View allAll Photos Tagged Rawalpindi
Taking the bus in Pakistan is a colorful adventure. In September 1986 I traveled the bumpy Karakorum mountain road from Rawalpindi to Gilgit. On road, I met a Canadian couple (Harry and Carrie) and we continued to travel all through Xinjiang, Tibet, and Nepal for over 9 months - sometimes on road, you meet people who become more than family.
The picture was originally photographed on slide film with my Nikon FE2 camera and 50 mm lens. I photographed the slide bracketing it with a Nikon D850 camera and enhanced the picture in Lightroom, Photoshop, and Topaz.
Little Swift (Apus affinis) captured at Banni, Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan with Canon EOS 7D Mark II.
For detailed information about Birds of Gilgit-Baltistan visit www.birdsofgilgit.com
@Sean , The cobra must have mistaken my short telephoto lens for a pipe !! I moved away after one quick click .
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It was quite an interesting race and first of it's kind in twin city of Rawalpindi, Islamabad.
Amature guys were participating in it and the guy in picture is riding a 70cc bike.
Raja or Saddar Bazar Rawalpindi buzzes with life in August 1985 - people from all over Pakistan flock here for shopping and selling their goods.
The Picture was originally photographed on B&W film with my Nikon FE2 camera and 50 mm lens. I photographed the negative bracketing it with a Nikon D850 camera and enhanced the picture in Lightroom and Photoshop (coloring in Photoshop).
Maritime Museum Greenwich, London,
From Wikipedia
HMS Rawalpindi was a British armed merchant cruiser, (a converted passenger ship employed as convoy escorts, as patrol vessels, and to enforce a blockade) that was sunk in a surface action against the German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau during the first months of the Second World War. Her captain was Edward Coverley Kennedy.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Rawalpindi
Click on the photo for a better vision
Hitachi built HBU 20 #8043 Class Alco departs Golra Sharif Jn on 10th November 2025 with train 130DN 07h00 Rawalpindi to Multan Cantt āThall Expressā
We went to Peshawar to attend a research conference. A day well spent. We had our research and our poster to present. It was fun explaining our research. Our research was on adult ADHD.
This shot was taken on our way back from conference when we were headed back to Rawalpindi.
The white-footed fox (Vulpes vulpes pusilla), also known as the desert fox, is a small, Asiatic subspecies of red fox which occurs throughout most of northwestern Indian subcontinent, Pakistan's desert districts from Rawalpindi to Rajasthan and Kutch in India, Baluchistan, southern Iran, and Iraq. It is mostly found on sand-hills or in the broad sandy beds of semi-dry rivers, and only very rarely in fields, and then in the vicinity of sandy tracts.
It is similar in habits to the hill fox, but its diet is more carnivorous than that of other subspecies, and its prey is more restricted to gerbils and sand rats, due to the more barren habitat it occupies
Like the Turkmenian fox, the white-footed fox has a primitive, infantile skull compared to those of its northern cousins. It is smaller than the Afghan red and hill foxes, and never exhibits a red phase in its winter coat, nor the silvery, hoary phase of the Afghan red fox.It closely resembles the unrelated Bengal fox in size, but is distinguished by its longer tail and hind feet.As adults, their pelts are easily distinguished from other subspecies by the presence of a very distinct pale patch on each sides of the back behind the shoulders, which is overlapped by a dark, transverse stripe over the shoulders in front of the light patches. The colour on the back varies from brownish yellow to rusty red with slight admixture of white, while the flanks are whitish or greyish. The outer surface of the limbs are iron-grey or rufous, while the inner side of the forelegs and the whole front of the hind legs are white. The face is rufous, with dark markings around the eyes. The underparts are slaty in hue. The chin and the centre of the chest is white. The ear-tips are black or dark brown and paler at the base, lined with whitish hairs. The tail is almost the same colour as the back, but is less rufous on the sides and beneath. Most of the tail's hairs are black, and may form a dark ring at the end of the tail. The tip is white.
Raja or Saddar Bazar Rawalpindi buzzes with life in August 1985 - people from all over Pakistan flock here for shopping and selling their goods.
The Picture was originally photographed on B&W film film with my Nikon FE2 camera and 50 mm lens. I photographed the negative bracketing it with a Nikon D850 camera and enhanced the picture in Lightroom and Photoshop (coloring in Photoshop).
RAWALPINDI November 10,2007 : Party workers from Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz group protesting against the imposition of Emergency Rule in Pakistan.
Women voters casting their vote for the Pakistani General Election here in a polling station in Rawalpindi. Elections are being conducted for Pakistan“s National Assembly and four Provincial assemblies today all around Pakistan. February 18,2008.
Kindly Do not use this or any Other Photo posted here in any form without my written permission, even not for any blog or any other such activity.Picture without watermark also available on demand
Pakistani police clash with a supporter of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto before his arrest during a protest against President Pervez Musharraf's imposed emergency rule, in Rawalpindi November 9, 2007. Pakistani police blocked opposition leader Bhutto from leaving her home in Islamabad on Friday and sealed off the capital and nearby city of Rawalpindi to stop a rally against Musharraf.
Kindly Do not use this or any Other Photo from me posted here without my written permission, even not for any blog or any other such activity