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Holes have been dug to look for a power cable …Thanks for visiting my photos! I really appreciate your comment and fav! 😊 Have a lovely day out there ❣️

Gentleshaw Common, Burntwood, England

Taken in Qinghai-Tibetian plateau by a very cheap Xiaomi cellphone

Good Afternoon Everyone!

 

Very much hope your weather and circumstances are better than ours. Don't be deceived by the blue sky. All is not calm!

 

All day and night yesterday we were battered by extreme weather - with 70mph gusts. At 9.00am this morning there was no let up and in fact the gusts seemed even stronger - so much so that a power line above our village was severed. Consequently no electricity. We weren't alone as it affected a wide area.

 

The squally rain did, however, produce this fine spectacle - viewed from my home in Betws yn Rhos, Conwy, North Wales. Thankfully, the power was later restored.

 

It's now 13.00pm and our extreme weather continues!

 

Very much hope you are all still safe and well too.

The sunset last Sunday

Enfield Town station

Detail of a 17th Century's architecture

BEST VIEWED LARGE!!

 

The sun only comes up in this location one a year have never taken this scene before because of the power cables and pylons but this time i did because it all works together, the sun, birds and the electric all produces power!!

It’s half a century since the Cotswolds was declared an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB). To mark the milestone Telegraph Travel explores this pretty pocket of rural England – from rolling hills and sweeping meadows to bucolic villages and stately homes – and explains what it is that keeps us coming back.

 

Happy Telegraph Tuesday!

These are getting more rare every day as all power lines and cables are going under ground nowadays. No wonder! Those are always a bit of a mess!

Sometimes I wonder what I'm-a gonna do

But there ain't no cure

For the summertime blues

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119 starlings and 1 bird of prey

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PENTAX K-3 DSLR, SIGMA DC 18-200 mm 1:3.5-6.3 II HSM

 

1/640s, f/11.0, 120 mm, ISO200, -0,3 EV, 22nd of August 2014 at 15:42 CEST (DST) / MESZ

 

© bitte beachten / please note / tenga en cuenta / notare che / обратите внимание / 请注意 / ご注意ください / παρακαλούμε να σημειώσετε: © CopyRight Lutz Koch / Idstein (eLKayPics)

 

no usage of any kind without my explicit permission !

 

keine Nutzung irgendwelcher Art ohne meine ausdrückliche Genehmigung !

Pictured in the distance, located off the North Wales Coast, is part of the Gwynt-y-Mor (English Translation: Sea Wind) 576 Megawatt Offshore Wind Farm. It's the fourth largest wind farm in the world. Proposals are under consideration to further increase its size. It's always windy here!

 

Presently there are 160 wind turbines of 150m (490ft) tip height above sea level and it began operating in June 2015.

 

The electricity generated is transferred into the foreground power line by a connection two miles distant to my immediate right near the hamlet of Dinorben above Llanfair Talhaiarn.

 

Try enlarging the image for a close look as well.

 

Very much hope you are all still keeping safe and well too!.

Geometric design (explored)

As Mollie and i walked back to the car the bright sun shimmered across the water and lit up the sky. As you see there are pylons in the distance and power lines ahead running the width of the reservoir. This area is known for its abundant pylons!

Electrical cables in Libano, Colombia, 2017.

 

All images © Michael Evans

All Rights Reserved

What may well be the final working of 6K41, the 2.57pm Valley - Crewe Coal Sidings nuclear waste train, disappears past Connah's Quay in North Wales with the electricity pylons and cables forming, rather appropriately I thought, a Guard of Honour.

 

The 'going away' shot was the Plan A game plan to feature the pylons. The class 68s hauling it, 68005 and 68033, are perhaps therefore irrelevant, but at least the container gets a look in.

 

3.39pm, 18th September 2019

 

Látványos napsütötte köd, légköri rejtély hajnalban.

91 minutes ago:260 positionon Monday, May 12, 2014 Explore

  

I guess aerial power cables in japan are both for the crows to have a nap and for photographers to have fun!

Kyoto, Pontocho.

Power line and houses. Libano, Colombia, 2017.

 

All images © Michael Evans

All Rights Reserved

#748 - 365 2010 Day 17: This battalion of pylons strides purposefully across the Downs from the power station on Shoreham Harbour over the Fulking Escarpment and on into the Weald of Sussex. Here's where they fall over the Fulking North Face.

 

It is very likely that this image comes to you courtesy of power from these lines.

 

The South Downs is a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) and soon to be National Park. Pylons like these are hardly noticed, and yet they are everywhere and essential.

 

But imagine the furore of it were mooted to put a wind farm up here! There may be arguments against wind-generated power on grounds of efficiency and cost, but ultimately I don't get those of aesthetics, because it is unlikely that we will ever start again and design with a blank sheet ...

Power line and houses. Libano, Colombia, 2017.

 

All images © Michael Evans

All Rights Reserved

Bakersfield, California 2010

  

I still love overhead cables.

This image was taken at the end of an unsuccessful birding session, the failing sunlight was warm, illuminating the power pylons, with the dark clouds in the distance looming ominusly.

 

This image is included in a gallery "Lovely" curated by AnaAyana.

The tallest building in the world Burj Khalifa, Dubai.

Lattice Climber auf einem 128 Meter hohen Strommast in Russland,das ist einer der letzten Masten der Oka Freileitungskreuzung,diese Masten wurden in hyperboloid Bauweise errichtet und gehören zu den weltweit seltensten Bauwerken dieser Art.

Tragmasten im Donaumast Design mit Erdseilhornern.

Analog 120 Tri-X film shot in a Hasselblad 503cw w/150mm Zeiss Sonnar lens. Developed in Ilfotec HC and scanned with an Epson V500.

Gwynt-y-Mor (English Translation: Sea Wind) is a 576 megawatt offshore wind farm located off the North Wales Coast and is the fourth largest wind farm in the world.

 

This is the point, near Dinorben, Llanfair Talhaiarn, Conwy, North Wales, where the electricity generated joins the National Grid.

 

Presently, there are 160 wind turbines of 150m (490ft) tip height above sea level and it began operating in June 2015.

Proposals are under consideration to further increase its size.

After all it's always windy here!

It wasn't enough to touch, he also has a grabby personality.

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