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Welch's Flume run's along Clear Creek and during the Goldrush supplied water for farming below. Plus that's tunnel #1, there's 3 tunnels

Walking the Thames Path from Hampton Court to Weybridge

I love this funky "Paths of Danger" outfit with the weird spiraling shape on it!

 

I don't have the tiny binoculars it is supposed to come with.

 

What does the spiraling shape do? Does it hypnotise you? Is it a radar? Nobody knows!

  

This Super Joe head is on a WWE figure from Jakk's Pacific, the hip articulation is not as good as on the UFC figures from the same company, at some point I will probably put this guy on a more articulated body.

Path below Pico Ruivo, island of Madeira, Portugal.

 

Pico do Arieiro with its 1818 m (5965 ft) is the third highest peak of Madeira. It is comfortably accessible by car. We hiked from Pico do Arieiro to Madeira's highest peak, Pico Ruivo (1861 m / 6106 ft), and back.

 

Madeira is a Portuguese island in the Atlantic ocean, approximately 1000 km (620 mi) southwest of Lisbon and 700 km (435 mi) west of the Moroccan coast. Situated in a hot spot area, Madeira is of volcanic origin, formed during several eruptive phases, the last of which ended around 6500 years ago. Madeira is a very mountainous island. With an extent of only 57 km (35 mi) from west to east and 22 km (14 mi) from north to south, and with the highest mountain having an elevation of 1862 m (6109 ft), the terrain of the island is mostly very rocky and steep, except for the high plateau Paul da Serra.

Madeira is also known as the "island of flowers", although most of the popular "typical" Madeiran flowers (like the bird of paradise flower, the hydrangea, the agapanthus and others) are neither endemic nor native. Some of the genuine Madeiran plants are the "Pride of Madeira" (Echium candicans), Canary Islands Juniper (Juniperus cedrus) and the laurel forests of Madeira (the latter one being listed as UNESCO World Heritage).

Madeira is permeated by artificially built water channels called levadas, which distribute the water from the wetter northern half of the island to the agricultural regions of the south. The levadas, mostly built by prisoners or slaves, were cut into the side of the mountains, partly running through tunnels, and enabled for example the cultivation of sugar cane which was the source of the Madeiran wealth during the 15th to 17th century.

Today most of the levadas are still in use, not only for irrigation but also for hydroelectricity. Running across the whole island, they provide a wide network of walking paths, making even extremely remote regions of the island accessible to pedestrians, which is one of the reasons for Madeira's popularity as a hiking paradise.

 

Pico do Arieiro - Pico Ruivo - Pico do Arieiro hike.

Madeira hiking holiday July 2013.

Nikon D5000+18-105mm

Giardino di Boboli, Firenze.

[25/04/2010]

I always loved Herrenhausen. It was nice going there with my family while in Hannover.

Voigtlander UltraWide Heliar 12mm F5.6 ASPH II + M9

Taken about half-way up the miner's track, just after the nice smooth path ran out! The summit looked incredibly far away at this point

Entrance - Our Daily Challenge

 

All rights reserved. Please do not use or reproduce this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my permission.

The scenic route kinda ends at the road, where there's a park across the street. From the road this path looks secluded and mysterious, as if it led into an uncharted forest.

152/365

Part of my neighborhood walking path.

This is a piece I painted for my dad's birthday. It is encaustic and oil on a wooden cigar box tray 6 3/4" sq.

The meandering path through Shanklin Chine

 

©2013 Nick Edwards, All Rights Reserved

This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media without the explicit written permission of the photographer.

The outcome of our Club52 project: rocky path. Jenny and I had great fun once again - and had been planning to decorate these rocks forever!

Taken on one of the Ellwood trails in Goleta, California. This entire area is very green and lush, this plank bridge being the only outcast, all muddy and stained. Though used by hikers and families as much as the rest of the trail, it looked like it had received no TLC.

Some of the Malvern U3A Boules group photographed with the trophy we have been given so now we are going to have a knockout competition to see who wins it.

That will be fun.

Matthew has been begging for two years to go to the Space Center in Huntsville. So I took him yesterday and it was fun. This is Space Shuttle Pathfinder. Not everyday you see a fully stacked space shuttle!!!

mobile photography

Getting some fresh air at lunchtime. The canal tow path is looking gloriously overgrown at the moment.

ok more like dirt road in the woods. forest path sounds more romantic.

 

At Armand Bayou Nature Center

The Fruit Garden Path by Amy Lowell

The path runs straight between the flowering rows,

A moonlit path, hemmed in by beds of bloom,

Where phlox and marigolds dispute for room

With tall, red dahlias and the briar rose.

'T is reckless prodigality which throws

Into the night these wafts of rich perfume

Which sweep across the garden like a plume.

Over the trees a single bright star glows.

Dear garden of my childhood, here my years

Have run away like little grains of sand;

The moments of my life, its hopes and fears

Have all found utterance here, where now I stand;

My eyes ache with the weight of unshed tears,

You are my home, do you not understand?

 

Resolution Way, formerly Mechanics Path connects Deptford High Street and Church Street along the south side of the railway viaduct, the former 'Mechanics Arms' (now a restaurant) on the right.

 

This is a rare remaining section of the once 'gas-lit tree-lined boulevard' built by the London and Greenwich Railway alongside the line. An artists impression of the early days can be seen here - mikes.railhistory.railfan.net/imfile/03812.jpg

  

Rowe Woods - Cincinnati Nature Center

 

Falkirk Mansion, San Rafael, California

created in gnofract 4 edited in Pinta

Foot/bike path over Olentangy River Road, SR 315 and the Olentangy River. It has quite a grade up and down!

Minolta X700

45mm f/2

Kodak Portra 160

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