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The picturesque Arlington Row cottages in Bibury were built in 1380 as a monastic wool store. This was then converted into a row of weavers' cottages in the 17th century, and is one of the most popular visitor attractions in the Cotswolds,
The district road R2 from Langenerling to Moosham was upgraded at the end of the 1990s. At that time, the district of Regensburg purchased a 10 m wide strip. This was unique at the time and allowed a row of trees to be planted in the area, which was poor in trees. Thus, a total of 96 winter lime trees were planted on the approx. 2 km long section. This row of lime trees can be seen from far away.
Die Kreisstraße R2 von Langenerling nach Moosham wurde Ende der 1990er Jahre ausgebaut. Der Landkreis Regensburg arwarb damals einen rd. 10 m breiten Streifen. Dies war damals einzigartig und erlaubte, in der baumarmen Flur eine Baumreihe zu setzen. So wurden auf dem ca. 2 km langen Streckenabschnitt insgesamt 96 Winterlinden gepflanzt. Diese Lindenreihe ist schon von weitem zu sehen.
Text modified, originally from Landkreis Regensburg
I need to get these paper wrinkles in a row………...almost done.
For the theme group "Looking close... on Friday!": "In a Row".
This is Tulip Town, located in Mount Vernon, a part of the Skagit Valley Tulip Festival. As I mentioned in the previous posting, this year, of course, we are unable to enjoy the tulip festival because of the Coronavirus, so I decided to go back in my archives to enjoy some of the beauty of past years. Hope you enjoy!
Tulip Town
Skagit Valley Tulip Festival
Mount Vernon, Washington
041617
© Copyright 2020 MEA Images, Merle E. Arbeen, All Rights Reserved. If you would like a copy of this, please feel free to contact me through my FlickrMail, Facebook, or Yahoo email account. Thank you.
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This photograph has earned the following highest awards:
InfiniteXposure, Hall of Fame
Originally called Grovont, the area just east of Blacktail Butte, near the Gros Ventre River, provided farmable land to hardy Mormon settlers in the 1890s. Unlike most homesteaders of the period, the Mormons tended to build farming communities rather than isolated sites, leveraging shared labor and cooperative irrigation plans to strengthen their settlement.
With the establishment of Grand Teton National Park and subsequent expansion to encompass this land, most of the settling families abandoned their farms by the 1950s. Two iconic barns remain along Mormon row, this one belonging to Thomas Alma (T.A.) Moulton, and one just out of frame to the right, beyond the pink stucco home, built by John Moulton.
It's easy, in contemporary times, to think that these settlers picked their sites based on the stunning backdrop of the Teton range just beyond their pastures. But this land is rocky, heavily populated by bison and antelope, and situated on the high plains north of Jackson Hole, Wyoming, with short growing seasons, harsh conditions throughout much of the year, and exceedingly spare resources. Idyllic today, it would have been an absolute labor of love and endurance to live here in their time.
Congrats on Explore!
#187 ⭐ July 29, 2021
Alignement d'arbres
Réalisation artistique- Artistic composition
Traitement numérique de l'image- digital image processing
A row of buildings in Luebeck, a town in North Germany. I read that these were used for salt storage. I took the buildings (3 or 4 pictures) on a gloomy afternoon 4 years ago and stitched them together. I had in mind to just use the buildings and have the already washed out sky brilliantly white. But I never liked that look and the buildings always seemed askew. One day I realized that it was not about my image, they really were askew. And then I played around with my trusted presets in LR and now I began to like what I saw. I also added texture and fake snow. No white sky now, much better.
*In a row by DPSP
3 bento female poses
duck includes
-Inworld- Mainstore DPSP
- Marketplace- MP DPSP
Picture is taken on: DS'ElleS Serenity Estate
Bath Row, down by the river in Stamford.
Fuji X-T10 camera
Helios 44-2 lens
"processed" in darktable (white border added)
DSCF5306_0001