View allAll Photos Tagged Secure

The latch seems busted, so this is the best closure I could fabricate while it was -26ºC out there.

A bird's eye view of the loaded trailer. Assistant Coach Julian Canha '06 inspects, checks and ensures all shells, oars, riggers and accessories needed for the regatta are properly stowed and secured.

Penetration testing is a significant test that finds out the loose ends lying in your application, system, and network. It makes sure that your system network is 100% safe. It cannot be hacked or the invaders cannot enter it easily. www.socassurance.ca/penetrating-testing/

 

Taken aboard the Osprey with my friends Steve and Kathy Terry and their guests.

 

To see more, visit the set:

www.flickr.com/photos/gcquinn/sets/72157627769325465/

Secure Card Issuance with the DTC1000 and Joao Paulo Florentino de Sousa to the left and Tony Ball to the right

"Sun Catcher" hanging in a window behind "pebbled" glass behind security bars.

Godby is one of the largest full service security firms in Florida.

Love padlocks at N. Seoul Tower, Korea

Four zip ties hold it in place. A few handlebar tape spacers keep it quiet

...and under constant supervision

This hug with ultimate security and comfort is known to all living beings...

Secure the Bag, Mint the Soaps and Throw the Bones is a site of exchange that aims to recontextualize the intricate histories of the brown paper bag and Hispano cuaba soap while inviting the audience to play a game of dominoes. This is based on the artist’s ongoing examination of these items found in private and domestic settings. Nonetheless, their combined racialized, colonial and social complexity reverberates in the customs and dynamics of collective space within a black diasporic subjectivity and imagination. To learn more visit www.recessart.org/francheskaalcantara/

  

Photographed by Christopher J. Vitale

   

so secure, you can't even get your car in

UCG’s Enterprise Cloud Backup & DR centralizes the backup and recovery of data on all servers throughout the enterprise—headquarters, as well as remote and branch office (ROBO) locations. Agents automatically back up your data over a secure and encrypted internet connection to UCG’s secure data centers. You are able to monitor and manage everything within a web browser. Recovery is just as easy: When you need to restore, simply navigate to the recovery point via an intuitive interface, and then click. Throughout the entire backup and recovery process, FIPS-approved 256-bit AES encryption keeps your data secure.

 

UCG’s Enterprise Cloud Backup, DR and H/A solutions can back up and recover thousands of physical and virtual servers.

  

Wimborne Town 5-0 Slimbridge. Wimborne secure 3rd place play off place. Photo Steve Harris

There's a parking lot big enough for 2 cars. We each get a spot. It's locked up & hidden from sight.

had a walk along lancaster canal this morning and discovered this secure shed .......

View "Secured" on black oron white.

 

Copyright © 2012, Jeff Stewart.

All rights reserved.

*

Once laid the Turtle Eggs are moved to a secure enclosure for hatching. Volunteers monitor the beaches for turtles laying then retrieve the eggs and place them in a caged off enclosure a few meters away. They also record the details of the turtles.

 

The loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) is a species of oceanic turtle distributed throughout the world. It is a marine reptile, belonging to the family Cheloniidae. The average loggerhead measures around 90 cm (35 in) in carapace length when fully grown. The adult loggerhead sea turtle weighs approximately 135 kg (298 lb), with the largest specimens weighing in at more than 450 kg (1,000 lb). The skin ranges from yellow to brown in color, and the shell is typically reddish brown. No external differences in sex are seen until the turtle becomes an adult, the most obvious difference being the adult males have thicker tails and shorter plastrons (lower shells) than the females.

 

The loggerhead sea turtle is found in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans, as well as the Mediterranean Sea. It spends most of its life in saltwater and estuarine habitats, with females briefly coming ashore to lay eggs. The loggerhead sea turtle has a low reproductive rate; females lay an average of four egg clutches and then become quiescent, producing no eggs for two to three years. The loggerhead reaches sexual maturity within 17–33 years and has a lifespan of 47–67 years.

 

The loggerhead sea turtle is omnivorous, feeding mainly on bottom-dwelling invertebrates. Its large and powerful jaws serve as an effective tool for dismantling its prey. Young loggerheads are exploited by numerous predators; the eggs are especially vulnerable to terrestrial organisms. Once the turtles reach adulthood, their formidable size limits predation to large marine animals, such as large sharks.

 

The loggerhead sea turtle has a cosmopolitan distribution, nesting over the broadest geographical range of any sea turtle. It inhabits the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans and the Mediterranean Sea.

 

In the Atlantic Ocean, the greatest concentration of loggerheads is along the southeastern coast of North America and in the Gulf of Mexico. Very few loggerheads are found along the European and African coastlines. Florida is the most popular nesting site, with more than 67,000 nests built per year. Nesting extends as far north as Virginia, as far south as Brazil, and as far east as the Cape Verde Islands. The Cape Verde Islands are the only significant nesting site on the eastern side of the Atlantic. Loggerheads found in the Atlantic Ocean feed from Canada to Brazil.

 

In the Indian Ocean, loggerheads feed along the coastlines of Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, and in the Arabian Sea. Along the African coastline, loggerheads nest from Mozambique's Bazaruto Archipelago to South Africa's St Lucia estuary. The largest Indian Ocean nesting site is Oman, on the Arabian Peninsula, which hosts around 15,000 nests, giving it the second largest nesting population of loggerheads in the world. Western Australia is another notable nesting area, with 1,000–2,000 nests per year.

 

Pacific loggerheads live in temperate to tropical regions. They forage in the East China Sea, the southwestern Pacific, and along the Baja California Peninsula. Eastern Australia and Japan are the major nesting areas, with the Great Barrier Reef deemed an important nesting area. Pacific loggerheads occasionally nest in Vanuatu and Tokelau. Yakushima Island is the most important site, with three nesting grounds visited by 40% of all nearby loggerheads. After nesting, females often find homes in the East China Sea, while the Kuroshio Current Extension's Bifurcation region provides important juvenile foraging areas. Eastern Pacific populations are concentrated off the coast of Baja California, where upwelling provides rich feeding grounds for juvenile turtles and subadults. Nesting sites along the eastern Pacific Basin are rare. mtDNA sequence polymorphism analysis and tracking studies suggest 95% of the population along the coast of the Americas hatch on the Japanese Islands in the western Pacific. The turtles are transported by the prevailing currents across the full length of the northern Pacific, one of the longest migration routes of any marine animal. The return journey to the natal beaches in Japan has been long suspected, although the trip would cross unproductive clear water with few feeding opportunities. Evidence of a return journey came from an adult female loggerhead named Adelita, which in 1996, equipped with a satellite tracking device, made the 14,500 km (9,000 mi) trip from Mexico across the Pacific. Adelita was the first animal of any kind ever tracked across an ocean basin.

 

The Mediterranean Sea is a nursery for juveniles, as well as a common place for adults in the spring and summer months. Almost 45% of the Mediterranean juvenile population has migrated from the Atlantic. Loggerheads feed in the Alboran Sea and the Adriatic Sea, with tens of thousands of specimens (mainly sub-adult) seasonally present in the North-Eastern portion of the latter, above all in the area of the Po Delta. Greece is the most popular nesting site along the Mediterranean, with more than 3,000 nests per year. Zakynthos hosts the largest Mediterranean nesting with the second one being in Kyparissia Bay. Because of this, Greek authorities do not allow planes to take off or land at night in Zakynthos due to the nesting turtles. In addition to the Greek coast, the coastlines of Cyprus and Turkey are also common nesting sites.

 

*Wikipedia

Secure

 

Calatrava's Quadracci Pavilion

 

The Art Center

 

0807 Secure AAA2

  

Photographed by Christopher J. Vitale

   

RAF Sealand, Queensferry

To make sure Chuck's package was really secure, I used the string tie, several pieces of tape, and a couple staples. Someone suggested sealing it with a glue stick, but I didn't want to go overboard.

Dinghy attachment point

*

Turtle Eggs ready to be moved to a secure enclosure for hatching. Volunteers monitor the beaches for turtles laying then retrieve the eggs and place them in a caged off enclosure a few meters away.

 

The loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) is a species of oceanic turtle distributed throughout the world. It is a marine reptile, belonging to the family Cheloniidae. The average loggerhead measures around 90 cm (35 in) in carapace length when fully grown. The adult loggerhead sea turtle weighs approximately 135 kg (298 lb), with the largest specimens weighing in at more than 450 kg (1,000 lb). The skin ranges from yellow to brown in color, and the shell is typically reddish brown. No external differences in sex are seen until the turtle becomes an adult, the most obvious difference being the adult males have thicker tails and shorter plastrons (lower shells) than the females.

 

The loggerhead sea turtle is found in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans, as well as the Mediterranean Sea. It spends most of its life in saltwater and estuarine habitats, with females briefly coming ashore to lay eggs. The loggerhead sea turtle has a low reproductive rate; females lay an average of four egg clutches and then become quiescent, producing no eggs for two to three years. The loggerhead reaches sexual maturity within 17–33 years and has a lifespan of 47–67 years.

 

The loggerhead sea turtle is omnivorous, feeding mainly on bottom-dwelling invertebrates. Its large and powerful jaws serve as an effective tool for dismantling its prey. Young loggerheads are exploited by numerous predators; the eggs are especially vulnerable to terrestrial organisms. Once the turtles reach adulthood, their formidable size limits predation to large marine animals, such as large sharks.

 

The loggerhead sea turtle has a cosmopolitan distribution, nesting over the broadest geographical range of any sea turtle. It inhabits the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans and the Mediterranean Sea.

 

In the Atlantic Ocean, the greatest concentration of loggerheads is along the southeastern coast of North America and in the Gulf of Mexico. Very few loggerheads are found along the European and African coastlines. Florida is the most popular nesting site, with more than 67,000 nests built per year. Nesting extends as far north as Virginia, as far south as Brazil, and as far east as the Cape Verde Islands. The Cape Verde Islands are the only significant nesting site on the eastern side of the Atlantic. Loggerheads found in the Atlantic Ocean feed from Canada to Brazil.

 

In the Indian Ocean, loggerheads feed along the coastlines of Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, and in the Arabian Sea. Along the African coastline, loggerheads nest from Mozambique's Bazaruto Archipelago to South Africa's St Lucia estuary. The largest Indian Ocean nesting site is Oman, on the Arabian Peninsula, which hosts around 15,000 nests, giving it the second largest nesting population of loggerheads in the world. Western Australia is another notable nesting area, with 1,000–2,000 nests per year.

 

Pacific loggerheads live in temperate to tropical regions. They forage in the East China Sea, the southwestern Pacific, and along the Baja California Peninsula. Eastern Australia and Japan are the major nesting areas, with the Great Barrier Reef deemed an important nesting area. Pacific loggerheads occasionally nest in Vanuatu and Tokelau. Yakushima Island is the most important site, with three nesting grounds visited by 40% of all nearby loggerheads. After nesting, females often find homes in the East China Sea, while the Kuroshio Current Extension's Bifurcation region provides important juvenile foraging areas. Eastern Pacific populations are concentrated off the coast of Baja California, where upwelling provides rich feeding grounds for juvenile turtles and subadults. Nesting sites along the eastern Pacific Basin are rare. mtDNA sequence polymorphism analysis and tracking studies suggest 95% of the population along the coast of the Americas hatch on the Japanese Islands in the western Pacific. The turtles are transported by the prevailing currents across the full length of the northern Pacific, one of the longest migration routes of any marine animal. The return journey to the natal beaches in Japan has been long suspected, although the trip would cross unproductive clear water with few feeding opportunities. Evidence of a return journey came from an adult female loggerhead named Adelita, which in 1996, equipped with a satellite tracking device, made the 14,500 km (9,000 mi) trip from Mexico across the Pacific. Adelita was the first animal of any kind ever tracked across an ocean basin.

 

The Mediterranean Sea is a nursery for juveniles, as well as a common place for adults in the spring and summer months. Almost 45% of the Mediterranean juvenile population has migrated from the Atlantic. Loggerheads feed in the Alboran Sea and the Adriatic Sea, with tens of thousands of specimens (mainly sub-adult) seasonally present in the North-Eastern portion of the latter, above all in the area of the Po Delta. Greece is the most popular nesting site along the Mediterranean, with more than 3,000 nests per year. Zakynthos hosts the largest Mediterranean nesting with the second one being in Kyparissia Bay. Because of this, Greek authorities do not allow planes to take off or land at night in Zakynthos due to the nesting turtles. In addition to the Greek coast, the coastlines of Cyprus and Turkey are also common nesting sites.

 

*Wikipedia

  

Photographed by Christopher J. Vitale

   

May 24, 2012

London, Ontario

 

Corner of Clearance and King. There was an ambulance and some police cars just to the left of this image. Not sure why they were there, but I take it that was why he was outside.

Secure Payments 2022

  

Photographed by Christopher J. Vitale

   

by Vyral comes with the thong and Bodysuit that comes in many colors you can choose from and can be found at the grand event the Landmark will be in the description below

Le Roxy Café, lieu d'échange et de convivialité est reconnu comme un des meilleurs café-concerts du moment. L'ambiance et l'accueil réservés aux clients sont incomparables. Le Roxy Café dispose de plusieurs chambres d'hôtes ainsi que d'un dortoir le tout entièrement neuf et confortable d'une capacité pouvant aller jusqu'à 30 personnes. Par ailleurs, le Roxy

Café est un relais/étapes motards proposant des balades motos permettant de découvrir les merveilles de la région bretonne. En tant que Relais motards, le Roxy Café propose de nombreuses prestations tel que parking fermé et éclairé, BBQ, machine à laver et sèche linge, nettoyeur haute pression. Les tarifs proposés pour les chambres d'hôtes sont très avantageux à partir de 45 € TTC la chambre et petit déjeuner inclus pour deux personnes.

 

The Roxy Café, is a place of exchange and friendliness and is famed as the best bar/café with live music in the area. The atmosphere an reception reserved for customers is incomparable. Roxy Café has several guest's rooms and a recently refurbished dormitory which has a capacity to ideally accommodate up to 30 persons. The Roxy Café is situated as a staging post for biking tours throughout the spectacular Brittany region.

We offers well lit, secure and covered parking, BBQ area, washing and dryins facilities,high pressure cleaner.Rates offered for guest's rooms are very favourable at 45€ TI including breakfast for two persons.

 

www.roxy-cafe.com

www.chambres22.com

www.chambrehote22.com

www.chambreshotes22.com

www.chambredhotes22.com

www.chambresdhotes22.com

www.gite22.com

www.biker22.com

www.bikers22.com

www.bikerbretagne.com

www.chambresbretagne22.com

www.motorcyclebretagne.com

www.baladeenmoto.com

www.baladesmoto.com

www.gites22.net

www.hotelsbretagne.net

www.chambrebretagne.net

www.chambreshotesbretagne.net

www.chambresdhotesbretagne.net

www.relaismotard.net

www.golfbretagne.net

www.motorcyclefrance.net

www.bedandbreakfastbrittany.net

www.weekendbretagne.net

www.weekendenbretagne.net

www.shortbreakfrance.net

www.shortbreaksfrance.net

www.chambrehotes.biz

www.chambredhote.biz

www.hotelbretagne.biz

www.gitebretagne.biz

www.gitesbretagne.biz

www.golffrance.biz

www.brittanyfrance.biz

www.balademoto.biz

www.shortbreaksinfrance.biz

www.rassemblementmoto.com

www.soireebretagne.com

www.etapemotard.com

www.relaismoto.net

www.soireeetape.net

www.relaismotards.net

Locked door on an old shed.

1 2 ••• 38 39 41 43 44 ••• 79 80