View allAll Photos Tagged SHARED_SPACE

Sharing space on their perch.

Hi there! So Dark Mouse Jewelry has moved! While I enjoyed my time on Imogen, I decided that I need more space, more li, more lol. I've been fortunate enough to relocate to the Nouveau sim! I'm sharing space w/a lot of old friends and I have more space! Please visit the newly remodeled shop here: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Nouveau/212/24/29. ALSO, I've been invited to a new event, the SENSE Event! I've loved this event for years, and now I'm a part of it! I hope you'll stop by and pick up my newest release, The Star Sunburst Necklace. A great bauble for summer, it's a moon star stone in a sunburst! You get 4 metal choices and 8 stone choices all in a convenient HUD. Here's a teleport to the event: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/DreamsLand/180/105/1502, you can also get the landmark at the main store! There's a new VIP group gift out, the Abstract Leaves Necklace, so check that out too.

Exposition "Spatium"-"Spatium" exhibition

 

Surimpression de deux de mes photos originales : une forêt vosgienne (réserve de la Charme) et un carrefour à Toronto (Canada). Avant la colonisation, la forêt recouvrait ce territoire. Comment partager l’espace avec les autres êtres vivants ?

 

Two of my original pictures have been overprinted : a forest in the Vosges (North-East of France) and a view from Toronto (Canada, Ontario). Before colonization, this territory was covered by forest. How can we share space with other living beings ?

Sharing space in a universe full of rocks.

è una storia di pelle

ma la pelle è sottile

nasconde, svela

protegge ed espone

e ascolta e parla

e dona, e riceve

la pelle è sottile

respira emozioni

regala sensazioni

e disegna passioni

è una storia di pelle

ma la pelle è già carne

la carne è già ossa

e le ossa son sangue

è brivido, sussurro

senso e riposo

resa e conquista

parola e disarmo

è una storia sottile

di pelle mischiata

di spazio condiviso

di un'età ritrovata

---

it's a story of skin

but skin is thin

hides and reveals

protects and exposes

and listens and speaks

and gives, and receives

the skin is thin

breathes emotions

gives away passions

and draws sensations

it's a story of skin

but skin is yet flesh

flesh is yet bone

and bone is yet blood

it's shiver, it's whisper

it's sense and it's rest

surrender and conquer

word and disarm

it's a thin story

of mixed skins

of shared spaces

and age resurrected

 

Basel, 2018

L

  

A photographer and fisherman underneath a red sky sunrise at Little Bay in Sydney's eastern suburbs. Shot on Muru-ora-dial country.

It’s not the kind of place you brag about

panel walls, creaky floors,

a couch that’s seen better spines.

But it holds us just right.

 

She tucks in close, no words needed,

head on my shoulder like it’s been there forever.

I shift a little, make room - not because I have to,

but because I want her closer.

 

This shack might be rough,

but it remembers our rhythm -

soft sounds, shared space,

and love that doesn’t need to shout to be heard.

 

Happenstance - Flamingo Beach

 

Love Shack ♪♪

 

See Nene's version HERE

Pieris brassicae (Linnaeus 1758)

Blaca de la col - mariposa de la col.

Flor de Scabiosa columbaria.

Entre escabiosas y otras flores silvestres se paseaba la Mariposa de la Col dando rienda suelta a su apetito. Como buen piérido tampoco hacía gala de quietud en sus breves posares pero se logró alguna que otra foto siguiéndole los pasos en la ruta gastronómica del pradillo donde compartía espacio con distintas especies.

 

Large white

Among the scabies and other wildflowers, the Mariposa de la Col was walking, giving free rein to her appetite. As a good pieridae, he did not show stillness in his brief postures but he managed to get the occasional photo following the steps in the gastronomic route of the meadow where he shared space with different species.

 

Piéride du chou

Parmi la gale et autres fleurs sauvages, la Mariposa de la Col marchait, laissant libre cours à son appétit. En bon piéride, il n'a pas montré d'immobilité dans ses brèves postures mais il a réussi à obtenir la photo occasionnelle en suivant les étapes de l'itinéraire gastronomique de la prairie où il partageait l'espace avec différentes espèces.

 

From the Washington Trails Association:

 

Hikers flock to Mount Storm King for that signature shot, standing on a rocky outcropping above Lake Crescent. But it's a grind to get there, and the climb to the summit can be dangerous in bad weather. Luckily, there are several outcroppings about halfway to the top offering similar views. It's still a steep hike to get to them, but at least it's shorter.

 

Start at the Storm King Ranger Station, on the southeast side of Lake Crescent. Hop on the wide trail that passes in front of the ranger station, and soon pass under Highway 101. Signed for Marymere Falls, the flat trail may lull you into a false sense of security. Make no mistake, your climb will come.

 

After just a few minutes of hiking (it'll clock in at about a half mile), arrive at huge boulder and a sign propped against it, pointing the way uphill via a 180-degree turn. This is your turnoff for Storm King. You might want to take a few layers off.

 

Shift it into low gear and begin your climb. Passing first through damp forest, the trail switchbacks steeply before flattening out moderately at a half mile from the turnoff. The forest opens, and becomes drier as you traverse through giant pines. Keep climbing, and you'll notice the forest around you changing. Pines give way (or at least share space) with madronas and manzanitas; hardy, twisted trees and shrubs with reddish bark that add color to the surrounding trunks of massive cedars and hemlocks.

 

Begin looking for views when the madronas appear. There are several viewpoints, offering peek-a-boo views of both the Barnes Creek valley and the deep blue waters of Lake Crescent. At 1.3 miles, arrive at a shoulder where you have a through-the-trees view of Lake Crescent and the Strait of Juan de Fuca. This is the end of the maintained trail. If you want to continue, the trail does so, but it becomes gradually fainter and rougher, culminating in a climber's trail.

 

Hikers are aided by ropes just below the end of the climber's trail, but it's quite exposed, and the tread is nearly non-existent up there. Consider carefully if you become uncomfortable on your way up, and don't climb up anything you don't want to climb down.

 

Extending your trip: Back at the junction with Marymere Falls, turn left and go see the falls before heading back to the trailhead. It's a short hike, and the sweet little loop takes you past not only a gorgeous waterfall, but also wide, quietly burbling Barnes Creek. It's a nice cool down after the beating you got on Storm King.

Sharing space at sunset. These were two, of several, Bluebirds atop two very tall sycamore trees at the Marsh entrance.

I couldn't fall asleep two Saturdays ago so Scotch and I went out as the sun was rising through heavy clouds and headed for Manhattan Beach. Surf reports seem to suggest Southern LA beaches get bigger waves than Northern LA beaches. Unlike Malibu, it was already full of people when I arrived around 8:30 AM. Came back a few days later.

 

Manhattan Beach, CA

January 10th, 2015

54°F 9:00 AM

 

SETTINGS:

Canon T4i

EF-S18-135mm IS STM

@27mm

ISO 100

f/4.5

1/200th second

Forster's Terns having some issues sharing space on the rail.

Forsythe NWR, New Jersey.

Pier leading to ferry landing in Beacon. Ferry is sharing space with a tall sailing vessel. Sun sets over the Hudson. And in this moment, all is well.

Bob Sorrell was an automotive designer and builder of the 1950s. His work includes building land speed racers, show cars, drag racers, hot rods, customs, and tether cars. His fiberglass creations were outrageous and memorable, the earliest being the SR-100 roadster. It was a Sorrell original design that was unique and creative with its unified fender-to-body expression and envelope-design.

 

The Sorrell-Larkin SR-200 began life as a Lister-Chevrolet. In 1960 it was involved in a tragic accident at the Los Angeles Times Grand Prix at Riverside. The wreckage was acquired by Bob Sorrell and had it brought back to his shop, where he and Jim Larkin shared space. The car required extensive modifications to the frame and many other mechanical components. A fiberglass body finished in patriotic colors was carefully and expertly crafted, and based on past Sorrell designs (the SR-100).

 

It was involved in another crash at Riverside in 1962, close to where the Lister had come to a rest in 1960. This time, an extensive fire transformed the wreckage into ash. The car was totally destroyed. The blaze was so intense that track workers had to use a skid loader to cover the flaming wreckage in dirt. This SR-200 was reincarnated by the original builders, Mike and Jim Larkin, who used the original models and technology they developed back in the late 1950s. After the original designer, Bob Sorrell, passed in 2003, they replicated a car that no longer existed. The original SR-200 raced twice at the Riverside Raceway, once in 1961, then again at a Cal Club race in 1962, where it was destroyed by fire in a crash. Unable to extinguish the fire, which has spread to the magnesium wheels, a skip-loader was brought in and the car was buried where it sat, at Turn 1. Everyone, including the Larkin brothers, believed to this day that the car still lie buried under what is now condos.

 

Since it took almost ten years for the Larkin brothers to finish this project, advancing age and health issues evolved which prevented the brothers from going racing with their SR-200. In late 2013, Mike Larkin sold the project to Wes Abendroth. Wes has been racing and restoring specials for over twenty years and, after working on the Sorrell for three months, he was able to put it in the proper livery for vintage racing.

 

This car was accepted to the 2014 Monterey Historic Races and The Coronado Speed Festival with the driving duties given to Wes' good friend, Bill Sadler, then 83 years of age: he was one of the oldest living drivers currently competing in sanctioned events.

 

AS ALWAYS....COMMENTS & INVITATIONS with AWARD BANNERS will be respectfully DELETED!

 

This red winged blackbird was sharing space nicely with about 4 other males, but that will change once the females have made it back north!

Peace Bridge Calgary Alberta Canada

 

#corona

Ashford Picture house, Giant Ice Creams and other delights await at Elwick Place, Ashford, Kent

she always waits until the page turns. bold, but never rude. today, she didn't notice the lens—too busy pretending not to steal. photographed at home in palma, where even the smallest visitors write their own stories.

Thanks for the comments, faves and visits

 

To see more of my 4K videos please see my Video Website: vimeo.com/randyherring

 

To see more of my 4K HDR videos see my channel: www.youtube.com/@hherringtech

 

Amidst the vibrant life of Gibbs Gardens in Ball Ground, Georgia, stands a charming gazebo, offering a peaceful retreat for visitors. Positioned at the convergence of winding pathways, the gazebo is a quaint centerpiece in a lush tableau edged with a colorful array of blooming flowers. The structure provides a quiet space to enjoy the surrounding natural tapestry of towering trees and manicured lawns. The stillness of the nearby pond mirrors the calmness of the setting, reinforcing the garden's invitation to pause and savor the simple pleasures of nature. Whether as a solitary sanctuary for reflection or a shared space for intimate conversations, this gazebo is a timeless feature that encapsulates the tranquil essence of the gardens.

© Darlene Bushue Photography 2024

 

A rare moment captured: two of North America's largest ungulates sharing the same space. Have a great day!!!

Happy New Year my flickr friends. Thank you for all the visits and kind words.

A honey bee (Apis mellifera) and a bumble bee (Bombus sp.) sharing space on a dahlia at the Point Defiance Dahlia Trial Garden in Tacoma, WA.

. . . In the Silence of Hearts . . .

 

Wrapped in the warm embrace of the autumn breeze, she lies intertwined with the man who has become the architect of her world.

 

She surrenders to the one who owns not just her body but also her heart and soul. This is a love that transcends the surface - an enduring devotion that lingers in every whispered promise.

 

Every touch, every glance, becomes an ode to the cherished connection they share. She takes pleasure in spoiling him, crafting a haven where he feels not only comfortable but genuinely adored.

 

Loyalty weaves the fabric of their shared space, and comfort is the currency exchanged in the silent language of their tender love.

 

In this moment, he is more than just her lover; he is her owner, and she willingly surrenders to the beauty of being his.. 💞

 

I ❤️ You

Scarlett ❤️ Jaxon

Alaska Railroad's barge train, 120N, is right up against the Chugach Mountains and the Seward Highway is between the Chugach Mountains and Turnagain Arm. Makes for some very interesting shots. The 120N is seen stretched out in the background at some 8,000 feet in length.

At Cammo estate, Edinburgh. Quite bold wee birds, its a pleasure to share space with them and worth the price of the nuts and seeds.

Sharing space with the Orchard Oriole

The 110 North shares space with the Seward Hwy both of which are tucked in between the Chugach Mountains and Turnagain Arm. You would think it would be impossible to miss a train along this stretch but you would be incorrect.

One of the most emblematic streets of the capital of Spain, view from the Cibeles Palace, seat of the Madrid city hall. The central bank of Spain, and buildings as the Circle of fine arts, the Metropolis, the Army Headquarters, or the Telefónica building share space in this privileged viewpoint.

______________________________

Una de las calles más emblemáticas de la capital de España, vista desde el palacio de Cibeles, sede del ayuntamiento de Madrid. El Banco de España, y edificios como el del círculo de bellas artes, el metrópolis, el cuartel general del ejército, o el edificio telefónica comparten espacio en este privilegiado mirador.

When you have had enough shopping and the film doesn't start for a while just sit and relax on a bench or grab a beer or snack from the retail units nearby

Photography © Jeremy Sage

31/07/2017 #1673. Comings and Goings on the Adur Ferry Bridge this evening

 

In Explore at #83 on 31th July 2017

On Friday morning I woke at dawn to rain in the forecast. It would have felt so good to roll over and go back to sleep. But I was leaving the coast that day, so I peeked outside. A break in the clouds revealed a beautiful blanket of stars and that was the boost I needed. Moments later I was in my car driving to Nickerson Beach. When I arrived I was the only car in the parking lot. Out on the beach I found this American Oystercatcher family with two very young hatchlings but they were on alert. So I crouched low several yards away and waited. The sun was behind clouds for over an hour as I slowly crept closer to the family. Then the magic happened. As the sun broke free from its barrier this family of four began to forage closer and closer to where I sat, coming within ten feet of me. Feeling accepted by and sharing space with wild creatures is a feeling of great privilege that never gets old. Imagine if I’d just gone back to sleep! June 23, 2017

On Wednesday December 29, 2021, Wisconsin and Southern Railroad locomotive 4178 leads the day's edition of train L867 through the Upper Narrows on the north side of Rock Springs, Wisconsin headed for the end of the line at Reedsburg. The railroad and State Highway 136 share space with the meandering Baraboo River in this small stretch of canyon carved out from the distinctive quartzite bluffs of the Baraboo Range. The bridge in this view is one of four Baraboo River bridge crossings that occur in a relatively short distance just on either side around Rock Springs, but this under deck truss bridge is one of the more unique structures.

 

Robert and Mason on the L467 crew have just finished dropping a cut of grain hoppers at the United Cooperative elevator on the south end of Rock Springs, to be loaded with the fruits of some of Sauk County's fall harvest for transport to distant markets. Now with 8 cars in tow, each loaded with raw materials destined for at least 5 different industries in or around Reedsburg, the train is trundling through the scenic beauty of the Upper Narrows that is still coated with a dusting of fresh white powder from an overnight snow storm.

 

When I first got a drone a little over three years ago, I certainly had a lot of places I wanted to try using it, and have found countless views and scenes I couldn't have imagined. But definitely one of the scenes I had in mind was something like this, although I couldn't imagine the beauty of the view exactly. Over the last decade and a half or so, I've hiked the bluffs on both sides of the canyon and been able to find a few "land based" overview shots before. Trees have obscured some of the views that photographers of the Chicago and Northwestern used to capture here in publicity photos many years ago. Since I acquired the aerial imaging device, my schedule hadn't lined up with both the weather/lighting conditions and the railroad's schedule (movements through here usually only occur Monday to Friday these days) until this particular day. The morning's glorious sunshine (see my previous Devil's Lake photos) had faded by this point in mid afternoon, but that was okay in that it softened what otherwise would have been sharp shadows and backlighting. And The Narrows did not disappoint - this is one of many frames that was captured as a brief "aerial chase" occurred, easy to do when the train is only going about 10 mph...

Part of the four year Common Ground project.

 

Southampton Common has been in existence since 1228 and became a public park in 1844. It encompasses 328 acres. The old cemetery covers 27 acres and received its first burial in 1846. It is one of England’s earliest municipal cemeteries and is located on the Common.

 

For the past four years my Common Ground photographic project has examined the Common and the old cemetery to artistically interpret a landscape that has been shaped by human activity through management of this shared space.

 

Common Ground explores the intersections between the man-made and the managed natural resources – from the open and wooded spaces to the paths that link the various Common elements. These paths are the key to the Common, it’s frame, linking the open spaces, the water, the woodland spaces and the old cemetery.

 

Common Ground has an Arts Council funded exhibition in the Southampton City Art Gallery from 2 December 2017 to 7 April 2018. ​

'Route of the Streamliners' via the 'Mainline through the Rockies'.

 

17 of Union Pacific's finest hold-outs from the 'Streamliner' era are surrounded by the Pagodas Canyon's ruby red cliffs on the former D&RGW Dotsero cut-off. The special train is making a round trip run between Denver-Dotsero-Denver and is now returning eastbound having just highballed Dotsero, CO a few minutes previous. Today the breathe-taking scenery found on the former Rio Grande in Colorado (and Utah), including this narrow passage in the mountains which the Colorado River and railroad share space, can still be viewed daily from onboard the California Zephyr….albeit Amtrak's California Zephyr.

 

UP 8952 ~ PDVDV1 ~ Red Canyon, Colorado

Union Pacific's Glenwood Springs Subdivision

05.29.2015

Female Wood Duck and a Painted Turtle share space on a log as they bask in the afternoon sun. Smythe Park, Toronto, Ontario.

Heber Valley Railroad's Pumpkin Train and Wizard's Train share space on a busy Friday evening at Heber City, Utah.

time to open the senses and take notice of what we share space with.

Another shot through my kitchen window.

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copyright © Mim Eisenberg/mimbrava studio. All rights reserved.

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I invite you to stroll through My Galleries.

 

A member of the Digger Wasp family, this large wasp is a fairly regular visitor to pollen-distributing wildflowers in the Ottawa area. The female deposits a paralyzed insect along with its young, and the young grow to adult size feeding on the insect. Once mature, the new Wasp becomes a pollinator, feeding off and distributing pollen across meadows.

 

Despite its size and somewhat ominous appearance, the Great Black Wasp is more or less indifferent to humans with cameras setting up nearby. Like a lot of the solitary wasp species, its concern is nutrition, and it is happy to share space.

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