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We had several days of record high temperatures in late February, bringing the painted turtles and frogs out of the mud to enjoy the warmth. I was surprised however to see that this big snapping turtle also came out to enjoy the nice weather. Wildwood Park, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Her i landet er alle rige, men på hvad det er svært at sige, der er penge til en og forstand til en anden, fælles for alle er dog Fattigmanden
Up Cottonwood Canyon in the Bighorn Mountains east of Lovell, Wyoming, there is an area of big fallen rocks I calle "Snapped Rocks". Here large rocks rest along an old landslide. The name, however; comes from the several trees in and around the rocks whose tops appear to have been snapped off during a wind event like a microburst. These "snapped" trees, visible in the photo, are quite common in the lower reaches of the canyon in others places besides the big rocks. Most of the trees affected were cottonwoods.
so im way late to this party. All the really cool shots have already been done, i’m just gonna try to get a few nice pics here and there. I need practice
shadow of the tomb raider, xbox one, ingame photomode, edited with flickr app
Taken at Paignton Zoo
Hope you enjoy and many thanks for everyone viewing, faves and commented on any of my images have a great day
The idea of a snap landscape has long intrigued me. You know, the methods that (some) street photography embodies - the capturing of a decisive moment, the unique moment, split seconds - brought to landscapes. The majority of my landscapes are productions of thought and action. I don't mind this, I love waiting in the slow down world of pinhole photography. But at the same time, much landscape photography is not about split seconds... seconds maybe, but not split seconds. There are few decisive moments that seem to be found out there. And yes, it is a different world beyond where the sidewalks end, but that doesn't mean that I can't try seeing with eyes I don't usually bring out there. Why not try a little candid landscape photography.
Olympus XA / Arista Premium 400
I wanted an eye to eye, but Bruno didn't. I think if I'd been allowed to offer food ......
Nicer through a window.
I finally found a good spot to get this GUFE roller. All it took was a little trespassing.
Here is the interaction from the guy who came out 5 seconds after I parked my bike:
"Can I help you, sir?"
"No, I just need to snap a quick picture of the other side of the river. Sorry about the trespassing. I'll only be a second."
"Yeah, well, we put those signs up... uh... we have a lot of heavy equipment..."
I looked at the tiny parking lot with a busted-ass Buick in it and then at the two picnic tables I was standing next to, then up at him quizzically.
"Heavy equipment?" I asked.
"Well, just, yeah..." and then he walked back inside.
"Thanks! I'll just be a second."
Some people. Sheesh. Dude must have been bored and under the impression that a No Trespassing sign was as effective as a mine field or something.
Anyhoo, I'm really glad I didn't have to steal a boat to get this angle. Enjoy!
In the days before scanners, watching for headlights on the rails paralleling highways was the way we found trains. Encountering a distant southbound headlight on the Illinois Central Gulf along Interstate 55, I found an old county road bridge at the small community of Shirley, IL for this prize catch. Rocking and rolling along at 30 mph; 3-xGM&O F3's have 45 cars in tow in route to Springfield on this 05-19-1975 day. Check out that code line on the west side of the train.