View allAll Photos Tagged LookingOut
Sometimes flying gives beautiful views, and sometimes nothing but a dull carpet of even clouds. This was an exciting trip! Madrid - Amsterdam
The rest of the group looking out over the valley. (I was behind being too busy shooting pictures... :P)
Essaouira, Morocco, North Africa, wind, coast, windy city, looking out, moody sky, clouds, waves, crashing, look out, tourism, travel, seagulls, Jimi Hendrix, beat poets, writers, creatives, arts, festivals, sunset, light, shadows, battlements, cannons, Canon 5D, _MG_9587_1000px
I had an opportunity to follow these Icehockey skaters from "Rungsted Ishockey".
Goalie Flemming Woetmann # 31
183cm/ 76kg.
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The medieval city walls had rooms and stairs inside. It was a great view from the top of this magical city's skyline.
Early evening Lewis and I decided to take a walk along the beach with our cameras to see what we could find and it was truly freezing cold!! After a little disappointment in catching a good sunset Lewis was a little upset and wanted to sit down ... photo opportunity!!
Black-and-White ~ 365 ....
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Looking out from near the top of the Sutter Buttes, I was struck by how much water was visible. There were flooded rice fields in all directions.
I took this shot from Federal Hill Baltimore Fall 2012. I thought it might make a cool affect by incorporating the cannon lookingout to the Inner harbor.
You don't know what we went through to see what we saw, unless you've done it and seen it yourself.
This was a definitive moment in this bug's life.
One of the towns, Cinque Terre, Italy -- Summer 2007
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In many countries, gestation crates are the cages that impregnated adult female pigs, also referred to as sows, are kept in for all but the last five to ten days of their pregnancies. For the nearly four months of their gestation, they live inside a cage that is just larger than the size of their bodies, roughly two by seven feet. They can lie down, sit, and stand but cannot turn around, walk, avoid the aggression from sows in neighbouring stalls, or respond to changes in the environmental temperature. Millions of pigs live in these extremely constricted spaces every day, despite many countries banning the practice on the grounds of animal welfare. Gestation crates are also known as sow stalls.
Proponents of the crates claim that they are necessary to prevent fighting among the pigs, while those in opposition say that the crates constitute animal abuse. We do know that living in these conditions, often in darkness, does not allow for the animals' natural behaviours, and research shows that the animals in crates exhibit expressions of stress, fear, boredom, and despondency. The crates do not have bedding, and the pigs lie on slatted plastic, metal, or concrete floors, to allow for the flow of waste to be easily collected in pits beneath them. Nevertheless, pigs living in gestation crates, as seen in these photographs, are often living in their waste, and their bodies are filthy.