View allAll Photos Tagged bars
Someone recently noted that there's a bar at every blinking red light in the U.P. I can think of a couple of exceptions, but not many. This one in Rock is appropriately named. Explored number 273 on January 15, 2018.
Explored 7/19/09 #98
If any of the models would like a copy of their pic (hi res or lo res), send me a flickr mail and I'll make sure you get one.
Matt's in the Market/Pike Place Market 100 Anniversary
Notice the character in the suit and hat. :)
Olympus Pen EE-3/Lucky film for Heather Champ's Are you feeling Lucky?.
Thanks again Heather!
Taken from our campsite at the KOA Campground in Bar Harbor, Maine.
One of my favorite places on planet earth!
A SOOC.
local bar. mama is over 80's.
opened when i was 6 or 7 years old. bar name is Ochimusha, meaning kind of defeated samurai fled from battle field.
A set of Bangor & Aroostook geeps are part of the early Conrail color riot that made up early Conrail. They keep company with an EL geep and C&O power in Bison Yard in Buffalo, NY on June 26, 1976. Conrail leased BAR power, as well as whatever other leasers it could get, in it's first years of operation. This weeks SNS was taken by Michael A. Tedesco.
Bar-tailed Godwit
Limosa lapponica
March 27th, 2021
Lake Wollumboola, Culburra Beach, New South Wales, Australia
Canon EOS R5
Canon EF 600mm f4L IS III USM lens
Canon EF 1.4x III Extender
A Bar-tailed Godwit feeding in the shallows at Lake Wollumboola.
A cold night in Bar Harbor leaves the town somewhat deserted.
© 2016 James Duckworth Photography - All Rights Reserved - Please do not download and use this image without written permission. It is protected by copyright.
Bar-headed geese: Highest bird migration tracked. A tracking study has revealed the secrets of the world's highest bird migration - the Himalayan flight of the bar-headed goose. The geese have been recorded at heights of more than 7,000m (23,000ft)
This is a northeasterly view from the public pier in Bar Harbor, Maine during a sunrise. It shows several lobster boats. Bar Island is on the left. In the far distance is the mainland of Maine. (image 34A2256) Please also visit: acadiamagic.com.
NOTE: All images are Copyrighted by Greg A. Hartford. No rights to use are given or implied to the viewer. All rights of ownership and use remain with the copyright owner.
This sunrise photo shows the Margaret Todd on a very foggy morning in Bar Harbor, Maine. (image 34A1945) Please also visit: acadiamagic.com.
NOTE: All images are Copyrighted by Greg A. Hartford. No rights to use are given or implied to the viewer. All rights of ownership and use remain with the copyright owner.
Bar-headed geese have to reach extreme heights when they migrate over the Himalayas. To be able to do this, the species is physiologically and biochemically adapted to flying at altitudes where oxygen levels and temperatures are both extremely low.
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The bar-headed goose is one of the world's highest-flying birds, having been heard flying across Mount Makalu – the fifth highest mountain on earth at 8,481 m (27,825 ft) – and apparently seen over Mount Everest – 8,848 m (29,029 ft) – although this is a second-hand report with no verification. This demanding migration has long puzzled physiologists and naturalists: "there must be a good explanation for why the birds fly to the extreme altitudes... particularly since there are passes through the Himalaya at lower altitudes, and which are used by other migrating bird species." In fact, bar-headed geese have never been directly tracked (using GPS or satellite logging technology) flying higher than 6,540 metres (21,460 ft), and it is now believed that they do take the high passes through the mountains. The challenging northward migration from lowland India to breed in the summer on the Tibetan Plateau is undertaken in stages, with the flight across the Himalaya (from sea-level) being undertaken non-stop in as little as seven hours. Surprisingly, despite predictable tail winds that blow up the Himalayas (in the same direction of travel as the geese), bar-headed geese spurn these winds, waiting for them to die down overnight, when they then undertake the greatest rates of climbing flight ever recorded for a bird, and sustain these climbs rates for hours on end, according to research published in 2011.
-Wikipedia
Meeting point: SLRR Yucca Station
Join us on the Bar Train for a journey by railway along the SLRR lines around Heterocera.
We will also stop for a halt at the Woodland Station, the home of the Bar Train, where you
will be able to collect a new stamp!
Important for a comfortable trip:
Detach any unnecessary attachments and scripts to avoid issues with region crossings.