View allAll Photos Tagged Sub-Zero
Sub zero temperatures and bitter conditions made for a tough climb up the eastern flanks and the Y Lliwedd ridge of Mount Snowdon. We were accompanied by freezing fog and limited visibility all day, when, as the sun was setting the clouds lifted and a gap on the horizon appeared allowing the light to flood over the land. Caught by surprise I was overwhelmed by the rich colours and contrast. The moment only lasted 10 minutes but just enough to capture a few shots.
One pair of many in our yard today happy to find the feeder filled in these sub-zero temps! This was shot from the living room, through the plastic-covered french door windows leading to the 2nd floor balcony because it was too cold to step outside for a moment!
With sub zero temperatures and a hard frost it was all worth freezing for as pinky dipper 59203 snakes its way through a colourful Hungerford with the 7a09 Merehead-Acton "Jumbo"
Sgwd Ddwli Isaf waterfall in sub-zero temperatures, surrounded by giant icicles.
Anyone who is familiar with this waterfall must be wondering how i got to the top tier to get this shot.
It involved some undignified crawling and scrambling up a mini glacier. Luckily the minus 5 centigrade temperatures deterred most tourists from witnessing my impression of a blind sea-lion!
This one may be a bit disturbing to some. It was done as a humorous response to the Elsa/Sub-Zero artwork (and subsequent cosplay I posted a photo of last year). While a bit gory (the spinal column is sectional and held together by rare earth magnets), I have to give the guy props for running with an idea and making it work.
Blue Bolt / Heft-Reihe
> Sub-Zero Man / "It's 'shoot-the-works' when Sub-Zero and his pal Freezum, crash a fancy Gambling Den..."
Script: ?
art: John Daly
Novelty Press / USA 1942
Reprint: Comic-Club NK 2010
ex libris MTP
Medical researches from the University of Manitoba found that sub zero temperatures are linked to an increased risk of heart attack. Analyzing 1,487 adults diagnosed with acute myocardial infarction (MI) in Winnipeg from July 2008 to December 2013 correlating MI with local snowfall and temperature records from Environment Canada database. The strongest predictor of acute MI (27% increased risk) was a daily high of less than 0 degree celcius. With every drop of 1 degree celcius the risk goes up .8% demonstrating a clear linear trend. However snowfall had no independent association with MI risk.
Historical evidence of the effects of cold weather on the incidence of MI dates back to Hippocrates in 430 BC. Factors influenced by cold temperatures include cardiac workload, coronary resistance, blood pressure and cholesterol.
Sub zero wind chills and frigid water aren't enough to keep the swans from their daily swim (or the geese from making themselves comfortable on a bed of ice).
Blue Bolt / Heft-Reihe
> Sub-Zero Man / Scourge of the Knights of the Blue Flame
Script: ?
art: John Daly
Novelty Press / USA 1942
Reprint: Comic-Club NK 2010
ex libris MTP
With the temperatures hitting sub zero and the nights somehow still drawing in we decided the remedy was to brighten things up a bit and make our second Christmas wall at sportswear shop 'Forty Five' about as full colour as we could go. So we decided to hit the Mardi Gras theme and go for Mr. Voodoo in his Mardi Gras mask enjoying some bodyrocking sounds as the carnival gets into full swing. I've never been to Mardi Gras so am having a hard time imagining exactly what kind of tunes he'd be getting down to but they're definitely party tunes and his mojo is surely rising...
Cheers
id-iom
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Paul Moralee, a member of the GBR snowboard cross team. Another day training in Zell Am Ziller Austria.
Training all week, racing all weekend.
Keep an eye out for the Europa Cup snowboard cross events,
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Thermometer refused to rise above freezing today. Considering we're halfway thorugh December and that's the first time this winter, we're doing not too bad.
Sub-Zero is a video game character from the Mortal Kombat series and one of the original characters in the first Mortal Kombat game in 1992. A mainstay of the series, Sub-Zero is the only character who has appeared in every Mortal Kombat fighting game. The character also appears in many other Mortal Kombat media works such as the Mortal Kombat live action film series and animated series.
The character is a formidable fighter possessing the innate ability to control ice in many forms.The most defining trait of the character is his fierce rivalry with his archnemesis Scorpion.
I saw Sub-Zero at the NYC Comic Con. He looks just as dangerous and menacing in person as he does in the games!
All Saints, Eyke, Suffolk
This village straggles the busy road between Woodbridge and Snape; since the closure of the nearby American airbase, it is much quieter than it used to be, though when I came this way on a sub-zero day in January 2017 I was pleased to see that the village shop was still doing good business. Across the road, and set back from it, All Saints sits quietly, with no tower to lead you to it from afar.
At first sight, this is a simple, if uneven, little church, somewhat barn-like in its ancient graveyard. Tall elm trees around it are home to jackdaws and rooks; their cries fill the air as they wheel above you. A great yew caresses the south of the nave. The modern little porch gives no indication that you are about to enter one of the more interesting churches in this part of Suffolk.
As you step down into the square south aisle and nave (in fact, they appear wider than they are long!) the first thing you notice is a pair of gorgeous Norman arches, one about 10 feet to the east of the other, at the base of what was once the central tower, although almost no indication remains of it from the outside now. Beyond them, the chancel opens up, its height accentuating the lowness of the arches which lead into it.
Sam Mortlock argues that All Saints was probably a cruciform church as at Pakenham in west Suffolk, with the south chapel leading off from the south-east corner of the nave taking up part of what was a south transept. Cautley considered a tripartite arrangement more likely, as at Newton-by-Castle-Acre in Norfolk, largely on the strength of the arches only having mouldings on the western side. One of the lower tower windows can still be seen on the eastern face from within the chancel, and looks most curious. A bell rope disappears up into the ceilure. Although the western arch only has one band of chevrons, the eastern arch has two. If you look closely at the nave roof immediately in front of the western arch, you can see traces of paint, evidence of a one-time canopy of honour to the now-vanished rood. There is a small collection of medieval and continental glass in the chancel north window, including a high quality scene of St Bridget feeding the beggars, two jolly mermaids and what appear to be the arms of the Borough of Great Yarmouth.
Edward Hakewill carried out the restoration here in the 1860s. He is responsible for the angels on the wall plate of the nave. The south aisle isn't really an aisle at all, more a completion of the square between original nave and south transept. The south transept (if such it was) had been a chantry chapel, often referred to as the Bavents Chantry. Lavers, Barraud & Westlake supplied the glass for Hakewill's west window, as well as a smaller lancet on the east side of the south transept, but the woodwork in the church is rather more recent, and an interesting story pertains to it.
Like several other Suffolk churches, including Waldringfield across the estuary, a family dynasty of vicars was responsible for the Anglican revival in this parish. These were the Darlings, James pere et fils. They held this living for 80 years, between 1859 and 1939. The father oversaw Hakewill's restoration of what had become a near-derelict church. The son, who took over in 1893, had a passion for woodcarving. He taught his parishioners the skill at night classes in the village school. Between them, the villagers produced the benches, font cover, organ case, chapel screen and reredos. If you look at the bench ends, you will find James Darling's pet dog, and some other unlikely animals including a beaver, a snake, a squirrel and a penguin. A crowned figure with a rosary on the poppyhead of one bench probably represents the Blessed Virgin, and a seated cleric with a smile on his face is probably James Darling himself. The pulpit is Darling's memorial. The workshop's bench ends can be found in half a dozen other east Suffolk churches.
The east window is a rather sombre affair, also by Lavers, Barraud & Westlake, showing the children coming to Christ while angels try and demonstrate what Charity looks like. The parish's most famous treasure, the 15th century Eyke key, is now in the British Museum. Its wards are shaped to make the word IKE, an alternative form of the village name. I was disappointed to discover that the doorlock has been changed since, but I suppose retention of the original would have made this the easiest of all churches to break into. A fibre-glass copy hangs on the wall.
It pleases me to come back here. It is now seventeen years since my first visit, on New Year's Day 2000, I was the first person of the century* to sign the visitors book, and it was pleasing to turn back to it on my return in 2006 and 2010. But I have left it too long, and on my most recent visit in 2017 I found that a new visitor's book had taken the place of the old one. Ah well. Back in 2000, the nice lady practising the organ had told me that one of the Reverend Darling's daughters was still alive, and occasionally visited to see again her father's and grandfather's handiwork. In 2010 I wondered if she still did, but now some seventeen years have passed, and I suppose she does not any more.
*Yes, I know that pedants will tell you that the 21st Century began on New Years Day 2001. Don't listen to them.