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En route to the National Cherry Blossom Festival Southwest Waterfront Fireworks Festival at 6th and M Streets, SW, Washington DC on Saturday afternoon, 7 April 2012 by Elvert Barnes Photography
Capital Bikeshare Bicyclist
Brighton and Hove Volvo B9TL Wright Eclipse Gemini BF12KXE 432 working route 29 Churchill Square Brighton to Monson Road Tunbridge Wells
# Seven :- All Routes
Summer is most defantly on its way which means im having to wind this project down it least for the summer. Still a late drive home gave me the oppitunity to spot this beauty. Love the contrast in light and in colour, the whiteness of the sign and hints of strong green of the trees lit up around it making it a winner for me. Shot with my Nikon 50mm set up on a tripod. Please view large
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Apart from the odd bridge, the evidence to the old railway is very small apart from like this, where you get the trees planted either side. A big pointer that there was a railway at somepoint!
Who needs steel cables and all that junk when you can just slide down on your butt?
(Thanksgiving Day on Picacho Peak, 7th of 9)
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Six Days Seven Nights, New Beetle - Day 5: Picacho Peak State Park
Scuttling out of Tucson we had a decision to make - go a little backwards and out of the way to repeat a good hike or take a chance on somewhere new. Easy decision, "somewhere new" always wins. On Thanksgiving day 2010, "somewhere new" was Picacho Peak, just off Route 10 between Tucson and Phoenix. The place name is redundant: "picacho" means "big peak" in Spanish. It's only 1,500 feet of "up" but some of that up was kind of exciting, almost as exhilarating as climbing El Cabezon back in New Mexico.
The Chain of Rocks Bridge became an official part of the Route 66 experience in 1936, when the highway was rerouted over the bridge. The bridge was closed to vehicular traffic in 1968.
The usual heavy traffic is not present. Looking south on State Route 43 just after crossing Mogadore Reservoir by the boathouse and dock.
New York State Route 31 (NY 31) is a state highway that extends for 208.74 miles (335.93 km) across western and central New York in the United States. The western terminus of the route is at an intersection with NY 104 in the city of Niagara Falls. Its eastern terminus is at a traffic circle with NY 26 in Vernon Center, a hamlet within the town of Vernon. Over its routing, NY 31 spans 10 counties and indirectly connects three major urban areas in Upstate New York: Buffalo–Niagara Falls, Rochester, and Syracuse. The route is one of the longest routes in New York State, paralleling two similarly lengthy routes, NY 104 to the north and NY 5 to the south, as well as the Erie Canal, as it proceeds east.
Much of NY 31 west of Jordan was originally designated as part of a legislative route from the late 1900s to the early 1920s. NY 31 itself was assigned in the mid-1920s, utilizing all of legislative Route 30 (modern NY 31, NY 429, and NY 104) west of Rochester and much of its current alignment from Rochester to Lenox. At Lenox, NY 31 turned southeast to follow what is now NY 316 and NY 46 to NY 5 in Oneida. It was realigned by 1929 to continue west to Lewiston on Ridge Road and altered in the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York to continue east to Utica via Verona. With the advent of U.S. Route 104 (US 104) c. 1935, NY 31 was realigned west of Rochester to follow most of its modern routing.
NY 31 was truncated westward to NY 365 in Verona in the early 1940s, moving the eastern terminus of NY 31 to the same junction that also had served as the northern terminus of New York State Route 234, a north–south route that extended southeastward to Vernon Center, since the early 1930s. The two routes continued to share a terminus until 1981, when ownership and maintenance of part of NY 234 was transferred from the state of New York to Oneida County as part of a highway maintenance swap between the two levels of government. In return, the state acquired a pair of county roads that followed a routing parallel to that of the transferred section of NY 234. The new state highways and the remainder of NY 234 became an extension of NY 31.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_State_Route_31
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_Creative_Commons_...
Route Irish, a seven mile stretch of road from Baghdad International Airport to downtown Baghdad, is often called the most dangerous road in the world due to the frequent attacks and roadside bombs.
I wonder what happened to the other one.
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This shot can also be found in a group called Route Artifacts. Please come check the others in the group.