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This bit of Canford Heath, outside Poole in Dorset, usually has a puddle.
But the amount of rain over Christmas (and me practically washing my cheap compact in it) made it look like a lake.
A bit of background on this shot is over on my blog.
Copyright © 2022 Seldom Scene Photography, All Rights Reserved.
I am getting a fat head. I feel compelled to brag a bit. I don't usually show more than Page 1 of my photos that were/are Explored by Flickr, and I don't even necessarily show Page 1 every time a new photo gets added. But this time, I have a *first* in 9 ½ years on Flickr. I had three of my photos chosen in a single day (November 20, 2014)! Almost always it is none or one, very rarely two, but three for me is amazing. So I am showing all 3 pages. Page 1 is the one with three in one day on it. I hope my viewers enjoy some of them.
1. Elderly Couple Walking Into the Fog, 2. Gorgeous Great White Egret, 3. I Like My Hawks Unleaded..., 4. Blue Pickup Truck with Taillights ~ a Rainting, 5. Two Little Girl Kittens, 6. Hooray! Arctic Tundra Swans are Back!, 7. Ribbon of Fog from Green Peak on to the North, 8. Autumn Trees Near Maple Ridge,
9. Big Fluffy Clouds & Reflections in McFadden Marsh, 10. Scrawny Tree Hill a Bit Somber & Spooky for Halloween, 11. Abandoned Store Window at Disston, Oregon USA, 12. Sweet Gum Tree (I think) from a Distance ~ Painterly, 13. McKenzie River, Lane County, Oregon ~ Painterly, 14. Sun Rays with Sort of Hidden Little Red Orb, 15. Vintage Metal Farm Equipment (Amazing), 16. One of My Favorite Shots Ever ~ 3 Beautiful Dogs Swimming & Fetching Cooperatively,
17. Caps for Toy Pistols, 18. Beautiful Fuzzy Weeds, 19. Great Blue Heron Catches Late Dinner, 20. Great Blue Heron Just Prancing Right Along, 21. Sunset Out My Rear Window ~ SOOC, 22. A Gazillion Gorgeous Pink, Red & White Poppies, 23. Sunrise with Red Orb and One Dark Duck, 24. Sunset with Red Orb,
25. Elk Family ~ Maybe Cow, Calf & Daddy?, 26. Quilt with Bare Trees (No Leaves Trees) ~ Best Viewed Large, 27. German Shepherd Looking Right at Me, 28. The Third Little Pig Foiled the Big Bad Wolf ~ But then Came that Darned Hurricane, 29. Sunrise from Out Back ~ July 8, 2014, 30. 5 Ducklings ~ I Like the One in Front with His Beak Open, 31. Male American Goldfinch ~ Carduelis tristis, 32. Female American Goldfinch ~ Carduelis tristis,
33. Grass is Great for Elk ~ They Eat Several Blades of It while They Hide Behind One, 34. Great Blue Heron in Flight ~ Looks Painterly but it is SOOC, 35. Gorgeous and Exotic Looking Flowers ~ Showy Milkweed, Asclepias speciosa, 36. More Grasses in Black & White, 37. Snake Like the One a Bittern Ate in One of My Photos Years Ago, 38. Magenta or Cerise Wildflowers with Yellow Centers, 39. Guess What I Saw at the Hospital Yesterday ~ 2 Deer with Cute Antlers, 40. Best Viewed Large to Spot all the Creatures Here,
41. Poppies Sandwiched Between Earth and Sky ~ Painterly, 42. Field of Poppies and Orchard with Tiny Specks of Sheep, 43. More Poppies Swaying in the Breeze, 44. Bittern Stalking the Next Meal ~ Get a Load of that Right Foot, 45. Female Cinnamon Teal Duck Shows Off Pure White Feathers Under Her Wing, 46. Male Cinnamon Teal Duck Stretching & Fanning Out Some of His Feathers ~ EXPLORED, 47. Part of a Large Herd of Elk ~ Best Viewed Large, 48. Cutest Cinnamon Teal Duck Pair Ever!,
49. Used to Be Quaint Little Pink House ~ Now Entrance is Boarded Up, 50. Don't Laugh ~ It's My First Time Photographing a Hummingbird, 51. Sunrise at McFadden Marsh with Guardrail and Fence, 52. Which 2 out of these 4 do you like the best? This is #6993, 53. Which 2 out of these 3 do you like the best? This is #7004, 54. Matt & Thomas Bringing Down a Huge Tree, 55. Pigeon Butte & Queen Anne's Lace or Wild Carrot, 56. Hey Man, We Have Here a Barn, a Marsh and a Rainbow with Like Some Way Weird Processing, Ya Know?,
57. Canada Geese, One Show-Off & Some Small Birds, 58. Quaint Old Barn that I Like, 59. Gorgeous Hawk at William L Finley National Wildlife Refuge, 60. Sunset out My Window, 61. Swans in Flight (Parts of Seven of Them), 62. Tchaikovsky ~ A Noble Looking Long-Haired Cat, 63. Christmas Tree Made Out of Books, 64. Trees in Front Yard ~ Almost Black & White ~ Some Specks of Color,
65. Blueberry Bushes & Poplar Windbreak on the Way Out ~ Painterly, 66. Bulldog in Muddy Black Truck ~ Light Rain, 67. Freshly Painted Fence Ornamentation at US Post Office, Corvallis, Oregon, 68. ************************************************ Some of the 29,000 Canada Geese Coming Back for the Winter, 69. It's Not Snow! It is Super Artsy Techniques on my Photo of a Very Hard Rain, 70. Concrete Cluster Benches at Corvallis Riverfront Park, 71. Sunlit Clouds & Douglas Fir Trees in My Back Yard, 72. Giant Marshmallow Farm
Created with fd's Flickr Toys
This photo appeared in the following ideotrope albums:
Southern Kerala and Tamil Nadu - February 2008 - On the road in India
At Thanksgiving Rudi reminded me of a grim statistic regarding Indian traffic: India has 4% (or is it 5?) of the world's motor vehicles and 25% of the world's traffic fatalities. Even having visited India once before, I couldn't imagine the chaos and frequent danger of being on the road. Of course the conditions we encountered ran the gamut from smooth, quiet country lanes where our tandem was the fastest on the road to unbelievable chaos where it felt like a bit of a miracle to make it through the day.
By the end of five weeks though, we never crashed, and except for one goat I can't even recall that we ran into anything. As in the U.S. the traffic law in India seems to be that if you get there first, you have the right to the road. This law is taken to its logical extreme such that there's really no reason to ever look behind you. Pay attention to what's in front, be ready to brake and avoid sudden turns. In this sense I could see order to it all and certainly enjoyed heavy, slower traffic to the far too common high-speed chicken matches with buses which left us more than once bouncing off the edge of the tarmac. It's no surprise that fatal bus accidents are reported almost daily in the newspaper.
Coastal Kerala
We arrived at the Thiruvananthapuram airport at about 4am and cycled out of the "city" 26 hours later. The city hardly ended. During our first three days of pedaling, I'm not sure that we were ever out of sight of people and buildings. Perhaps we shouldn't have found this surprising. Kerala has the highest population density of any state in India. And within the state the highest density is found in the southern half of the state on the flat strip of land between the sea and the hills - exactly where we rode the first three days. We mostly avoided the fast traffic of the main road, usually riding a road closer to the coast. The network of paved roads is dense. There are many possibilities.
It wasn't always easy to follow these roads, and I can think of three funny incidents from these first three days:
We were on a narrow road with a fair bit of bus traffic. We noticed lighter traffic. Suddenly the road ended, and we looked across 100m of water with no bridge. Thinking we had missed a turn, we backtracked and quickly came to the spot where the buses turn around. Locals directed us back to the water and down a sandy single track where we loaded onto an oversized canoe with a motorcyclist and another bicyclist. Two men poled the craft across, and soon we were on our way again.
Further north on a similar narrow road we somehow managed to miss the main fork. The road continued to narrow and narrow until we were on a three-foot wide dirt track between two walls. Still we continued and cycled right into someone's yard! All found it amusing.</li?
In another section we had been warned that the coastal road was a bit broken in places and we'd have to push the bike so we weren't surprised to come upon a sandy single track. It was surprising to come upon a mahout on his elephant traveling in the opposite direction on this track. It was very sandy off the track and thinking the elephant would have an easier time of it than we would I kept on the track. The mahout hollered at us, and we were quite close before we ducked out of the way!
Cardamom Hills
After three days of riding to Alappuzha we were ready to try anything besides the Kerala coastal strip so we headed east into the hills. In less than 10km we came to the most peaceful, beautiful riding that we'd seen up to that point. Of course it all wasn't like that, but we had made a good choice.
We rode for three days to get to the Kumily/Thekkadi/Periyar tourist area and two more to get to more beautiful, more touristy, and higher Munnar. We climbed a lot on four of those days, but the roads were well-graded and simply by luck rather than any planning we only had a couple climbs that lasted more than 15km. On the other hand after climbing out of Munnar, we descended about 70km down to Kurichikottai. That would have been a brutal climb.
Through the hills and mountains we pedaled in misty, forested areas where all we could hear was the sounds of monkeys and birds. I thought of Jack Zuzack and the sounds he recorded on his 'round the world trip. We also rode through cardamom (these are the Cardamom Hills after all), rubber, tea, coffee, pepper, jackfruit, and coconut. The tea plantations were particularly beautiful as they seem to glow a translucent green.
The Tamil Nadu plains
Along the road from Munnar we met David who invited us to stay with his family in Kurichikottai, our first night in Tamil Nadu. David's from Kerala but came to Tamil Nadu to help the locals with basic health care and sanitation. He explained that most people don't have toilets in their houses in Tamil Nadu and we'd see many people using the side of the roads as a toilet in the morning. We spent the next two weeks riding in Tamil Nadu and indeed that's one thing I'll remember from our early morning riding there.
In spite of that, the riding in Tamil Nadu was more enjoyable than coastal Kerala. There were lots of wide-open spaces, beautiful agriculture areas, good roads, light traffic, compact cities. Also the weather was more comfortable since it was drier than Kerala. (Overall the weather on the whole trip was good. We never wanted a/c at night. Most of the day was warm, but it felt pretty hot from 1-4pm. We'd try not to be riding then.)
We visited a number of temple towns in Tamil Nadu: Palani, Madurai, Sivakasi, Tirunelveli, Tiruchchendur, Kanniyakumari. These places are on the Hindu pilgrimage circuit and except for Sivakasi and Tirunelveli were crowded with pilgrims.
Any place that's popular for Indians to visit is absolutely chaotic on the weekends. We experienced this in Munnar and Kanniyakumari, both places that we stayed a few days. Once the weekend crowds went home, we enjoyed the relative tranquility of these towns.
Sivakasi is famous for being a production center for fireworks. We ended up visiting the city because we met Jack Reed on the grounds of the Ghandi Museum in Madurai. He invited us to Sivakasi. Jack's friend, Sami, managed to arrange a tour of a cracker factory for the four of us. Seeing the workers and the working conditions was the most moving experience of the trip. The "factories" - though there's nothing automated about them - are scattered out on the hot plain away from the city and away from each other. The factory we visited consisted of about 20 small (4mx4mx4m), widely-spaced buildings. Each building has at least four doors which are always opened during work hours. There's no electricity. The design - good ventilation, many escape routes, widely-spaced buildings - is to prevent accidents. The workers are paid by the piece and earn about $3/day for this boring, repetitive, dangerous work. They're in constant contact with the chemicals in the fireworks - though some jobs looked much worse than others - and must fully wash before leaving the premises (to keep the unhealthy, volatile chemicals out of their homes). It was the closest thing I've seen to a sweat shop. Two women asked me to take them to my home, the only time that happened during this trip. That said, the workers appeared to genuinely return our smiles, and I'm afraid they're paid more than the average wage in India, perhaps even double (?).
The culinary journey
During our first trip to India, we spent two months in the north - Rajastan, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal - and loved the food. Then we spent a month in the Andaman Islands where there is mostly South Indian food. We were introduced to a whole new Indian cuisine, and we loved it! Indeed both of us prefer South Indian food to North Indian. The South Indian food is lighter, less oily, and less rich. It's food that can be eaten every day - not like what's served at the Indian restaurants in Boulder.
For breakfast we'd order a bread or rice dish - often appam in Kerala, idli or pongal in Tamil Nadu. Both states had dosa, puri, porotha, puttu, ottappam as well. The breads are served with curries and chutneys, and in fancier restaurants different breads were served with different sides. Egg curry was a popular breakfast option in Kerala, and many places would offer omelets as well. All except the most basic restaurants would offer tea (chai) and coffee. There wasn't much difference between dinner and breakfast unless we'd go to a fancier restaurant and order specific made-to-order curries.
Lunch is an all-you-can-eat affair based on rice. In Tamil Nadu banana leafs are used as plates, but I don't think we saw that a single time in Kerala. Silverware is not used. The rice comes with a number of vegetable sides, pickled stuff, papadam, and a pudding for dessert. Waiters come by with dal, sambar, and curd to pour over the rice, and they're constantly dumping more vegetables and rices onto your plate. The food was continually tasty. The one complaint would be that it was somewhat repetitive.
Kovalam and Mumbai
20km before completing our loop in Thiruvananthapuram we spent a couple days at the beach resort of Kovalam. I was impressed. The beaches were beautiful and clean with very mellow waves that were easy and fun to bodysurf. The main beach (Lighthouse) is tastefully developed, and there's still fisherman pulling in their catch. I can see why Europeans fly to India just to visit Kovalam.
On our flight home we took advantage of a 10 hour layover in Mumbai to make a quick dash into the city. We went straight to the Gateway of India and barely caught it in the last light of the day. I had hoped to do a little walking tour, but it's hard to appreciate the architecture in the dark. The most memorable part of this excursion will be the incredibly crowded train coming back from Churchgate to Andheri at 10 on a Saturday night. The doors to the trains don't close, and folks hang out the sides. People carry their bags above their heads because there's no room between the packed bodies. There isn't even enough room for everyone's feet on the floor. People stood on my feet, and I stood on other feet. At the stations it's required to jump off while the train is moving to avoid being pushed back on by the mass attemping to squeeze on. Not being experienced jumping off moving trains, Julie and I were a bit nervous when our stop was approaching. I followed the example of the person in front of me, and a helpful passenger gave Julie an arm to help her balance as she stumbled onto the platform. In spite of the chaos everyone was helpful, good-natured, and polite. Farewell, India.
The route: Thiruvananthapuram, Varkala, Karunagappally, Alappuzha, Kanjirappally, Peerumade, Thekkadi, Nedumkandam, Munnar, Kurichikottai, Palani, Kodaikanal Road, Madurai, Sivakasi, Surandai, Tirunelveli, Tiruchchendur, Kanniyakumari, Kovalam, Thiruvananthapuram.
Link to less selective photo album
Kerala and Tamil Nadu - all photos - Link to trip description
A bit late in the season for autumn colours, but the first decent weather we’d had in a fortnight so I headed out after work to see what I could see. I actually rather like the mix of evergreens, muted yellows and oranges, and bare branches.
This High Dynamic Range 360° aerial panorama was stitched from 75 bracketed photographs with PTGUI Pro, tone-mapped with Photomatix, processed with Color Efex, and finally touched up in Affinity Photo and Aperture.
Original size: 25000 × 12500 (312.5 MP; 1.61 GB).
Location: Glen Major Forest, Ontario, Canada
Bits and Pieces form the poupee hunt and the swayland hunt. More details on teresarepublic.com/ soon.
These flowers were taken a bit ago and I just absolutely loved the colors and wanted to share them with you. They remind me of miniature trees.
Hope everyone has a fantastic week.
Credits: Anita Designs - Field of Dreams and Country Girl; Gibby Frogett Craftations - Maelstrom; Pixabay; Unsplash Effects PhotoMania and CraftArtist 2
20 pence piece used for scale for this copper bit-coin.
Highlighted the shot for the detail on the coin.
abstracted design....was called Blenkinsopp's Columns till it was shaken up a bit.....thanks for looking.....best bigger....hope you have a great wekend
Here's a little bit of contemplation on the shore of Tioga Lake yesterday as my husband and I awaited the eclipse. I'm pretty sure I was thinking, "How the heck am I going to photograph the darn eclipse!??!"
Lake water levels are lower than I've ever seen as the spot I'm sitting at is usually under water this time of year. Overnight temps are still hitting below freezing at this elevation, keeping the lake ice around for a little while.
A bit of hopeful blue sky this morning viewed in the garden.
It turned out to be a glorious day, but unfortunately Graham fell while out and the Pompiers took him off to Lannion to the Emergency Department for a check up.
Everything OK, other than a grazed knee but it put a stop on photo taking for me for today.
Thank you for your favourites. :O)
All of the recent posts of old rusty vehicles are no longer in existence, the yard has been totally cleared. So these maybe the last record of these vehicles.
LC-A+ RL / splitzer / cross processed expired Kodak Ektachrome E320t tungsten film.
My end-of-roll ritual for the last few weekends: trying to get this shot of the top of Leeds Town Hall to line up.
this morning my plan was to "catch" some morning-fog..so the alarm at 6.15 and that really hurts on your day off, but ok ..and i drove around in search for that fog...nothing..only this tiny bit..;D..so the end of the morning soaking feet from the wet fields, and with some gooodmorning pics..so the coming pics i bore you with are made with little eyes and wet feet..;D
A tiny home-style restaurant which can only be entered from the back of the building. Be patient with the queue.
All new parts. All non-production except for the two-finger hinge pieces, which are just uncommon in green.
There seems to be a bit of an identity crisis going on in Manchester is this August 1991 view at Piccadilly bus station. The bus, a 1978 Atlantean with Park Royal body had been new to London Country as their AN150 and it still carries the livery and indeed the fleetnumber of that concern. It is now part of The Bee Line fleet, which was under the same common ownership as London Country through Drawlane holdings, Bee Line having been owned previously by Ribble and sold on after Stagecoach aquired them.
The C Line names over the door were applied to a number of vehicles that were operating out of the former Crosville depot at Macclesfield which was also under Drawlane control, this however was short lived and Macclesfield would later pass to Stevensons of Uttoxeter who were.........yes you guessed it, part of Drawlane!
Drawlane would later become British Bus who were taken over by the Cowie group, this was later renamed Arriva and the rest is history!
This Cooper’s hawk took his time dismembering his prey, until the carcass was pretty much cleaned, then carried off the remains. It was a natural process , but gruesome all the same
I didn't notice the very tiny insect on this Seaside Arrow Grass until I looked at my telemacro photo a bit later. Probably couldn't have got a macro shot of it, anyway, as I was already standing right on the edge of a wetland. Have not yet identified it. Taken at Slack Slough, near Red Deer, on 2 June 2013. Could it possibly be a Twenty-spotted Ladybug / Psyllobora vigintimaculata? I don't know if anyone can make an ID from such a distant shot.
Yesterday, I was out on a full-day bus trip to the Red Deer Wetlands Area, NW of Calgary. I think it was about an hour and a half's drive to get there. This was an annual outing arranged through the nature group that I belong to, and each year is to a different place. The Red Deer Wetlands Area is made up of Slack Slough (our first stop), the McKenzie Trails area (our second stop) and lastly the Kerry Woods Nature Center and Gaetz Lake Sanctuary, where we spent the last two hours of the day. The latter was such a beautiful area, wonderfully laid out, with several viewing decks around the lake. Some of us chose to walk the whole way round the huge lake (further than I had expected, lol!). A couple of Moose certainly made it more than worth the effort. We were so lucky that the rain stayed away until just the last few minutes of our walk, and then the heavens opened. The forecast had been for thunder showers morning and afternoon, but it just remained overcast till the last moment - hence a lot of photos that came out blurry, ha. A great trip, well-organized - thanks so much for all your hard work, Lynne! - and it was so good to see various friends that I hadn't seen for ages, as well as those whom I see often. It's raining here this morning, but I really, really hope that the forecast for tomorrow turns out to be accurate, as three of us are heading north to Edmonton (roughly a three-hour drive) for an exciting day!
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Anatolian, Bits & Pieces, Eurographics, Heye, Jumbo Wasgij, Piatnik, and Schmidt 1000 pc jigsaw puzzles
Takes a bit over an hour to walk to this spot. The first bit of the walk one has to risk a rocky slope between 30 & 45 deg. Lots of loose rocks to slip on.
Once up along the top, it's an easy walk along a fire trail. Neil the photographer in the photo by the water told me about this spot. Just had to be done once he told me, it was calling me...
This is a 6 shot, portrait panoramic. Next will be a sunrise one morning from here if I bring a powerful enough torch to allow me to get up that slope. Question is... will I tell the wife....