View allAll Photos Tagged cleanesting
On my way to a gig I saw this ahead and made a quick shot. I really had to spruce up the shot. So this is not the cleanest shot it could be. I love tHuRsDay
Happy Truck Thursday
[Enlarge and look around.]
We'll return to the historic estate at Highfield (1826) and take a closer view of the buildings a little later, but for the moment we're having a look at the magnificent beef cattle that are farmed here. They are mainly Angus cows and they are farmed to supply the prestigious Cape Grim Tasmanian Natural Beef company.
Each of these cattle are raised on the rich rye grass and clover that receives plenty of natural clean rainwater. Cape Grim Beef is highly sought after by the finest restaurants for its marbling, which is produced in stress free cattle. So these cows have the best life imaginable.
Peter Greenham who runs Cape Grim says, "We have the added advantage of an already strong Tasmanian brand, a reputation for some of the cleanest air and water in the world and we don't use hormone growth promotants or GM foods here either. We started the MSA grading in mid 2007 but the labels and packaging came along in December that year. A year later we have fine restaurants and premium butchers all over the country who are just loving it."
www.capegrimbeef.com.au/Tasmanian_grass_fed_beef_restaura...
In the early morning light the cows stand in the paddock that overlooks the town of Stanley with the famous volcanic plug, "The Nut", as a backdrop. This land has been farmed now for almost exactly 200 years.
Liepnitzsee, Wandlitz, Brandenburg
Der zum Wandlitzer Seengebiet gehörende Liepnitzsee liegt acht Kilometer nördlich der Berliner Stadtgrenze auf dem Gebiet der Stadt Bernau bei Berlin und der Gemeinde Wandlitz und ist einer der saubersten Seen in Brandenburg. Der See füllt eine aufgegabelte Glaziale Rinne, die über das Grundmoränenplateau des Barnim verläuft. Der See ist eine Hinterlassenschaft der Weichseleiszeit und liegt in einer Rinne, die von bis zu 30 Meter hohen Endmoränen umgeben ist. Seine größte Ausdehnung erreicht der See in Ost-West-Richtung. In seiner Mitte liegt die Insel Großer Werder. An seinem Ufer standen die Landhäuser früherer hoher DDR-Politiker und lange war der See ein Gehimtipp für Naturliebhaber.
The Liepnitzsee, part of the Wandlitzer Seengebiet, is located eight kilometers north of the Berlin city limits in the area of the city of Bernau near Berlin and the municipality of Wandlitz and is one of the cleanest lakes in Brandenburg. The lake fills a forked glacial trough that runs across the Barnim basement plateau. The lake is a legacy of the Vistula ice age and lies in a channel surrounded by end moraines up to 30 meters high. The lake reaches its greatest extent in an east-west direction. In the middle is the island of Großer Werder. The country houses of former high GDR politicians stood on its banks, and for a long time the lake was a tip for nature lovers.
In front of my kitchen window, my little friend wishes you a nice Sunday with my favorite singer...........)))))
listen:
Sunday Morning Coming Down · Kris Kristofferson
Well, I woke up Sunday morning
With no way to hold my head that didn't hurt
And the beer I had for breakfast wasn't bad
So I had one more for dessert
Then I fumbled through my closet for my clothes
And found my cleanest dirty shirt
And I washed my face and combed my hair
And stumbled down the stairs to meet the day
I'd smoked my brain the night before
On cigarettes and songs that I'd been pickin'
But I lit my first and watched a small kid
Cussin' at a can that he was kicking.......
Utah Railway's RUT611 local, the Provo to Ogden turn, navigates the Jordan Narrows on former Rio Grande rails the afternoon of Sept. 26, 2007. In the background is Point of the Mountain, a massive sandbar that features some of the 'cleanest' sand in the United States, meaning it requires very little refinement or processing to be commercially useable.
Here's a shot from my trip to the North Country (parts of NH north of the White Mountains) at the begninning of autumn. Lake Umbagog really stands out in my mind: It's some of clearest/ cleanest water I've come across anywhere. It was just so peaceful and relaxing, you can almost feel the outside world melting away :) temporarily.
Works best when viewed in large.
Explored ( Aug 16, 2010 #296 )
Fishing under the sunlight !
These two persons in the picture are my best friends, the name of the guy on the left is "Ali Harakat" and for the Guy on the right is "Ismail El-Ghoudi".
On that day we spent a very nice times in one of the most cleanest and beautiful sea in Libya
Al-Maya, Libya !
Devil’s Lake is another lake along the Cascade Lakes Scenic Byway, just outside of Bend, Oregon.
The emerald waters of Devils Lake, a popular picnic and camping spot that treats visitors to an eerie optical illusion: crystal clear water and a shallow white pumice bottom make it seem as if boats on the surface are floating in midair.
Devil’s Lake is comprised of glacial water from glaciers up the mountains nearby. Glacial water is some of the cleanest and purest water on earth – hence the color of this beautiful, Caribbean-looking lake.
Being located right off the byway, it’s not hard to miss. We simply pulled our car over, walked out, and there it is. It is one of the smallest of the Cascade Lakes, so it’s easy to see the whole of it. The higher we were above the lake, the greener it looked, and the closer we got, the clearer it looked.
It's been a few months, so a much needed day of solitude at Sully Springs was in order. I was happy to see that traffic on the line seems so have picked up since the last time I was down. It seems that BNSF may be getting power strapped again, as two of the coal trains I saw this day had SD70M leaders.
Coal loads snake through one of the numerous curves of the North Dakota badlands on a gorgeous winter morning. Perhaps the cleanest H2 SD70M I've seen in my life is leading the train, with a GP rebuild tagging along as well.
I liked the middle tree’s shadow as a dividing line between the two sides of the frame. On the left close up details, on the right how the light works around the tree. No focus brackets here just f16. I did exposure bracket 5 frames with an exposure compensation of -2. -6,-4,-2,0,+2 This allowed me to keep highlight colors otherwise they would be lost. ISO was 800 because of how dark it was. One last tip always DeNoise in Lightroom if your wanting the cleanest image possible. Helps clean up, noise, color bleeding and bring out colors better.
My cleanest tintype up to now. I polished the surface just a bit before varnishing, which makes the highlights a tad brighter. The polishing marks however are visible.
Miami (/maɪˈæmi/; Spanish pronunciation: [miˈami]) is a seaport city at the southeastern corner of the U.S. state of Florida and its Atlantic coast. As the seat of Miami-Dade County, the municipality is the principal, central, and the most populous city of the Miami metropolitan area and part of the second-most populous metropolis in the southeastern United States.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Miami's metro area is the eighth-most populous and fourth-largest urban area in the U.S., with a population of around 5.5 million.
Miami is a major center, and a leader in finance, commerce, culture, media, entertainment, the arts, and international trade. In 2012, Miami was classified as an Alpha−World City in the World Cities Study Group's inventory. In 2010, Miami ranked seventh in the United States in terms of finance, commerce, culture, entertainment, fashion, education, and other sectors. It ranked 33rd among global cities. In 2008, Forbes magazine ranked Miami "America's Cleanest City", for its year-round good air quality, vast green spaces, clean drinking water, clean streets, and citywide recycling programs.
According to a 2009 UBS study of 73 world cities, Miami was ranked as the richest city in the United States, and the world's fifth-richest city in terms of purchasing power. Miami is nicknamed the "Capital of Latin America" and is the largest city with a Cuban-American plurality.
Miami has the third tallest skyline in the U.S. with over 300 high-rises. Downtown Miami is home to the largest concentration of international banks in the United States, and many large national and international companies. The Civic Center is a major center for hospitals, research institutes, medical centers, and biotechnology industries.
For more than two decades, the Port of Miami, known as the "Cruise Capital of the World", has been the number one cruise passenger port in the world. It accommodates some of the world's largest cruise ships and operations, and is the busiest port in both passenger traffic and cruise lines.
Metropolitan Miami is the major tourism hub in the American South, number two in the U.S. after New York City and number 13 in the world, including the popular destination of Miami Beach.
Credit for the data above is given to the following website:
Ash-throated Flycatchers nest in the southwestern states of the US. We do have the cleanest air and the bluest skies here in the Davis Mountains of West Texas.
I may never take another bird photo after this year!!!
For my ongoing bird-a-day project for 2017.
NYC water does not come from the Hudson or the East River. It is piped in via aqueducts from the Catskills in Upstate New York and is some of the cleanest municipal drinking water in the country.
During 2022, I've been a little obsessed with this tilt and pan lightpainting technique.
This is maybe the cleanest result I got so far. Basically the shot involves tilting the camera to a pre-determined angle and filling the background lighting with flash and smoke. Then, at the end of the exposure, the model turns on the flashlight while I simultaneously pan the camera across the frame.
The trick is to stop the panning so the light ends within the frame. It's a two handed job and you have to be quick with the lens cap!
The cleanest ACe on UP's roster rolls northward at Belt Jct in north Houston with a train of pellet hoppers and tank cars.
MAGSP 12 (Manifest- Angleton to Spring, TX)
UP SD70ACe #8447
UP C45AH #2599
Houston, TX
March 12th, 2022
This shot was taken earlier this year. Reddish are certainly my favorite of the waders. When they are feeding, they run, dance over the water, just barely fly over it, pop into the air, use their wings to for shade it to spot their prey, do what we call shake and bakes, shaking their feathers all over. In sum, they are fun to watch. My bucket list is to observe a young juvenile, which surprises me that I’ve never seen. If anyone can point me in the right direction, I’d be very grateful. This guy was fishing this area of a lagoon and spotted what looks like a ballyhoo to me, and the chase was on. Typically, Reddish catch their prey but this little fish got away. Nice of it to show itself. (Reddish Egret – Egretta rufescens) (Sony a1, 200-600 lens @ 600mm, 1/4000 second, f/6.3, ISO 640) (Brief technical note: If anyone wonders why the aperture you often see in my images with this lens is f/6.3, it’s because this is its maximum aperture once you’ve zoomed out a bit. I pretty much live with this lens at f/6.3 unless there is a specific need for a wider depth of field. The ISO 640 is what I treat as my base ISO for fast moving subjects. With the a1, the cleanest ISOs are 100, 500 and 640. I used to use auto ISO about 20% of the time for all but flying birds. But now, because I want to park at a specific ISO, I rarely use it.
Not the cleanest nor the prettiest, but these things are crazy skittish so I'm happy with this one
Susquehanna State Park
Harford County
Maryland
Some days now I have been swimming in a lake close to this place, not the lake you can see on this picture but another lake uphill to the left of the photo. Yesterday someone told me that the lake I have been swimming in has the cleanest water in the area, some kind of water spring that comes from the underground. I really love this place, one of the most beautiful in the neighborhood to where I live.
An overcast afternoon in Austell, GA finds a manifest heading east by the railfan park. Leading is probably the cleanest dash 9 I have ever seen. It was strange to see a dash 9, especially an old paint dash 9, look this clean.
5-20-2023
For today's "MLW Monday" I'll feature Delaware-Lackawanna M630 #3000, lovingly known as "Pinky". Although I understand the some folks at D-L did not appreciate the nickname, to me it was of no harm for it's notoriety. She was a stand alone in the great Alco kingdom of Scranton. This girl has seen the likes of the Pacific Great Eastern. Made it into British Columbia red, whit & blue paint. Went to General Electric and rebuilt as GECX 706 until arriving at Scranton, PA. The 3000 just might be the best running locomotive on the D-L roster. Every time I visit the are she is always out there earning her keep. I don't recall ever seeing her at the shops. Since this photo from several years ago, taken under Interstate 81 at Scranton, she has received the D-L corporate paint. And that paint probably remains as the cleanest of all that have been repainted. A good clean runner to this day. Even today when I see the 3000, I call her Pinky.
There is some prime real estate at Bicheno on Tasmania's east coast. A small population of under 1000 people, and some of the cleanest water in the world. The people who have lived here for years are sitting on gold.
Property values have risen over 20 percent in the last year alone and houses sell before they are even listed (often to foreign investors). This is all being fueled by historically low interest rates and tax breaks (which in Australia we call negative gearing). The problem is that the boom in house prices is happening everywhere, so you sell high here and you pay plenty somewhere else.
With inflation on the rise (though governments are fudging these figures low - the cost of living has gone through the roof), and a market correction on the way - especially in the wake of recent events - it is inevitable interest rates will rise. And what happens then? But sadly, it is harder than ever in history for young people to buy their own house. And who can afford these ocean views? Not me.
"Clean, the cleanest I've been
An end to the tears and the in-between years
And the troubles I've seen
Now that I'm clean, you know what I mean
I've broken my fall, put an end to it all
I've changed my routine now I'm clean..."
Depeche Mode: youtu.be/h1mD-_DKHc0?si=J-_WrWVXsgPpy8ID
Ruins of a medieval fortified church are located above the village of Lúčka, situated at the border of the Slovenské rudohorie mountain range and the national park of Slovenský kras. The village had been known since 1409 as part of the Turňa Castle Estate donated to Pál Besen by King Sigismund.
According to the testimony provided by the local church, however, the village dates back to at least the half of the 13th century. The church itself was built as an early-Gothic church of the Gemer style. In the first half of the 15th century, it was surrounded by a defensive stone wall with a watchtower situated in the front. The small fortress was captured by Jan Jiskra’s troopsand is commonly called the Hussite church by the locals. Only the external walls of the church and the considerably lowered defensive wall with the tower that later on served as a belfry have been preserved up to the present. The quadratic tower used to have two floors in the past, with three windows on the first floor and three loopholes on the ground floor that served to watch the surroundings and to protect the fortress from three sides: the west, the south, and the east. The top of the slope upon which the church was built provided for the natural protection from the north.
The area where the church stands counts among the ecologically cleanest territories in Slovakia. It provides for exceptionally good conditions for recreationin a peaceful natural setting and for short walks in the basin of the Čremošná, to the lake of Lúčka, as well as to the surrounding beech and fir forests. Moreover, the unique natural reserve of Zádielska dolina is located in close distance, lined with plateaux where traces of fortified prehistoric settlements were confirmed by archaeological surveys.
Ruins of a medieval fortified church are located above the village of Lúčka, situated at the border of the Slovenské rudohorie mountain range and the national park of Slovenský kras. The village had been known since 1409 as part of the Turňa Castle Estate donated to Pál Besen by King Sigismund.
According to the testimony provided by the local church, however, the village dates back to at least the half of the 13th century. The church itself was built as an early-Gothic church of the Gemer style. In the first half of the 15th century, it was surrounded by a defensive stone wall with a watchtower situated in the front. The small fortress was captured by Jan Jiskra’s troopsand is commonly called the Hussite church by the locals. Only the external walls of the church and the considerably lowered defensive wall with the tower that later on served as a belfry have been preserved up to the present. The quadratic tower used to have two floors in the past, with three windows on the first floor and three loopholes on the ground floor that served to watch the surroundings and to protect the fortress from three sides: the west, the south, and the east. The top of the slope upon which the church was built provided for the natural protection from the north.
The area where the church stands counts among the ecologically cleanest territories in Slovakia. It provides for exceptionally good conditions for recreationin a peaceful natural setting and for short walks in the basin of the Čremošná, to the lake of Lúčka, as well as to the surrounding beech and fir forests. Moreover, the unique natural reserve of Zádielska dolina is located in close distance, lined with plateaux where traces of fortified prehistoric settlements were confirmed by archaeological surveys.
Miami is a seaport city at the southeastern corner of the U.S. state of Florida and its Atlantic coast. As the seat of Miami-Dade County, the municipality is the principal, central, and the most populous city of the Miami metropolitan area and part of the second-most populous metropolis in the southeastern United States.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Miami's metro area is the eighth-most populous and fourth-largest urban area in the U.S., with a population of around 5.5 million.
Miami is a major center, and a leader in finance, commerce, culture, media, entertainment, the arts, and international trade. In 2012, Miami was classified as an Alpha−World City in the World Cities Study Group's inventory. In 2010, Miami ranked seventh in the United States in terms of finance, commerce, culture, entertainment, fashion, education, and other sectors. It ranked 33rd among global cities. In 2008, Forbes magazine ranked Miami "America's Cleanest City", for its year-round good air quality, vast green spaces, clean drinking water, clean streets, and citywide recycling programs.
According to a 2009 UBS study of 73 world cities, Miami was ranked as the richest city in the United States, and the world's fifth-richest city in terms of purchasing power. Miami is nicknamed the "Capital of Latin America" and is the largest city with a Cuban-American plurality.
Miami has the third tallest skyline in the U.S. with over 300 high-rises. Downtown Miami is home to the largest concentration of international banks in the United States, and many large national and international companies. The Civic Center is a major center for hospitals, research institutes, medical centers, and biotechnology industries.
For more than two decades, the Port of Miami, known as the "Cruise Capital of the World", has been the number one cruise passenger port in the world. It accommodates some of the world's largest cruise ships and operations, and is the busiest port in both passenger traffic and cruise lines.
Metropolitan Miami is the major tourism hub in the American South, number two in the U.S. after New York City and number 13 in the world, including the popular destination of Miami Beach.
Credit for the data above is given to the following websites:
CM3315, CM3312 and CM3310 roll through Glenfield as they head for Inner Harbour via Sydney as 3966 from Naradhan.
Since their name change in March 2021, the former CFCLA fleet has been changed to their new branding of "RF" or Rail First Asset Management. Both the front and third locomotive have received this treatment, while the middle unit has been stripped of its logos and is awaiting its rebranding.
Thursday 14th August 2021
"Just one hour north of Brisbane, located between Caloundra and Maroochydore, are the calm waters and golden sands of Currimundi Lake which connect to the ocean at Currimundi surf beach.
Currimundi was named by Sir Leslie Wilson, using the local aboriginal name for the area, Garrimundi or Girrimundi, meaning 'Place of flying foxes'. Winner of "Queensland's Cleanest Beach" award in 2004, Currimundi is certainly a gem in the crown of glorious beach areas in the Sunshine Coast region. Doubly blessed with a natural lake connected to a long and unspoilt stretch of beautiful surf beach."
I came across this small heard of impala whilst driving around the Tembe Elephant Reserve. They really are the most beautiful examples of antelope. They have combe like teeth that they use to groom themselves and each other with! They are generally regarded as the 'cleanest' examples of their species. But more than that they are incredibly photogenic! I think this image is proof of that. Enjoy!
a nice Sunday visit in front of the kitchen window:
Kris Kristofferson - Sunday morning coming down
Well, I woke up Sunday morning
With no way to hold my head that didn't hurt
And the beer I had for breakfast wasn't bad
So I had one more for dessert
Then I fumbled through my closet for my clothes
And found my cleanest dirty shirt
And I washed my face and combed my hair
And stumbled down the stairs to meet the day
I'd smoked my brain the night before
On cigarettes and songs that I'd been pickin'
But I lit my first and watched a small kid
Cussin' at a can that he was kicking...........
2011-07-03 6036-L1T3
Here is one from the archives, This was taken July 3, 2011. I have been looking back at when I started taking photos of the eagles and how much my photography has changed with them. This was taken during the first few times that I went to the Ravines. This was taken with my first camera on this photography journey of mine a Canon T1i....how things have changed. So it is not the sharpest and cleanest of shots but it does mark the beginning of my love for these birds.
This upcoming summer marks 10 years since I have been photographing this pair of Bald Eagles at the Ravines park. I have seen about 20 eaglets born and 4 different nest. Some people have suggested that I create a book about the Ravines and the Eagles that reside there. That got me thinking how long has it been since I started shooting these Eagles.
Maybe I will have to look into that book thing......
On the path that leads to nowhere, I have sometimes found my soul.
-- Corinne Roosevelt Robinson
While visiting Big Sky Montana back in 2015 we were told by a park ranger at Yellowstone NP where the grizzly bears were taken if they became too curious with or had interactions with stupid people doing stupid things in the park. Having seen and photographed my first Black bear in the park the day before…in a crowd of 50 other tourists’ shoulder to shoulder, my desire to see and capture a grizzly was off the charts!
The next morning a friend and I jumped in the car and headed to the truly in the middle of nowhere location provided by the ranger. For miles and miles, there were no fences, power lines, chem trails…no sign at all of what time period we were in. The timing of our quest was perfect as an early morning passing shower ignited a faint sweet smell to the cleanest of air…truly heaven on earth! The granting of a double rainbow was just sensory overload!
Looking down into the stream below, I noticed a beautiful granite bolder just below the surface of the storm’s runoff. In an example set by my mother since childhood, I climbed in and collected the rock to take home to provide a physical piece to the memory of a special place and time.
Today this rock is in our yard. Even though it’s been 10 years, I can still smell that sweet Montana post storm, morning air every time I see it.
Un autre lac se trouve à proximité de la baie Borromée, comme une version en miniature du Lac Majeur: le Lago di Mergozzo. La ville du même nom se trouve à l’ouest du lac, À l’origine relié au Lac Majeur, le Lago di Mergozzo en a été séparé au 9ème siècle, à cause des alluvions du Toce. C’est en raison de cette séparation qu’il jouit d’une température nettement plus élevée que celle du Lac Majeur. En outre, il est considéré comme l’un des lacs les plus propres de l’Italie du Nord. Mergozzo, qui se trouvait autrefois sur une ancienne route commerçante reliant l’Italie au Valais en passant par le Col du Simplon, a bien su conserver sa structure médiévale. Aujourd’hui, ce sont ses ruelles étroites qui séduisent, tout comme ses églises et la simplicité de ses maisons, qui donnent l’impression que le temps s’est arrêté. La promenade le long du lac, particulièrement belle et bien entretenue, invite au calme et à la relaxation.
Another lake is located near the Borromeo Bay, like a miniature version of Lake Maggiore: Lago di Mergozzo. The town of the same name is located to the west of the lake. Originally connected to Lake Maggiore, Lago di Mergozzo was separated from it in the 9th century, due to the alluvium of the Toce. It is because of this separation that it enjoys a significantly higher temperature than that of Lake Maggiore. In addition, it is considered one of the cleanest lakes in Northern Italy. Mergozzo, which was once located on an ancient trading route linking Italy to Valais via the Col du Simplon, has managed to preserve its medieval structure. Today, it is its narrow streets that seduce, just like its churches and the simplicity of its houses, which give the impression that time has stood still.
Not the cleanest background, but I just adore the backlit effect on this woodpecker. Just a beautiful bird to watch!
Looks like I forgot to post to Flickr for over a month. Not gonna lie, I've been pretty lazy about it. Don't worry, you've not missed out on much. But yeah, I'll hopefully be posting more soon, and I'll probably have more figures done as well.
So here are some figs I've been working on.
Left to right:
Tracer: Fully sculpted, painted (except for the face), yata yata yata.
The Ruler of Everything: From Tally Hall's song of the same name.
Zimbabwe Songbird (Red): From Tally Hall's Banana Man song.
Captain Marvel: Probably my cleanest paintjob to date.
Walter Mitty: From The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. Not much of a fig, just a quicky.
AIM Agent: Fully sculpted helmet. Nothing special.
(NO PHOTOSHOP!)
Cyprus has the cleanest bathing water in Europe
www.youtube.com/watch?v=nfvAH4kyEZw&list=RDnfvAH4kyEZ...
Thalassa (Sea)
Song by Thanos Mikroutsikos
Lyrics: Lina Nikolakopoulou
Performed by Milva
CN A439 is pounding the diamond at Ringold on a brisk winter afternoon. A439 usually returns to Windsor under the cover of darkness from London, however occasionally there can be delays and the return trip happens the following day instead. This particular outing it worked out that 439 had a nice pair of SD75Is with the leader being the cleanest of the two. See my recent VIA 72 post for the history/set up of how this interlocking works between CN/VIA and CP.
www.flickr.com/photos/130272127@N07/54766167718/in/datepo...
Train: CN A439 with CN 5746 (SD75I) and CN 5633 (SD75I).
VIA Chatham Subdivision
Chatham, ON
This is what it looks like to walk through a Redwood fern forest. The cleanest smell you've ever experienced.
With a pair of the cleanest units on the CP/CPKC roster, an empty grain train from Mexico approaches Chaney Jct just west of Downtown Houston. This train was the first to cross CPKC's new Ottensmeyer Bridge at Laredo after the ribbon-cutting ceremony on February 6th.
These two Tier 4 ES44's are part of a set of eight ex-Baffinland Mining units CPKC purchased in 2024. The locomotives were built as Tier 4 demo units for GE/Wabtec and had been leased & repainted for Baffinland Iron Mines for a new railroad to be built on Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada. However, due to project delays the mine opted to end their lease of the locomotives and GE then sold them to CPKC.
CP 7432 was built as GECX 2030 in December 2014 and became BIMR 7003 before being sold to CPKC in 2024.
CP 7437 was built as GECX 2022 in April 2013 and became BIMR 7008 before being sold to CPKC in 2024.
G391 005 05
CP ET44AC #7432
CP ET44AC #7437
Houston, TX
February 9th, 2025