View allAll Photos Tagged Logging
Vermeer 6x17 Panoramic Curved Plane Pinhole Camera | Ilford Delta 100 | Red Filter | negative developed at home using Cinestill Dƒ96 monobath | negative scanned by Sony ILCEO ⍺6500 - Tamron 35mm ƒ2.8 | Post-processed using Negative Lab Pro.
8 minute exposure.
This image is of a logging road near the town of Fernie, British Columbia, Canada.
I post his image as a homage to the power and majesty of raw nature. As I hiked this road, I was surrounded by old forest, some red cedars hundreds of years old. I carried bear spray, understanding to whom this land really belongs.
I felt alone and not. Being immersed in nature allowed me to "live in the moment." Worries and negative thoughts were banished. Peace and hope prevailed.
Three of the many turtle logs I photographed last weekend. On the middle one, I like the way the last turtle seems to be taking an interest in the nutria. In the lower one, I believe I can count three turtle species on the log - the ever-so-abundant and invasive Red-Eared Sliders, the native Western Pond Turtle (The ones with no color or stripes), and I feel pretty certain the big turtle number three from left to right, is a native Western Painted Turtle. I am not 100% certain, but the lack of red-ear, plus the numerous yellow stripes on the head say it is. If only I could be sure. I always feel the Western Painted Turtle is the holy grail of turtle-sighting in our ponds here.
This log cattle yard is located in the Alpine Nation Park, northeast of the town of Licola in Victoria, Australia.
It is on the Tamboritha Saddle at the junction of the Dingo Hill track and the Tamboritha Road.
The water filled wheel ruts in the foreground mark the start of the Dingo Hill track and green hairy Lichen can be seen growing on the logs.
The Tamboritha Saddle is a flat area at the top of the climb up from the Wellington River and it sits at 1,280 meters.
Low cloud covered the area however it did not intrude lower than about 50 meters below the saddle.
This low cloud provided diffused lighting which highlighted the beautiful autumn tones of the Alpine grasses and when I visited again five days later, these tones had all but disappeared.
It was cold as the temperature was somewhere around 1 to 3 degrees C but thankfully no wind.
The ramp to load cattle or horses on or off a truck uses the two large gum trees as its support with a cross section secured to the trees, with rocks and earth completing the structure.
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The Olde Washing Log at Earlswood Lakes - no ceremony here , just hop on and wash away !!
A bacon bap time and a few snaps while we were here . I did get a shot of at least ten Canadian Geese flying in head on from the top lake , but they were coming in low and got terribly mixed up in the background - so I was a bit disappointed that shot was not so good . However , working only with the 18-135 lens , the log bathroom was a better prospect with so many makes of birds having a wash .
This section of the Bruce Trail and also part of the Bruce Peninsula National Park is called Halfway Log Dump.
Pair of Colas Railfreight Class 56s 56113 + 56078 passing Woodacre on 6j37 1402 Carlisle Yard - Chirk Log Train on 10/03/2023
Mactaquac Provincial Park, New Brunswick, Canada. I shot this in shutter priority, but in hindsight, I should’ve shot this manual. By shooting SP, my aperture was wide open and my logs got super blurry and out of focus. Ah well!
Special offer release.
If you like to spend time near the fire inside or outside, this is for you:
Wood burning stove manually operated (on / off at touch) with crackling fire sounds. Outside & inside versions included.
Log wall and stove tools available to complete this set.
Found this ruin a mile or so down the road from the previous shot. Two log house ruins in one day (half hour). I will have to go back to shoot this one, the sun was almost gone and these are kind of dark.
A Yule Log is a specially selected log burnt on a hearth as a winter tradition in regions of Europe, and subsequently North America.
It is also a chocolate sponge, filled with Madagascan vanilla cream and milk and dark Madagascan chocolate ganache. Hand-finished with a rich Belgian chocolate which can be purchased from Marks & Spencer.
An old log cabin with a valley view is above the snow line after a spring storm in Bennington, Idaho.
97302 and 37405 working 6C56, the 09.50 Aberystwyth Krono Colas to Chirk Kronospan Colas Rail through Gobowen, Saturday 1.3.25.
Apparently the train was suffering braking problems and was held at the outer home at the top of the hill before the station and also the outer home on the departure from the station. Here it was crawling through the station at not much more than walking pace.
Tarn Hows is an area of the Lake District National Park, containing a picturesque tarn, approximately 2 miles (3.2 km) northeast of Coniston and about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) northwest of Hawkshead. It is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the area with over half a million visitors per year in the 1970s and is managed by the National Trust.
Tarn Hows is fed at its northern end by a series of valley and basin mires and is drained by Tom Gill which cascades down over several small waterfalls to Glen Mary bridge: named by John Ruskin who felt that Tom Gill required a more picturesque name and so gave the area the title 'Glen Mary'.