View allAll Photos Tagged SINGLE
An autumn/winter leaf, still hanging on. Summer is approaching rapidly over here.
Have a good weekend, everyone! 🌻
Viola odorata white flowering form at Malshanger, Hampshire. Along the lanes and around the format Malshanger this form is seen in the hedgerows. Strange a white flower should have the name 'violet'. www.plantlife.org.uk/things_to_do/grow_wild/?ent=266
This lady was braving the cold North Sea yesterday, sooner her than me but I am sure she enjoyed herself.
Northern Rail 150274 heads onto the single line over the Penistone viaduct whilst working the 2B48 0935 Sheffield - Huddersfield
29 12 20
This Daisy is on it's own ,so that's why it's called a single daisy and it has a lot of petals into the pictures
VL358 approaches Casula with scrap metal train 2194 from Goulburn to Botany.
Thursday 12th August 2021
Für:“Smile on Saturday“am 24.02.2024.
Thema :“A single Drop“(ein Tropfen )
😃Thanks for views, faves and comments 😃
Beautiful yellow single petal Dahlia at NYBG.
Dahlia are available in a rich variety of bloom colors, shapes, and sizes. They can be single-flowering or double flowering, can be as small as 2 inches in diameter or up to a foot.
Single dahlias feature blooms with a single row of flat or slightly cupped ray florets arranged in a flat plane, uniformly overlapping, preferably in the same direction with no gaps. The disc flowers may have up to three rows of bright yellow or orange pollen and the blooms are over 2 inches in diameter.
--- gardenia.net
Soo Line Train 77 from Superior with F7A 2203-A is arriving in Dresser, Wis. on Feb. 27, 1979. Single unit F units were common on secondary local type trains on the Soo in the 1970s but new GP38-2s are coming soon for this F7.
SINGLE-LIFE seems to be SIMPLE: one bedroom flat is enough, mini-car is more than enough ...
and..
It is better FINANCIALLY: pay less rent, save on gas & electricity, maybe more government benefits...
and..
It is much more CONVENIENT: less noise at home...
But it does NOT necessarily MEAN that being single is BETTER.
Getting back to this amazing place in the backcountry of Mt.Baker wilderness once again in winter and this time the condition was vastly different. On the way in, we saw lenticular cloud hanging overhead which usually is a sign for storm. Later on in the day fog started to roll in and I snapped this photo which shows the partially shrouded hill with a single lane snowshoe/ski track. It is such an interesting scene to see in the wilderness. Also, can you spot a skier in this photo?
Made of laser cut steel, then spot-singed with a blowtorch for different hues of colors. 5" wide, 2" high
Theme: Photo of a "SINGLE" item.
Thank you for taking the time to view my photo, and for the faves and comments you make, thank you.
Continuing this brief series of cool sights I saw on a single morning outing to Grasslands, the park at my doorstep. These two Moose with their calves were a surprise; I tend to see moose more often in fall and winter. And last year there was considerable noise and commotion as contractors built a new bridge across the Frenchman River - resulting in many wildlife species, including moose, steering clear of the area until things settled down.
But.. they're ba-ack!
I'm so happy. They add an extra touch of wildness to the prairie landscape. Twenty-four years ago, when I first spent some extended time hanging out in this place, moose were a rare sighting. In the interim, they have arrived to occupy the valley, and other prairie locations, too; biologists are not sure why.
My theory? They find ample food and shelter here, where there are no natural predators, no hunting, and an abundance of peace and quiet. Essentially these are the same reasons I moved here full time in 2011. I'd like to think I'm smarter than the average moose. But maybe I'm not.
More to come...
Photographed in Grasslands National Park, Saskatchewan (Canada). Don't use this image on websites, blogs, or other media without explicit permission ©2024 James R. Page - all rights reserved.
Single dandylion taken with a single flash to the right to enable me to get a good enough depth of field
I purchased this, still in the original box and never used. The flashlamp was with a Kodak Photo Flasher dated 1954.
The lamp is laying on a sheet of Forever stamps.
I pass this field almost every day and in fact, every year I look out over it at this time of year and remind myself to photograph the tree with the dark sky behind it contrasting against the gold. And every year I forget to go back, until today. And just in the nick of time as the farmer told me it's getting the chop tomorrow - the barley, not the tree!
I love trees; there's something so reliable, solid and dependable in a tree; something lasting; something that will outlive us all; something we can trust. This evening as I was basking in the fading sunlight glinting off the golden barley, I wondered about the tree and how deep her roots must be to hold her up in such an exposed spot.