View allAll Photos Tagged Wiring,
Hops are the female flowers of the hop species H. lupulus; as a main flavor ingredient in beer, H. lupulus is widely cultivated for use by the brewing industry.
Hop shoots grow very rapidly, and at the peak of growth can grow 20 to 50 centimetres per week. Hop bines climb by wrapping clockwise around anything within reach, and individual bines typically grow between 2 to 15 metres depending on what is available to grow on. When the hop bines run out of material to climb, horizontal shoots sprout between the leaves of the main stem to form a network of stems wound round each other.
Hop gardens consist of a regular arrangement of poles interconnected by wires. Every spring, the farmers add vertical wire ropes that are used by the hop plants for climbing. Here you can see how this is done with the help of three persons in a turret.
Text adapted from Wikipedia.
Small copper wires wrapped around the cone that used to be on the back of an old tube television. :-)
I saw this as a possible series from the salvage yard -- the stripped away wiring from the old rusty doors. I tought this was pretty "different" and photo worthy.
Flickr meet-up location: County Line Classics Auto Parts & Salvage - Red Oak, Texas
Part of a self-imposed theme at the meet-up: Classic Car Door Wiring
Please, no invites to "Invite Only" groups.
Fractal morph of a photograph of the pickups of my Fender Stratocaster guitar. The next three images are variations - mashups and further morphs - of this one.
Fresh from EMD, CP 7055 is being set up for service at St. Paul, MN, after being delivered the previous afternoon.
How anything electrical works in many parts of India defies logic. Complex entanglements of electrical wires hanging somehow on the utility poles in many of the areas I saw seemed to be the norm. How any of this works is anybody's guess. Tragically, there are over 10,000 electrocution deaths in India every year. (www.counterview.net/2017/09/electrocution-in-india-kills-...)
I could never fathom the wondrous wiring I saw in Chinese streets, as I'd never seen the like in any other country up until that time. Consequently I took any number of photos, and made movies following the maze of wires I saw beside the roads I travelled. Now that I've travelled further afield, I know this chaotic system of wiring is quite common across second and third world countries.
An old electrical box in one of the upper floors of that vacant office building in Birmingham, Ala.
Very dark here ... this is illuminated with five pops of a flash bounced off the wall and ceiling behind/above the camera.
Open wire box on the streets of Hanghzou, China
Numbers 3:37
also the pillars around the court, with their bases and pegs and cords.
Easter Rising 1916-2016 Centenary Anniversary
These guys were sitting out on the ledge above the Centra store along Dame Street's Cork Hill/Parliament Street junction as the parade passed by.
Dame Street - Dublin - Ireland