View allAll Photos Tagged Timber
Timber Rattlesnake in situ. I have shots with the head in focus but I thought this one was more compelling.
ÖBB Taurus 1116 144 - operated by Rail Cargo Austria (RCA) - with a long and heavy timber train travels along the river Danube between the stations Krummnussbaum and Säusenstein (Lower Austria)
Click on the photo to enlarge for a better view.
© Andreas Berdan - no unauthorized copying permitted
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Colas Class 60 60095 passes Woodacre near Garstang on 6j37 Carlisle yard - Chirk timber train,photograph taken on 23/02/2016
He's the best walking/running partner ever. He never complains, he's always eager, and he's just a joy to hang out with.
Shot of a timber wolf taken in the Kasselburg eagle and wolf resort, near Gerolstein, Germany.
Timberwolf
Aufgenommen im Adler- und Wolfspark Kasselburg in der Eifel nahe Gerolstein.
Canon Sure Shot Ace
Kodak Elite Chrome 100 (expired 2001)
Converted to B&W in Lightroom
I've shot lots of expired slide film and usually have good results, but this roll came out quite underexposed. I decided to convert the pictures to B&W as I felt they looked better that way.
Last Summer I stumbled upon one of the Cumberland Plateaus many Timber Rattlesnakes. Such a awesome specimen.
A fine looking buck in the early morning side light iof the Oklahoma Cross Timbers. Our beautiful world, pass it on.
Timber Ponds were set up along the southern shore of the River Clyde in the early days of wooden shipbuiling, occupying the area between Port Glasgow and Langbank. The industry required vast quantities of thoroughly seasoned timber, and with shipyards occupying most of the shore line from central Greenock to eastern Port Glasgow, demand was prodigious.
The ponds prevented the timber from floating away and allowed the logs to be organised according to type, length of seasoning, and ownership. Extreme weather could result in the logs breaking free of the ponds, closing the river until they were recovered. Remnants of the timber ponds still exist in the lines of vertical wooden posts sticking out of the mud, and rectangular areas can still be seen in aerial views of the surrounding riverbed.