View allAll Photos Tagged WarningSign
Not far from our place there’s a family that keeps bees. Next to the hive boxes is the sign shown above. Before seeing this I did not know that there was a downside to mosquito spraying. PLEASE download and post this photo everywhere! If you can’t download it, make a screenshot of the enlarged image. It’s an important piece of information.
A locked gate gives access to the railway at this point. That this is a potentially dangerous place is laid out on the sign. There is not only the hazard from passing trains but they are powered by electricity carried in a third rail – 750v DC. The address of the nearest hospital is also given. In a quaint carry over from former times the distance to London is given: 30 miles 4½ chains
Another image from the Pentax 645 11n, this time using Kodak Ektar film which is 7 years out of date. I read somewhere that you should allow a stop of extra exposure for every decade of outdatedness (is that a word?), so I set the film speed at ISO 50. As I was not expecting too much, I wasn't too fussy about the subject matter but I do like this one which is the road down to the ferry at Glenelg. The scans looked a bit dull but it was quite easy to get them to look acceptable.
Message on the sign intrigues me, it might be a road that goes on forever. Maybe a road once on it you realize that you should have ignored your curiosity. If I only had more time and not bingo on gas h'mmm.
I made this for anyone who tends to lose followers on their blogs because of their tendency to use the words "vagina" or "boobies" more than others think is appropriate. As far as I'm concerned, vagina and boobies are *always* appropriate, but then again, I guess I *do* like vagina and boobies in general more than most other girls. >;P
Look out children, ballhat bird doesn't want you going in there!
Funny, it seems that having this type of sign on a plain metal box might be just the thing to get kids intrigued.
Explored! Up to #124 on July 16.
Copyright Robert W. Dickinson. Unauthorized use of this image without my express permission is a violation of copyright law.
Olympus E-M1 Mark III and Olympus 75mm f1.8 lens with circular polarizer.
Sunday 4 February on a cold windy day captured in black and white to show the bleakness across to Bridlington and Flamborough head with the lighthouses in the far distance.
Strange sign: "Customers with no sense of humour are advised to enter at their own risk"
North Circular Rd, Phibsborough, Dublin, D07 DT61
Does the sign exist to warn unsuspecting motorists, or as good business advice to prospective criminals?
Danger! Danger! High voltage
By Electric Six
I was up in the EMC (Electromagnetic Compatibility) Lab at work when I spotted this.
Electric Six are not a band I follow but I am familiar this lyric and thought I'd make the most of serendipity!
An ironic juxtaposition of signage. Just like the knives were out for Caesar during the Ides of March, the knives are out for Journey Beyond Rail's Overland train. The 133yo Overland train service between Adelaide and Melbourne is likely to close at the end of March 2020: a victim of government indifference, cheap airfares and the coronavirus. The logo on one of the passenger cars has been captured with the "Beware" part of the "Beware the Gap" as an ominous warning of an probable end.
Two obnoxious habits I detest and in particular the second one by a long way.
Behavioural warning sign seen inside Castries Central Market in the City of Castries on the Caribbean Sea Island of Saint Lucia.
Photograph taken by and copyright of my regular photostream contributor David and is posted here with very kind permission.
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.
"7 Days of Shooting" "Week #7" "Crossings" "Minimal Sunday"
I'm crossing my fingers this image is minimal enough! I had
a fun learning experience cropping away the background!
Taken at The Regency, Laguna Woods, California. © 2015 All Rights Reserved.
My images are not to be used, copied, edited, or blogged without my explicit permission.
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Brickfields marshalling yard with on the left D-loco 181.01 (shunter) in the middle 191.02 and on the right side 221.22. Most KTM locomotives have (had) names this class 22: Changkat Tenggara.
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.