View allAll Photos Tagged Pulling

Meieki Street, near Nagoya Station, Nagoya, Aichi-ken, Japan

Pull is a close up of an iconic old red telephone kiosk standing by a roadside in need of a fresh coat of paint. sadly vandals have broken several glass panes and it no longer house's a phone . .

Photograph Β© Jez

One of the local pulling trucks in our local town.

 

A Black Skimmer pulls up from it's run on the water and starts to apply the brakes to land on the shore.

VP614 (LK04UWW) pulls into Harrow Weald garage with blinds shown for a very short 182 garage working from Oxhey Lane.

we went to a Pet Show last week and I took this shot of this spoiled Bulldog Princess...

 

The Bulldog is a British breed of dog of mastiff type. It may also be known as the English Bulldog or British Bulldog. It is a medium-sized, muscular dog of around 40–55 lb. They have large heads with thick folds of skin around the face and shoulders and a relatively flat face with a protruding lower jaw.

 

I wish I had a stroller to push Buster...

  

Added Note... there were people there pushing strollers that had guinea pigs and one girl had a hard shell backpack with a pigeon!! We will do anything for our pets!!!

 

Vermont Railway's RDHJ's power pulls into Eagle Bridge, NY where they will wait for an eastbound train to pass before they can change tracks to run their power back around their train at Hoosick Jct.

Hot asphalt tanks are being pulled out of Gardner Asphalt Supply by the SE-1 crew in Seaford before spotting the loads back on the track.

Context shot for Macro Mondays.

A quartet of clean UP SD40Ns (UP 1561, 1657, 1648, 1533) pull the Wendover Local across 3rd North in Salt Lake City, Utah the afternoon of July 24, 2012.

On damp rails 70013 makes steady progress dragging a freight train out of the siding at Swithland during a misty start at the 2017 GCR Winter Gala

Just had to pull over for this one. The rays of light found an openning in the clouds and lit the land below with the Rocky Mountains in the background

Mechanical arrangement for Victorian gentlefolk to announce their presence at the front door. No apps back then.

**No edit picture . I just use windlight :)

  

Outfit : PULL Store // Liza Dress

Hair : Stealthic // Vesper

Pose : Empowered // Go Work Poses

Accessories : Equal // Fringe Handbag @ Movement // Bad Phone @ ERSCH // Danny Glasses

Footwear : Scandalize //

Skin : Pepe Skin

Ear : PUMEC

Eyelash : L'etre // Basic Eyelash Fatpack

Eyes : AG Echo Eyes Gacha

Head : Genus // Genus Babyface W002

Body : Legacy // Classic

Lipstick : TOP1SALON // HD NATALUXE LIPSTICK

One of the many RCO pull jobs working Conway’s west end gets headroom out of yard limits. This move happens dozens of times a day, used to double up westbound road freights on the staging tracks beside Five Yard.

Stormy Sunrise Over Sunburst Park

 

I have to admit...I really didn't feel like getting out of my tent two weeks ago when the alarm went off at 4:30 AM. It had snowed a bit more overnight and everything seemed to be covered in ice. But I pulled out the jet boil, made some coffee, and staggered out into the cloudy predawn light. The Nublet might have only been 4 or 5 kilometers from the Magog Lake campground, but it might as well have been on the moon. I forgot to take my 14-24 out of my bag and between the weight of my tripod, new ballhead and multiple lenses, it was like hauling a couple of boat anchors up that trail. I grimaced several times as young twenty-somethings bounced happily up the trail past me as I sat shoving snow in my face to make up for the frozen life straw in my pack.

 

Somehow I made it back onto my feet and just managed to make it somewhere between the Niblet and the Nublet (I never did figure out which was which) just as the sun broke through, lighting up the clouds and bits of the range in front of us with a brief burst of orange. Suddenly I quite forgot about the fact that I was exhausted and freezing my butt off and spent the next two hours shooting some of the most gorgeous real estate in the Canadian Rockies. For someone like me, whose batting average was now in the minus territory after striking out with 10 days of shooting in the Northwest last Summer, 10 days of shooting the Dolomites last Fall, and finding the entire Western Hemisphere covered in smoke on my 10 day trip through the Canadian Rockies a month ago...this view literally brought tears to my eyes. Every once in a long while, I actually come across a breaking storm with some decent light. As the lady who set up her tripod next to me exclaimed "Thank you God!"

 

There was indeed much to be thankful for over those 10 days of shooting in the Canadian Rockies. When my shooting buddy Eric and I first arrived, the forecast was grim. Five days of gray skies...right through our time in Assiniboine. It was beginning to look like we might not see the sun at all. Instead, we were treated to just about everything from 4 inches of new snow, to bright sunshine, to some very decent sunrises and sunsets. The larches were just hitting peak color and we seemed to have arrived during a very small window this year between Autumn and Winter. A couple of days after we arrived home, almost a foot of new snow fell in and around Banff, and a second storm dumped even more later that week.

 

All of this to say, there will be many more images to come. We both had a fantastic time in the Canadian Rockies and we can't wait to go back. Our travels took us from Banff into Assiniboine for 3 nights before heading North to Jasper and Robson, finishing with trips to Yoho and back to Banff. As I told Eric, I paid for this trip in spades when I got back home and had mountains of work to catch up on…but that trip was easily worth what we paid in cash, time, energy and blood. More photos to come!

 

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Shenton Bosworth Battlefield line

New Hampshire Northcoast's D7 makes a stop on the north side of Rochester to pull empties from Tri-City a couple years ago. With the power split to work the facing-point siding, the high hood GP18 is in the "lead" for a bit.

MEC 516 yanks the last empty out of the Rousselot Peabody gelatin plant as the plant winds down production, deeming the end for rail service on the Danvers branch.

A steam pulled Set of Disk,s

IC SD70 1025 makes a brief stop at the station in Summit, IL while pulling CN L537 out of Glenn yard for headroom.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Pine Marten taken in the Scottish Highlands, June 2021

 

A big thank you to anyone taking the time to view & comment on my photography. Constructive advice always appreciated.

This is my fun contribution to this weeks theme of PushPull; Hans and Steve have had a hard week so they decided to break open a can of Pink Gin... Hans appears to be doing all the work but neither realised that you had to pull the ring...LOL. HMM

CN 4795 & CN 7054 are working hard as they start to pull with 59 cars for Taschereau Yard on a snowy morning.

A little late fall foliage hangs on as a huge 135 car CSXT Q436 (Selikrk to Worcester manifest) takes the siding at CP83 on CSXT's Boston Sub and slows to stop for its set out at the east end of the yard. Just to the right of the locomotives was where the Boston and Albany freight house stood until the late 1980s.

 

Despite the overcast skies, by the time the train finished their work and continued east the morning skies had cleared brilliantly as seen here: flic.kr/p/2mJaEAy

 

Palmer, Massachusetts

Wednesday November 10, 2021

Work horses on an Amish farm in Lancaster County, PA

Landisville Railroad 8651 pulls an empty BNSF sugar hopper from the transload facility at the end of the line. (taken on private property with permission and escort)

BNSF's Harbor Island job pulls a cut of grain out of Raymond Logistics.

That's what went through my mind as I rounded the corner and caught a glimpse of the sun shining on the boat. By the time I found a spot to pull off the road, grab my camera and run back to a suitable place to climb down to the loch side to grab a few frames the light had gone but the view was the same.

Not sure about this image, it was just a passing 'grab' shot the composition is way off but I liked the expanse of ice and the snow covered mountains in the background, there are buildings just out of shot on the right and a very bright spot just out of frame on the left.

Georgetown, ME Pulling traps on the coast of Maine.

For obvious reasons the content of the reportage from the village will take a different tack.

 

Here in the village plans were being drawn up in an attempt to get us through the coming weeks. πŸ“–

 

Who would lead us through this period of time where we would have to adapt and look out for each other, one name stood out above all others, yes Mrs Dorothy Trethewey who as you know is the President of the runner bean growing society, it was felt that no one could obtain a greater accolade than that of President. Also she would be able to pass on her experiences and wisdom when she was a child during world war 2.πŸ‘΅

 

Dorothy is well aware, like so many other places in this country and the world that we have always had a tremendous community spirit here in the village.

She also felt that communication would be vital in this situation we all face.

Hoof and Horace were tasked with making sure that the elderly and vulnerable were up to speed with communicating via modern technology, leaflets were printed and dropped through peoples letter boxes with various contact details and offers of help in so many ways.πŸ“‘πŸ“

 

A list of people were compiled by Dorothy of persons that should be contacted daily. These persons were allocated to various members of the village in order to carry out this task on a rota basis so that people on their own had a different person speaking to them during each phone call.☎️

 

However, we are aware challenging times lay ahead, so we must all pull together, do not panic, adapt and look out for each other.

Dorothy made it clear that even during the war humour was such a tonic and so good for the soul, therefore we must never lose sight of the simple things in life.πŸ˜πŸ˜‚

 

Hoof and Horace have suspended flights into space and grounded their Typhoon, Horace got out the relevant instruction manual of how to mothball it, which included jacking it up, taking the wheels off and carefully lowering onto blocks, β€œyes Horace carefully” also putting the air intake covers onto the jet engines so as mice from the barn could not climb up and sleep in them and subsequently have a rude awakening when it is restarted one day.πŸŽπŸ·πŸš€πŸ­πŸ­

 

All provisions were removed from the on board tuck shop (do you all remember them from your school days, in my case a very long time ago).

Plus the drinks cabinet had to be emptied, you know the one where the boys sit when they are driving the Typhoon during their space travels.πŸš€πŸ«πŸͺ🍩🍺🍺🍷🍷

 

I will leave you all with this thought,

Laughing is one of the best exercises, it’s like running inside your mind.

You can do it almost anywhere and it’s even better with a friend.

 

Thank you so much for looking at my photos, the comments and banter you leave are so appreciated.

Take care, improvise and stay safe.

πŸΊπŸΊπŸΊπŸ·πŸ·πŸ·πŸ’ƒπŸŽπŸ·πŸ˜ŽπŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

 

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