. That's not as daft as it sounds, because the weir is actually quite spongy from all the plant growth and setting the tripod legs firmly is essential for longer exposures such as this.
Log-a-Rythms - www.martijnvandernat.nl
taken at the Vlieglanden, the Netherlands
2 sec, f22, ISO100, 11 mm 0.6 hard grad ND filter, tripod, remote trigger
This image was sitting on my drive for a long time waiting for me to decide to write a blogpost or not… I guess indecision has decided for me…
Taken on a stormy sunrise in february 2015, The first time I got to test my 'new' #Tokina wide angle lense in real life. I'm still ever as happy with it as I was back then...
I wasn't really talking on my cell phone. It was just a pose. I don't want to misrepresent myself to my fellow photographers. Me walking around like a velocorapter is real though. I do that all day at work. It gets me out of having to much work and I get special parking. It's great!
She's either inspecting my work or she's enjoying climbing the log pile in the garden. Her face says she's not too impressed. Well, cats are hard to please.
Continuing to purge old autumn pics, I come to this one. There is nothing wonderful about the photo, but I want to show the old, log structure by the trees. There are a lot of these buildings remaining in the Ottawa Valley. I took this somewhere along the backroads of Lanark County last autumn.
The geologic processes that have fossilized the wood of these ancient trees is an omen of what will come.
This photo was taken by an Asahi Pentax 6 X 7 medium format film camera and SMC PENTAX 67 1:4 45mm lens with a Zenza Bronica 82mm L-1A filter using Fuji 160NS [220] film, the negative scanned by an Epson Perfection V600 and digitally rendered with Photoshop.
Large tree with moss on the lower end of its trunk at campsite in the woods at Presqu’ile point in Presqu’ile Provincial Park , Martin’s photographs , Brighton , Ontario , Canada , September 22. 2020
Trunk
Cobweb with fishing lure
View of four shoes
Sitting on a large log
Presqu’ile provincial park
Tomshoo camp stove
Driftwood
Woods
Parks Ontario
cloudy sky
Canada
Ontario
Provincial Park
September 2019
Favourites
Martin’s photographs
clouds
Woods
Brownish red mushroom
Trees and roots near the shore
Roots
Lake
sandy beach
IPhone 6
Moss , Mushrooms and Fungi on a fallen tree at campsite
Moss
lichen
Mushrooms
Fungi
fallen tree
campsite in the woods
Fallen trees on the shore
cropped photograph
Brighton
September 2020
IPhone XR
Nikon DF
DF
Nikon
Marsh board walk
Fox head shaped stone
Picnic table
Shore of Lake Ontario
Small tree
Tree stump
Sunset
Wildflowers
Mulleins
Tall grasses
Large trees standing
Lake Ontario
Presqu’ile point
Lighthouse
Dead tree
Tree
Campsite
Forest
Woods
Trees
Flower
Weeds
Bark
Tree bark
Handy work
Large fungus
Island
Sand
beach
Helen’s photographs
Nature photography
Broken tree
Campfire
This photograph had some highlight and shadow in camera adjustment. Otherwise it is a straight OOC JPEG.
This happens to me a lot. I never get photos of something, and then suddenly I get different opportunities, miles apart. Here are some more red-eared slider turtles all out on a fallen tree in the pond near Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco.
Today is day 329 of Project 365
Log in Lough Leane. We went to Killarney hoping there was a bit of color in the sky with the sunset. It wasn't there so we dropped this massive log in the lake and started shooting. While it got darker we did a bit of light painting.
One of two images of logs seen from the small island in Oakwood Cemetery, Troy, New York, USA on September 16, 2023. I often see turtles on this log, but they usually dive into the water shortly after I arrive on the scene. I don't recall ever seeing ducks with them before! The Mallards didn't seem to be disturbed by my presence.