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Routemaster RM1453 (CLT453). To celebrate the 60th anniversary of Thornton Heath Garage a number of routemasters operated a special service on route 109 between Croydon and Brixton. Croydon, Saturday 9 April 2011
Nouvelle fontaine, pour accueillir le visiteur mais les travaux s'éternisent et l'anarchie s'est instauré à l'entrée de Blida ...
Silver Lake and Spirit Lake are located along the same stretch of highway, known as State Route 504 or Spirit Lake Highway. I originally posted this shot with the title Spirit Lake. This is actually Silver Lake.
Spirit Lake is much closer to Mount Saint Helens and figures prominently in the story of the Mount Saint Helens eruption. As a result of the pyroclastic material deposited by the eruption, the lake bed rose by over 200 feet and remains that way today. The lake is also much smaller in terms of water volume.
The little white blob, and its reflection, toward the left edge of the image, is Mount Saint Helens, minus its once perfect dome. A new dome has begun to emerge with recent volcanic activity, but it will be a long time before the mountain looks as it once did, if it ever does.
An entertaining telling of the events surrounding the eruption can be found in the movie St. Helens, starring, of all people, Art Carney (best known as Ed Norton on The Honeymooners) as Harry R. Truman, an 83-year-old lodge owner who refuses to leave the area and dies there.
These are the bunch of Cisco 2500 Routers in school. None of them are being used and are finally getting used this year by my class! Taken with iPhone.
Widening Route 17, George Washington Memorial Highway, Phase I complete. New bridge over Poquoson River. Looking south. (Photo by D. Allen Covey, VDOT)
En la habitación del Hotel Horizonte, en Palma de Mallorca (el euro está como referencia de tamaño :-) Una opción interesante, funcionaba muy bien y daba un ancho de banda de lujo.
The Route 6 federal stimulus ARRA $4 million resurfacing project continues in Westport with guardrail installation. The project covers 4.5 miles. Completion is expected in early 2011.
Route 66 plaque text:
You are standing near old Route 66. The line of the roadbed and the telephone poles in front of you mark the path of the famous "Main Street of America" as it passed through Petrified Forest National Park. From Chicago to Los Angeles, this heavily traveled highway was not only a road. It stood as a symbol of opportunity, adventure, and exploration to travelers.
A trip from Middle America to the Pacific could take about a week - no interstate speeds here! For many, the journey was not just across miles, it was across cultures and lifestyles - from the most mundane to the exotic. Of course, getting to your destination was important, but the trip itself was a reward. From the neon signs of one-of-a-kind motels to burgers and chicken fried steaks of the multitudes of restaurants, from the filling stations that served as miniature oases to gaudy tourist traps, these more than 2,200 miles of open road were magical.
Gaze down the long road and listen. You may hear echoes of the past - echoes of Route 66.
Petrified Forest National Park
Arizona, USA
The Route 35 to Novato for Golden Gate Transit has an extra nice driver today as they head for the Transit Center. Today, this 2003 Orion V will waste no time making the stop and then leaving here for Novato, CA.
Meanwhile, a Route 36 to Marin City is seen at the Southbound platform waiting on one passenger before heading onto US-101 towards Marin City.
©FranksRails Photography, LLC.
A Route 66 road trip is a driving adventure along what is probably the most famous road in the world. Historic Route 66 spans over 2,400 miles and crosses 8 states, starting in Chicago, Illinois and terminating at the Pacific Coast in Santa Monica, California. Given its “66” designation in 1926, it became a well-traveled highway, bringing together people from all walks of life.
John Steinbeck would refer to Route 66 as “the mother road, the road of flight” for those trying to escape the Dust Bowl and ravages of the Great Depression in the 1930’s. Later it would support a countless number of vacationing families from the Midwest heading to the Grand Canyon or Disneyland. As more Americans took to the highway, a roadside culture would spring up along Route 66—motels, diners, gas stations, tourist attractions—to cater to a population that was increasingly mobile.
Today it is that classic road side culture and the appeal of the open road that continues to attract tourists. Route 66 has inspired songs, films, TV shows, books, and even a clothing brand. Even though Route 66 was officially decommissioned in 1985, people from around the world come to drive this mythic highway, stay in vintage motels, gawk at odd roadside attractions, and eat American road food. For some travelers, it is a trip back in time to revisit a road they once traveled on a family holiday, whereas for others a Route 66 road trip is the ultimate symbol of Americana.
Route 138 is a major highway in the Canadian province of Quebec, following the entire north shore of the Saint Lawrence River past Montreal to the eastern terminus in Natashquan on the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. The western terminus is in Elgin, at the border with New York State south-west of Montreal (connecting with New York State Route 30). Part of this highway is known as the Chemin du Roy, or King's Highway, which is one of the oldest highways in Canada.
Pic taken on Saint-Denis Street before Sherbrooke Street (part of the highway), at the south end of Route 335. ( www.flickr.com/photos/alain_quevillon/5533357266/in/set-7... )