View allAll Photos Tagged REMOTE
I don't know what that face is? hahaha. She told me to make it, so I listened. I thought it was cute though :) I love my niece! Her and my 2 year old niece took some shots with my camera too. It was on the tripod, so all they did was press the button, but still it was so cute at how excited they were to take the pictures. Hopefully I can morph them into photographers ;)
Ever since I saw the tiny line of this road on my Travel Map of Mid Wales, I have wanted to explore this route. It is as remote as you can get in the UK outside of Scotland. It crosses the Cambrian Mountains and is truly beautiful in even the dreariest weather.
B&LE 904 led what began as a Minntac loader, but redirected to U-Tac. Sun stayed out for a few nice shots, showing off the RCO antennas as they headed north along the Missabe Sub. Seen here cutting Midway road off they exit off the scale at Adolph.
Come take a look at the new Doiley Remote decor at the mainstore! Head to the left to snatch them up!
Cab: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/NICE/118/167/3997
Pizzo Andolla, Portjengrat in German, 3654m.
View from SE, the summit is the second pinnacle from the left. The great pillar in the center of the image is one of the more important mountaineering route of the area.
Took this shot approaching the small mountain hut “Bivacco città di Varese.” Along the path, I found a crossroad for the trail that leads to the basis of the mountaineering route to the summit of this mountain. Standing in front of that sign, painted on a large flat rock, I realized that I had already been walking for two hours and an half to reach that point, and that to get on the summit of Andolla, along the complex mountaineering route of the Italian side, It might took other eight hours of walking and climbing. Well, to climb Andolla was not in my intentions, but that consideration helped me to realize the dimensions and the severity of this mountain. I could not avoid thinking of the people that climbed this mountain for the very first time, more than one hundred years ago, with ridiculous technical equipment, no helicopters for the rescue, no paved road in the valley below. What an adventure.
A lot of people think that progress has opened new doors to mankind, but, in a certain way, I think it closed a lot of opportunities to see and discover the world and ourselves with a sense of wonder.
To be sincere, I have to admit that, at the beginning of the last century, few people had a car and the possibility to travel here and hike in a single day…. but a long and slow travel can be an ooportunity of another kind…
If you have been reading this till the end, well, excuse me for bothering you
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my written permission. © All rights reserved.
Guess what? I have a remote now! Woot woot!
My face is looking a little on the greasy side. Too bad I'm no Photoshop guru. I just know the basics. :(
Living in the Wild - Tonto Basin, Gila County, Arizona
{ L } Lightbox view is best
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In the battle of flimsy remote control versus a labratriever's powerful jaws, there was only ever going to be one winner. He hates the demise of anything electrical but this is beyond even Danbo's full utility belt of tools.
Running an SD40-2 (out of frame) via the remote on his chest, a BNSF engineer shuffles hoppers into the South Yard at Alliance, NE. Even with the downturn in coal traffic out of Wyoming, dozens of trains head in and out of the Powder River Basin mines via South Yard each day.
With the returning Mallaig-Fort William train, Stanier designed '5MT' 4-6-0 no.45407 'The Lancashire Fusilier' crosses the remote Arnabol Viaduct as she heads for Loch Dubh.
2019 Jacobite
Stopped by the remote controlled airfield for short time for the first time in quite a while. A friend of mine was flying a few of the 31 planes he owns. Only got photos of 2 of them while there, the first two red ones and the last six photos here. Fun watching how skillful these pilots are doing aerial maneuvers, takeoffs and landings. I always send any photos I take for them to post on their club site. Sorry for so many photos, just saving to my album. :-)
It made me laugh that the bidet came with a remote. My gag was that if you need to control your bidet remotely, you're probably not using the toilet correctly.
This started out as a prototype for a BB8 droid, but I thought it was interesting enough to stand on its own.
It's a remote control, steerable, monowheel. It has some control issues (don't we all) but it's still pretty fun to play with.
Video: youtu.be/fIADzTanDo8
More pics/info: jkbrickworks.com/remote-control-monowheel
Lagangarbh Cottage (lagan garve) sits in a very remote area just beneath the towering Buchaille Etive Mor in Glencoe, the awful weather here today didn't allow me to get many shots at all, but I wanted to shoot this cottage, I though that the weather despite being awful actually adds a lot to the dramatic scene here so I had to shoot this one from inside the car with the window down to protect the camera and offer some shelter as it was still pouring down outside, water on the lens from an outdoor position would have quite likely ruined the image.
View my most interesting shots on Flickriver here: www.flickriver.com/photos/pete37038/popular-interesting/.