View allAll Photos Tagged Queue,
Although its long past its zenith, Tata Llanwern still receives a steady flow of trains 24/7. 66079 pulls the 6H25 Margam - Llanwern coils into the exchange sidings whilst 66090 waits patiently with the 6H46 Bird Port - Llanwern empties.
This is the queue of pre-booked groups of people waiting to enter Windsor Castle. Individuals could go in front via a separate entrance. We went in the afternoon – when there was no queue :)
There is currently a gas shortage in Dakar. It took me 2 hours to finally reach the station. Patience for all was rewarded with a full tank. According to the newspapers all should be back to normal by the end of the week.
Holidaymakers form an orderly queue on Tenby South Beach waiting to board the boat to Caldey Island, Pembrokeshire, Wales.
First snows of winter adorning the summit of Scafell Pikes .. there's a veritable queue getting to and leaving the summit!
This shot was taken at Dow's Lake and not at ByWard Market... Where...
At the end of a long day of meetings on his first foreign visit as president, the leader of the free world (Barack Obama) and his 50-car motorcade took an unscheduled detour into Ottawa's ByWard Market in quest of that most Canadian of delicacies - a Beavertail.
Jessica Milien, a 17-year-old Ottawa high-school student and a big Obama fan. "I was just doing my job at the Beavertails and this agent came up asked me to bring (the president) a Beavertail.
"I asked him, 'well, which one would he like?' and he said, 'whatever you want.' I chose to give him the Obamatail, which is pretty much made because of him."
The Secret Service waited at the Hooker's Beavertails hut on George Street while she prepared one of the $3.75 hot pastries, a patty of wholewheat dough stretched into the shape of - you guessed it - a beaver tail. It's then float-cooked in canola oil.
Native to Ottawa, Beavertails are served hot with a variety of delectable toppings, but at a Canadian Embassy "tailgate" party marking Obama's inauguration last month in Washington, they served an Obama Beavertail, also known as an Obamatail.
Served with cinnamon and sugar, along with a whipped-cream "O" topped with chocolate sauce and a splash of maple, the Obamatail has been popular ever since.
Obama and Milien shook hands and posed for pictures together.
Obama drew Beatlemania-like screams and an enormous cheer from shoppers as he ambled among aisles of vendors selling crafts, Chinese noodles and Indian food at an indoor market.
He wandered into the Oxxo Silk Market, which sells aboriginal dolls and assorted tourist goods. He emerged with a keychain bought with $5 in Canadian currency - a dollar more than it was worth.
"I was looking for a key chain and a snow globe for my daughters." he said, explaining he was continuing a tradition started during the campaign of picking up memorabilia at every stop.
He also bought a silk scarf for wife Michelle.
Shoppers crowded his every move, snapping pictures as he entered Le Moulin de Provence bakery and announced he wanted Canadian cookies. The baker, from the south of France, obliged with Maple Leaf-shaped sugar cookies with red-and-white icing.
"I figure I'd get some points from my daughters," Obama declared.
The baker refused his Canadian cash: "It's for your daughters," he said. "It's not for you."
At one point, the president said he wanted a Beavertail. As he emerged from the indoor market, Milien was there waiting for him, Obamatail in hand.
The president - who'd earlier dined on Pacific Coast tuna with a chilli and citrus vinaigrette, maple and miso cured Nunavut Arctic char and Applewood smoked plains bison - told Milien he'd be eating the Obamatail once he got home to Washington.
Luis Munoz Marin Airport
SJU San Juan, Puerto Rico
( 1968 - 2013 ) The classic bare metal “Eagle” livery :
Created by famed designer Massimo Vignelli, this bare-aluminum livery was minimal yet timeless. The colors of the American flag (red, white, and blue) ran down the center of the fuselage, while a stylized eagle logo (with American Airlines abbreviated as “AA”) was painted on the tail.
This morning's line up of traffic along 10th St. heading into the downtown core. A line up of pylons too.
114 Pictures in 2014
#26 Queue
Drawing of the LT double sided bus stop with the oxymoronic 'compulsory request' bus and coach flag, and a bus farestage finial on the top.
Perhaps a once common sight is this line of steam vehicles waiting patiently in line to take on coal from the railway yard at Beamish Museum.
Heading up the queue is 1930-built Foden steam wagon 13536, registered RY 9259. Behind it is Mann steam tractor 1386 "Brinkburn Lass", built in 1919 and registered U 4943. Last visible is 1926 Fowler road roller 16851 "Whitby Jet", registered PY 6070.
Copyright © 2010 Terry Pinnegar Photography. All Rights Reserved. THIS IMAGE IS NOT TO BE USED WITHOUT MY EXPRESS PERMISSION!
12/31/2016 People lining up for free rides at the Thunderbolt roller coaster in Coney Island. Sony a7. Canon FD 50mm 1:1.4.
When flying Southwest it is first come first serve. The earlier you check in the sooner you board. Boarding groups start with letters and an associated number. These line staging areas take a little bit for one to acquaint themselves with if you have not flown Southwest before. Which post to stand in between?
And for photo number 3,000 on this photostream, one freshly-blagged ride on the Park & Ride later, this was about as far as I was allowing myself to get to Hull Fair that night. Conveniently, the bus at the head of this queue of specially-extended bus routes was, until recently, the last of these ex-Manchester buses I needed photographs of within the year! And here at the site of ordinary service buses picking up and dropping off for local routes, to finish off quite a good night, it might not be busy on the 6, but I'm sure they'll be packed out in time.
Finishing off a selection of photos from last night, Stagecoach in Hull's 19184, a 2007 ADL Enviro400 new to Stagecoach in Manchester, is seen standing outside of West Park on a specially-extended 6 from Hull Fair to North Bransholme.
The queue went down 1st, turned right on Independence to 3rd, then right on 3rd to Maryland Ave, up Maryland past the entrance again, then snaked through this parking lot, and then went further back (I couldn't see the end...). This was around 9:30 pm.
The exit queue from Horizons at EPCOT Center. This image was captured with a Pentax ZX-50 camera and the negative was scanned using an Epson Perfection V600 photo scanner.