View allAll Photos Tagged WarningSign

It's not all white in the snow . . .

Warning sign in front of the Chernobyl exclusion zone.

No Cocaine allowed? No it is a sign to not step on the fallen head statue. Easter Island.

Albany-Rennselaer Station, New York

a7iii + Sony FE 90mm F2.8 Macro G OSS

 

As described by "The Best of Oahu":

Sandy Beach Park is notoriously known for two things…powerful shore breaks and the fine beach sand that gets into everything! Sandy Beach is a beautiful isolated stretch of sand that lays just beyond the popular Halona Blowhole. This Oahu beach has a magnificent scene that you arrive upon after driving along the lava rock cliffside of Koko Head Crater.

 

It is also happens to be my wife's favorite...since they share the same name...Sandy!

 

Three bracketed photos were taken with a handheld Nikon D7200 and combined with Photomatix Pro to create this HDR image. Additional adjustments were made in Photoshop CS6.

 

"For I know the plans I have for you", declares the LORD, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." ~Jeremiah 29:11

J'imagine que les berges de l'Orb, tout comme celles du fleuve Hérault sont particulièrement fréquentées.

En automne, c'est nettement plus calme, pour autant, les berges ne sont pas complètement désertées. Je me serais même bien offert un petit plongeon dans les eaux vives, claires et nettement plus profondes qu'en plein été.

Traffic sign/'warning sign

Watch for trains!

 

Warnings without words at Sugarloaf Point lighthouse - I love the artistry of this wordless warning about a hazard underfoot.

 

[Warnings without words at Sugarloaf Point lighthouse_CU_IMG_8028]

Látrabjarg, Westfjords, Iceland.

 

Fujifilm X-E1 - Fujinon XF 18mm f/2 R

Stop sign that has been riddled with a shotgun outside of Havre, Montana.

 

There aren't too many road signs here in Montana that don't have bullet holes in them. At first I didn't understand why. But then I realized it was for the same reasons I have so many photographs of utility poles. On the stark eastern Montana landscape often there is little else.

 

I captured this image south and east of Havre early in the morning as the sun was just rising above the horizon. I've been waiting to find a good sign with bullet holes to photograph with the sun coming through. The utilty poles in the background were a nice addition.

 

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© 2010 Todd Klassy. All Rights Reserved.

Sorry for the swearing but man... I just howled when I saw this sign. I used a friend's zoom to take this as I was afraid of the reprocussions!...

 

Mystery Tour Friday b 650

Ham hocks, red beans, cornbread, bacon on the side

Ham hocks, red beans, cornbread, bacon on the side...

A rather fine poster, issued by the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents in association with the Ministry of Transport, in 1965 to coincide with the introduction of the UK's new road traffic signs that year. Such posters were widely distributed to organisations and institutions such as schools and indeed this is where this copy was rescued from by D Rose who has kindly scanned this and consented to let me post this.

 

The new system of signage, much more based in pictograms and a new typeface, came from the deliberations of the Worboys Committee that had sat at the behest of the Ministry of Transport to consider the country's road signs. The basic designs had been in place for over 30 years but new road conditions and growing traffic saw the need to update the system, such as for the new and growing motorway network. In fact the motorways had seen a new signage system a few years earlier developed by graphic designers Margaret Calvert and Jock Kinneir, and these signs were based on a continuation of their work. Aspects such as simplicity and legibility were seen as primary attributes of the new system.

 

So began a programme of sweeping away the old designs and replacing them, gradually, with new. The old designs are now often fondly recalled and indeed a small number of "pre-Worboys" signs still survive on the road network (few and far between) and in some counties old style heritage fingerposts for local directions have not only survived but been replicated on a small scale. The system seen here has worked well, overall, but there are calls for a systematic overhaul as, with any system, gradual change to allow for new requirments has led to some complexities and divergence from some of the principles set out in this new design.

"Like, seriously?"

 

As though rattlesnakes and rockslides weren't problematic enough, there's this!

The Dixie Highway was planned out in December 1914 to connect the Midwest with the South, from Chicago to Miami.

 

By the mid-1920s, the project was largely completed with a network of roads interconnected across 10 states with more than 5,000 miles of paved, bricked road. But, by 1927, Dixie Highway became part of the US Route System, and was therefore, mostly abandoned. But, a portion of it still remains in remote Florida, and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 20, 2005.

 

“It’s one of the oldest roads in America,” according to the historian.

 

Upon on my arrival, I started from south toward north, before I entered, there is a warning: “Travel at your own risk.” And another prohibiting the removal of the bricks in the road. Doing so, it says, warrants prosecution “to the fullest extent of the law.”

 

The historic stretch of Old Dixie Highway is 10 miles long, and would recommend to drive slowly as there are some thick soft-sand on the road that could cause slide off from the road if driving too fast.

 

Interesting fact: The brick was manufactured by the Graves Shale Brick Company in Birmingham, Alabama, belonging to a slave-owning man who fought for the Confederacy. It took 237,600 such bricks to build just 1 mile of road, 9 feet wide. Others are with the words "SOUTHERN CLAY MFG CO” for the Southern Clay Manufacturing Company in Tennessee.

The Federal Ministry of Health warns: Touching this vehicle can suddenly cause tooth loss!

This childs' seat may be used as a distraction while fleeing authorities.

A man walks in front of one of the hot ponds of the Oniyama Jigoku (The monster mountain hell), one of the locations that can be visited on the Jigoku-meguri (hell tour), a small excursion that takes visitors around Beppu’s eight natural hot springs that have spewing hot clay mud and steam or gushing high temperature water for more than 1000 years, keeping people away and inspiring the name jigoku (hell).

It looks like this traffic sign in Chesapeake, Ohio, was re-used from a previous assignment. I believe under the orange it says "McDonald's NEXT LEFT". Close inspection shows where the holes are for the mounting bolts in its previous use

Warning: Climb at Your Own Risk

 

There's been a lot of risk associated with the year 2020. Recently I found myself all alone far from everyone and everything. As I read the warning sign, climbing seemed like a minimal risk compared with all we've been through this year. And then I was high in the sky. I could feel the tower swaying in the wind. Slowly, back and forth. I could hear the creaking as the rivets rubbed against the cold, hard steel. But I couldn't hear any bad news, nasty name calling, accusations, or allegations. All the conspiracies were nowhere to be found. No virus was trying to chase me down. I was all alone yet I was overwhelmed with the realization I'm never alone. Climb at your own risk. You may just discover there is a road that leads to a far better place.

 

Clark State Forest

Henryville Fire Tower

2020

© James Rice, All Rights Reserved

2020.08.26 - Hum..whaaaa..? At first I thought this was a joke as I was cycling through Parc Maisonneuve but it turns out in July there were sheep brought to the park for people to hang out with ..and I guess this is where they crossed the bike path. The path by the way is paved, this trail is just a self made walking path next to it... it kind of took me for a loop though LOL.

 

www.mtlblog.com/news/canada/qc/montreal/you-can-hang-out-...

Nottingham Midland Station, October 2016

A railroad crossing sign in Geraldine, Montana.

 

Just another sign at just another railroad crossing. They are everywhere out here.

 

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© 2010 Todd Klassy. All Rights Reserved.

The empty rural landscape on the Hi-Line in rural Montana is punctuated by a stop sign and row of electrical utility poles.

 

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© 2011 Todd Klassy. All Rights Reserved.

Wandering round Hitchin Hertfordshire with the target being urban fragments.

The Flying Horse pub sign with road sign beneath

Photography © Jez

How observant are you? Did you spot the "Do not Cross" sign with 4 alternate flashing lights cunningly concealed on two 10 foot high poles? If you did congratulations.

Unlike the dimbo with a brain the size of a cod liver oil capsule you should have a driving licence.

Every time this river floods at least one bonehead floats gently down river towards Coleshill, they never do learn, this one made it but only just, oh yes, forgot to say the sign in the direction they came from is even easier to see...

Geoff Dowling

Signs Of The Times - Dog Warning Sign Ideas - IMRAN™

There was a discussion on a Facebook group for owners of German Shepherd Dogs where a person wanted a sign to warn a repeat trespasser not to do so. I propose this as a possible option. “Hungry Attack Dogs On Premises. Fed Once Daily. Last Meal Was 23 Hours Ago. Avoid Trespassing To Avoid Unexpected Loss Of Weight Or Body Parts.” 🐕😄 What do you think? I know, I know. Some scumbag lawyer of some slime ball criminal would use that to claim damages based on the sign even if meant in humor. But a settlement can’t really buy them a new pair of testicules if the dogs are trained like the ones in John Wick 3. 😂

 

© 2021 IMRAN™

 

#IMRAN #GermanShepherdDogs #GSD #dogs #lawyers #criminals #humor #WarningSigns

Not just any old fork-lift, but a heavy-duty boat lifter. Those forks are some 15ft long. This one was caught at rest at Tierra Verde Marina, south of St. Pete Beach.

New guardians of the toronto brickworks, live bees! Let the insects do the guarding!

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