View allAll Photos Tagged churning
Whitstable today.....a thunder storm in the distance, people eating ice creams behind me, a junior sailing team in the back ground, Phil the fishermans trawler roped up to the harbour wall and the very visible presence of something that has been churning up our beach......behold 'the churning'......brought to you by a local from a seaside town.
The Devil’s Churn is a long crack in the coastal rock that fills with each ocean wave, occasionally exploding as incoming and outgoing waves collide. It looks like a long tongue when filled with water at high tide. Located at Cape Perpetua, a large forested headland on the central Oregon Coast, located 2 miles south of Yachats.
Thanks for visiting -- I appreciate your comments, awards, faves, and invitations. Have a great day whenever you see this.
I made this photograph of a creek in the Columbia River Gorge that flows from the waterfalls at higher elevations. The green moss, grass, tree's and dirt were wet from the mist that fills the air from the nearby waterfalls. The smell of the air and water is very distinct, it’s fresh, and you definitely know that the falls are nearby. Hope you enjoy it, have a great weekend!
Cascade Locks, Oregon
© Tony Aceves 2014
Thanks to the SVR for giving me the opportunity to escape the house and go and play trains. The fact that 40106 and 182 had active steam heat boilers was the icing on the cake for the winter gala. To be honest i had visions of ill fitting steam heat pipes and clouds of steam lingering around locomotives in stunning low light situations, alas this did not occur, in truth there were a few wisps of steam here and there. This picture of 40106 would have been immense with a cloud of steam but non the less it is still atmospheric.
Additionally it was great to hook up with my 1Z10 chums, i think we all enjoyed the day and were inspired to test our photographic skills to the max.
My favourite from the other day, I like the brooding feel to it and the reflections.
Best viewed large - really!
A nomadic child in remote far western Mongolia, churning fermented mare's milk inside her family Ger.
I was part of an expedition led by members of the BBC Human Planet crew to revisit nomads filmed in the Documentary. We visited valleys in the Altai Mountains that had never seen outsiders before. My images formed part of a Lonely Planet trilogy, called Mongolia's Lost Secrets and can be seen on www.lonelyplanet.com
A bracing evening by the sea. Always a good idea not to turn your back on the sea in case one of those occasional bigger waves comes along and gets your socks wet.
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Those Krazy Kataloguers continue to sow the seeds of division and confusion while providing entertainment early in the morning. The title states "Unlabelled, urns, clocks and pulleys" where there is one clock, milk churns and a factory line with lots of belts and pulley wheels. With those churns on view we are obviously looking at something related to dairy in this Mason image but what, where and when?
Photographer: Thomas H. Mason
Collection: Mason Photographic Collection
Date: 1890 - 1910
NLI Ref: M9/2
You can also view this image, and many thousands of others, on the NLI’s catalogue at catalogue.nli.ie
RhB driving trailer coach ABDt 1713 was at the rear of the S2 1552 08:36 Thusis to Chur service [hauled by Class Be 4/4 motor coach 513] recorded at Reichenau-Tamins. The movement of milk churns via certain RhB RE passenger services was still to be seen back in 2009. The churns in view had not long arrived via such workings and were awaiting movement across for transfer to a road tanker.
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