View allAll Photos Tagged Slaughter
(My texture)
You can help put a stop to the cruelty that billions of animals suffer every single day.
A beautiful village in the Cotswolds.
If you go, go out of the Holiday Season, very popular in the peak summer months
Dog Slaughter Falls
Dog Slaughter Creek
Daniel Boone National Forest
Kentucky
5 Image HDR
Besides being really cool to look at, Kentucky waterfalls have another cool feature, unusual names. Another falls that myself and Jason were able to take our good friends Randy Sanger and Todd Williams to see was Dog Slaughter Falls. The moderate one mile trail to the falls is both beautiful and peaceful as it passes along the creek side and along rock overhangs which offers plenty of time to contemplate the origin of the creek and fall’s namesake. Upon our arrival to the falls it began raining and with it came the fog. This was another falls that I’d not seen with such a heavy flow, but it still had it’s unique water feature, it’s perfect flow lines. Unfortunately with the heavy flow came photographic limitations. My original plan was to cross the creek and shoot it from the other side, but with the water levels as high as they were I decided that I didn’t want soggy feet the rest of the trip. I got several shots from the right side, and this is the first post of many.
Sometimes, you just get lucky!
Framing this shot, I was just about to press the camera shutter when I heard the clip-clopping of an approaching horse (and rider). Then, from the opposite direction, a couple of ramblers.
Suddenly, the overall composition went up a notch – so pleased with the final result.
Can't help but feel it has the look of the sort of image that would make a great jigsaw.
The location is Lower Slaughter in the Gloucestershire Cotswolds and its quintessential England at its best.
LEGAL DISCLAIMER: I Do Not Condone Any Acts Of Vandalism Nor Do I Participate In Such Criminal Activity. I Am Simply An Observant and Take Photos Of This Graffiti You Have Come Across. ALSO I Will Not Condone Any Usage Of My Photos To Support Any Legal Matter Involving These Acts Of Vandalism Therefore YOU ARE NOT WELCOME TO VIEW OR TAKE THIS MATERIAL For ANY Purpose...
One of my favourite shots from my trip to Morocco - this picture tells a story that a thousand words would fail to do.
Eight images of the painting and two of the dedication plaque in The Lady Chapel at Saint Andrew’s Cathedral Inverness Scotland. The images are both shakily hand held and underexposed. Hopefully there is some charm to these images of sacred scene. Uploaded on 31 December 2023 I could be glad to see the end of 2023 if the major world issues were so easily ended by a new year started. It could be noted that scripture records Mary and Jesus having to leave their homeland where all babies were about to slaughtered and that he was to live hidden from those that would kill and much of his life goes undocumented. His return to his homeland has short time before his life ends in physical and mental abuse and torture and eventually in crucifixion. The very brief scene of peace at his birth and adoration is not remain peaceful and the following scenes are not for adoration. Christmas 2023 with war raging and further aggression looming is leading onto very much to do in 2024.
© PHH Sykes 2023
phhsykes@gmail.com
Link with more information.
Welcome To Inverness Cathedral
Inverness Cathedral - Wikipedia
Spartan Slaughter.
Presentar dudas íntimas Potentes versiones de la autoridad Velocidad magistral Combinaciones intensas Atento infinito Pasos inmensos Giros activos,
paragraffau dwys priodol yn groes ysbrydion dadleuon yn datgelu llygad llygaid cyffrous sy'n cyfieithu confesiynau,
Muergen Ënnertheeten net onvergläichlech Praktiken brutal Schoulunterricht opfälleg Fräiheet erschreckende Léierpersonal Leiden Dialogs Narzisismus Monologen,
تجولت الغرباء الاتحاد أسئلة خنق الخطط المذهلة لسنوات مشاعر السخط بالدوار المشاعر السكون بحار بلا توقف تعابير لا تصدق,
saisir des traits misérables des astuces instantanées des vents déconcertants défigurer des bêtes fou qui menace des frissons vifs reproches des vallées fermer des portes démons malheurs,
閉じた理解異なる独特の変容カーブを仮定して虚構なアイデアは人を目立たせない夜は危険な頭を要求する要求の厳しいブレード.
Steve.D.Hammond.
Upper Slaughter is a village in the English county of Gloucestershire located in the Cotswold district located 4 miles (6.4 km) south west of the town of Stow-on-the-Wold. Nearby places include Lower Slaughter, Bourton-on-the-Water and Daylesford.
The village is built on both banks of the River Eye. The Anglican parish church is dedicated to St. Peter.
Upper Slaughter was identified by author Arthur Mee as one of 32 Thankful Villages, although more recent work suggests a total of 52. This term referred to the small number of villages in England and Wales which had lost no men in World War I, and was popularised by Mee in the 1930s. In Enchanted Land (1936), the introductory volume to "The King's England" series of guides, he wrote "that a Thankful Village was one which had lost no men in the Great War because all those who left to serve came home again."Although the village was subject to an air raid, it also lost no men in World War II, an honour held by only 14 villages, collectively known as the Doubly Thankful Villages.
The hills in the Cotswolds are full of lush fields like these.
One of our favorite activities from our trip to the UK was wandering the Cotswolds on public bridleways. England has “public rights of way” which are paths where anyone is allowed to pass. These often go through the countryside, fields, and even backyards. One of our days in the Cotswolds we took a trek via a public bridleway from Lower Slaughter to Stow-on-the-Wold to Wyck Rissington to Bourton-on-the-Water and then back to Lower Slaughter.