View allAll Photos Tagged TABLE
Table Mountain is a prominent landmark overlooking the city of Cape Town. The views from the top of the mountain were fantastic, but this view looking up to Table Mountain was my favorite.
Well that's what I call them for lack of a better term. These are in the Bisti Badlands, and are mini hoodoos, only about 2-3 feet, or 65-100 cm high. There is at least one area with numerous small table top hoodoos. Here you can see more of them receding into the background. I'm always afraid I'll stumble in the dark and knock a top off. lol Fortunately that has not happened! The area was the floor of a vast inland sea millions of years ago, and many layers of sediment were formed, eventually compacted into sandstone, some layers harder and some layers softer. The unusual shape is caused by greater erosion of the softer lower layer, and slower erosion of the harder upper layer. Shooting in this direction the sky is wonderfully dark with minimal light pollution. More to the W &NW there is more light pollution. Shot at 14 mm, f 2.8, 30 sec., ISO 6400.
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The food table exhibit is always a big hit with kids and grownups at our show as well as the many other shows they display in, across the country.
120 in 2020
103. Tablecloths/Table Mats
One of a series of table mats I brought back from holiday in Austria about 20 years ago
© All Rights Reserved - Erik Symes Photography
Stuff shot through windows. Table setting taken through a restaurant window ~ Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
Picnic tables sit in the Parque Florestal do Cabouca Velha on the slopes on the east side of the the central volcano on Faial Island in the Azores. The park is located in the Frequesia (parish) de Salaõ.
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Pusch Ridge in the Santa Catalina Mountains, north of Tucson. From Catalina State Park, near the entrance station.
This might just be the most significant tree stump in Tasmanian history. In 1976 on this very site a group of conservationists across all political groups decided to establish The Wilderness Society. It was to become the major organiser of the campaign to save the Franklin and Gordon rivers from being dammed.
"Wilderness - Celebrating Australia's Protected Places"
www.youtube.com/watch?v=tU2cs53qvXw
This old tree (not a native) had been planted in the 1890s by the original settlers, and provided plenty of firewood when it was felled. But the stump became a symbol. Like the mythical Round Table in King Arthur's court, this table-like stump has been sat around for many years as environmentalists discussed their plans to protect the Tasmanian wilderness.
My new kitchen table... got it on Craigslist (love it!)
I have a tiny dining area in my kitchen and this small Country French Desk/Table fits the space perfectly.
I got the pottery in my parent's home town in North Carolina. It was created by a local artisan, B.R. Hilton. He wasn't home the day we got to his shop. He had a note that said, write down what you buy, and leave the money. You're on the honor system!