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The Red Sea is one of the cleanest seas on the planet and recreation on the Red Sea is considered one of the best for many years. A feature of the Red Sea is that it does not fall into the river, allowing the sea water to be clean and clear. The Red Sea is the warmest sea in the world: the water temperature can reach 27-28 degrees.

The Red Sea will be the great place for you to spend your vacation, let us make your wonderful trip…

 

البحر الاحمر هو واحد من انقي البحار علي الكوكب يعتبر من الافضل للعديد من السنوات. من مميزات البحر الاحمر انه لا يقع في النهر مما يسمح لمياه البحر ان تكون نظيفة و صافية. كما انه ادفئ البحار علي مستوي العالم فتصل حراره المياه الي 27-28 درجة .

البحر الاحمر سوف يكون مكان عظيم لتقضية عطلتك, دعنا ننشئ رحلتك الرائعة.

 

For more information about Giftun Island tours or other sea tours, you can contact us: Website: giftunisland.com/

Mobile: (+20) 1144044035

Provides the cleanest section of the outcrop (middle to upper Waynesville Formation)

Easily the cleanest loco (for now!) on the RHTT circuits the return Clacton - Colchester leg heads towards stormy skies showing more rain on the way.

From forward, looking aft. This is the cleanest nose gear well you'll EVER see- its in the partial 737 fuselage at the Museum of Flight! Best lit too. Thank you, Boeing, Museum of Flight, and everyone who made this possible. If your model 737 "Classic" looks like this, you did it right. :^)

 

101-0153_IMG

Grace M, 7 - Massachusetts

 

"I love to clean floors so my favorite socks don’t get brown and dirty on the bottoms. My tidy tip is to keep a throw rug by the front door to wipe your feet on when you come in the house. My job is to shake the little rugs outside and then vacuum them!”

sometimes they're the cheapest/cleanest places to stay.

BC is gearing up to have world's cleanest LNG facilities as noted in new legislation introduced today by Environment Minister Mary Polak.

 

Having the world’s cleanest LNG facilities means protecting the air and water in BC, which is why Premier Christy Clark made this a priority for the minister’s mandate and why meeting this commitment today is so important.

 

READ MORE: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2014/10/bc-to-have-worlds-cleanest...

Dragišnica, July 30th 2017.

 

CAN NATURE SOOTH away our pain and sorrow for us? Can just watching the cleanest of the clean waters cascade through the woods, ooze our grievances over the loss of dear ones? We stopped for a meal here and roasted bacon over the charcoal for the convenience. This 1-day hike was quieter than usually because a close friend had passed away.

 

Below Boljske Grede (2091 m), among the primaeval forests overlooking the gorge, playfully flows Dragišnica, one of the jewels to be treasured. This is one of the most desolate areas of Durmitor National Park in Crna Gora, Europe. Still surprisingly accessible, with good roads and trails along both sides of the Bolj ridge. It's a nature heritage I would like to keep only to myself and a few of my friends, lifelong, but can't really deprive you from at least seeing a few scenes from there.

 

Captured by Panasonic GM1 with kit lens, lightly edited, uncropped out-of-the-camera jpeg.

What had ignited last evening's odyssey was a brilliant, late-afternoon stroll through the 3 pagodas (sic) park. It would either make or break my trip, a previous traveler had warned, and I accepted the challenge for the former to result.

 

The three pagodas after which the park is named are only a trifle of an attraction within a huge, meticulously cultivated compound. It is the quintessential Chinese cultural amusement, combining one part real antiquity with three parts contrived historical authenticity. Much to my chagrin, man of the religious edifices on which the park's current crop of structures are modeled were either destroyed by natural disasters or ruined by "historical wars", namely the Cultural Revolution. Regardless, the refurbished pagodas and their entourage of reconstructed temples hold their own in vying for tourist dollars in Dali's ferociously competitive market.

 

I spent a bank-breaking $121RMB - the cost of a one way bus fare between Kunming and Dali - to enter the attraction and the money was well spent. Not only are there acres and acres of picturesque gardens and prodigious temples which provided plenty of opportunities for me to practice my photography, but the park also has what I consider to be the most immaculate toilets in China (as well it should since the high entrance fee guarantees gleaming facilities, as well as a scant number of visitors who can afford to pay the price to use those sparkling restrooms). Dirty China, this is not! To boot, all of the facilities and attractions are spaced out on the park's massive grid. I had an outstanding workout walking the mile or so from the park's entrance to its rear where the tower overlooking Erhai lake and the mountain is situated...

Copenhageners swim, but Nina and I jump, into the cleanest harbour in the world.

What's great about Europe is that nobody minds you changing in public; women are topless sunbathing; and some people just swim in their underwear. (like Nina and Afton)

 

[For the full story visit michaelfuller.ca | Follow me on Twitter or Facebook | Photo-adventures and philosophies in your inbox]

Jesse Seymour's Mk1 VW GTI VR6 on BBS RS Wheels is one of the cleanest around, despite a little rain. Click here to read the full article!

 

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Henry has to be the cleanest little chipmunk I have ever seen, this is the 5th time I have seen him wash himself today!!!!

 

Look at how full his cheeks are, it is a wonder the seeds didn't come flying out when he washed his face!

The cleanest I've been

An end to the tears

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

I don't understand

What destiny's planned

I'm starting to grasp

What is in my own hands

I don't claim to know

Where my holiness goes

I just know that I like

What is starting to show

Sometimes ...

Clean ...

As years go by

All the feelings inside

Twist and the turn

As they ride with the tide

I don't advice

And I don't criticize

I just know what like

With my own eyes

Sometimes

Clean

Sometimes

 

(c) Depeche Mode

Not the cleanest shot but the closest I've come to catching one out in the open.

Kyle Johnson with a sick ollie over the Hydrant.

The cleanest looking, and I don't remember but it also might be the only land.

 

Again, with the dual picture thing, and I even like this one a little better than the other one.

 

strobist info: vivitar 285HV at 1/16 camera left

One of the cleanest vwb's I have ever seen. This Jetta was tricked out by the crew at kindigit design in salt lake a few years ago and I had the chance to take some photo's for them for the web site. They put out some of the finnest cars around. If you want your ride done right you need to check them out.

This has to be one of the cleanest and most hidden beaches in Senegal!

This is probably the cleanest shot I have gotten of the Los Angeles city skyline. I picked the right night to go out and shoot this and I love how sharp this shot is.

I think this is the cleanest it will ever get!

the cleanest in the yard mines still the cleanest lol

This was the cleanest Plymouth Gran Fury I've seen in years. I wish the BK wasn't so busy. I would have liked to have checked it out better.

This is the cleanest 'classic' tractor with a cab that I have ever seen. There is no scuff marks not even on the clutch pedal or rear linkage.

The art work was slightly different to this reprint, but it still makes me very nostalgic to think of them, Ban the Bombs were the strongest cleanest acid I have ever had the pleasure to sample, never had acid like it since. At the same time I also remember Red yin yang's, good but nowhere near as strong, cut along Teletubbies, pretty tame but still good fun, and Red Dragons which were pretty shit. those were the days!

  

[Hello and thank you for checking out my photographs, I would like to build up an archive of vintage blotter from as far back as I can, but vintage blotter tabs aren’t the easiest of things to come across, so I need your help, if anyone has the odd tab or two that’s been kept from years ago, I’m only interested in single or a couple of tabs and not whole sheets, I would like to purchase or even lend these from you, if you don’t want to sell I will post them back to you once I have photographed them, I will also send you a packet or two of any poppy seeds that I have available. I know this is a long shot but I think that it is still worth trying; remembering I am only interested in vintage blotter, thank you for your time!]

   

One of the cleanest and least holey short row techniques I've used so far. The short rows on the side where the slipped stitches are work from the right side of the fabric.

 

blog.designedlykristi.com/?p=495

666302 must have been the cleanest loco in the UK on July 18th 2015, as it was being used to demonstrate the loco wash at the DRS Open Day at Kingmoor Depot, Carlisle.

Jesse Seymour's Mk1 VW GTI VR6 on BBS RS Wheels is one of the cleanest around, despite a little rain. Click here to read the full article!

 

To order a custom 2x4' photo banner of this image, please note the title and number and Click Here!

 

Check out our Cars & Cameras Closed Photography Group on Facebook!

 

More Than More

Sam Dobbins Instagram (@iamsamdobbins)

MTM Instagram (@morethanmoreusa)

MTM Facebook

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Jesse Seymour's Mk1 VW GTI VR6 on BBS RS Wheels is one of the cleanest around, despite a little rain. Click here to read the full article!

 

To order a custom 2x4' photo banner of this image, please note the title and number and Click Here!

 

Check out our Cars & Cameras Closed Photography Group on Facebook!

 

More Than More

Sam Dobbins Instagram (@iamsamdobbins)

MTM Instagram (@morethanmoreusa)

MTM Facebook

Cars & Cameras Facebook Photography Group

Probably the cleanest 1960 Crown you'll ever see.

 

Privately owned AD-743-11.

Every recognized city has one.

 

Singapore's chinatown probably is the cleanest one I've seen though.

When I was a councillor I had a bit of a spat with the Lib Dems about the logo on the high visibility jackets that the council's street sweepers wear. (I know what you're thinking, "It that sort of arguement that gives politics its current high standing in the public mind.")

 

They said they would take the council to the local government ombudsman unless it stopped using the "cleanest streets in London" logo. But as so often with them they didn't deliver.

 

Anyway I'm sure they'll be delighted that Lewisham is one of the finalists of the British Cleaning Council's Clean Britain Awards:

 

"The search for the most spotless area in the UK has now entered its final stages with today's announcement of the Clean Britain Awards finalists.

 

"Ten cities, five districts and two boroughs were judged the best examples of clean and tidy UK destinations from a competitive list of entrants to the British Cleaning Council competition. "

 

I hope and expect the logo to change to "cleanest streets in Britain" as a result.

The cleanest 86 at the show! Even the undercarriage and chassis was spotless!

With one of the cleanest paintjobs you'll see

 

Bagshot Breakfast Meet - Sunday, 9th. April 2023

It's now become part of our travelling calendar - we go on a city break for Jayne’s birthday in January - no presents for birthday's and Christmas, we travel instead. This year it was Seville. We had to drive 180 miles south to Stansted to fly there though, Friday afternoon on the A1, such fun... It was a really good drive down in actual fact, the best day for months, glorious blue sky and a fantastic sunset- and I was in a car. We got stung for tea and drinks in the Radison Blu but we were overnighting and leaving the car so we didn't have much choice. Ryanair aagh! Again no choice. To be fair to the abrasive Irish man O Leary things are better than they used to be and it was an acceptable flight.

 

We were hoping for better weather than we got- don't you always? It was. cold, windy and after some initial beautiful sun on our first afternoon, it was mostly grey. The wind died but so did the sun. The other little problem was that it was my turn for the awful cold that Jayne had been trying to get over. I was under the weather in more ways than one all week, it was only a cold but it was the worst I've had for ages and it didn't help my mood, particularly when the sun was absent. We had a few hours of really nice light here and there and I made the most of it - I think!

 

Seville has miles and miles of narrow cobbled streets, they seem to go on for ever. They are almost random in layout and it is extremely difficult to find your way around, it's easier to just keep walking and see what you find. So we did! The architecture is stunning and the history is fascinating. Aside from the ancient history the two events that seem to have had a massive recent influence are the Expo's of 1929 and 1992. The incredible buildings or 'Pavilions' that were built for a one off event are now part of the reason that people visit the city. The 1929 pavilions are fantastic, each one is a story in itself and a destination in its own right but there are a lot of them in Parque Maria Luisa. Plaza Espana, built by the hosts of course, is the biggest and I would imagine that you could make a project out of photographing the individual ceramic tile displays around it on their own. These incredible buildings really need the light to be right to get images that people want to see, flat bright light from bright grey skies is good for certain things but dramatic architecture deserves better - or maybe I'm looking for the easy way option. The other discovery that we made, we found just down the road from the hotel, about an hour into the trip – The Metropol Parasol. A giant lattice work parasol, apparently called ‘The Mushrooms’ locally and apparently the world’s largest wooden structure. You have to look twice, having discovered that it is wood. Only later did we discover that we could get to the top and there is an extensive walkway around the top of it. It is built on top of ancient ruins, ( still intact and viewable) a food market and bars etc. and has a plaza around it and on it, that is buzzing on weekend evenings. Walking around the top, the first people up it one day and being back to watch the sunset later was one of the highlights of the trip for me.

 

The 1992 Expo also covered a massive area but left behind lots of modern - and some very strange - buildings and arenas. Some are of a temporary nature and get dismantled others find a new use. The land used was on an island between two branches of the River Guadalquivir – Isla de la Cartuja. The branch that goes through the city is now a canal, blocked at its northern end by a barrier with a motorway on it, and is used extensively for water sports, mainly rowing. Many of the buildings are now used by private companies as headquarters , others have a very derelict look. The whole area- even though it is home to the theme park- which was shut for the winter, has a neglected air about it. There are weeds growing everywhere but fountains are switched on, which seemed odd. Unlike the city a short distance away, there are no cafes or bars or other people around for that matter, just us meandering through. The car park that was created for the event is massive, it stretches for miles, and I really mean miles. Totally derelict, just the odd person or dog walker around. There is even a railway line terminating here, in the middle of nowhere a modern and apparently unmanned station, like a ghost station. At this point, across the river proper is open countryside, much flatter than I expected and very easy for local walkers and cyclists to get to - also very calm and quiet, a place to linger and enjoy the peace.

 

As usual I researched and discovered as we walked, we averaged around 13 miles a day and tried to get off the beaten track. We were out around 8.15, before sunrise, and had orange juice, coffee and Tostada with the locals for breakfast. The trouble is that there are many miles of walking in a relatively small area, some streets are only a few feet wide so there are a lot of them to explore. Incredible ancient churches and squares are around every corner- it's a very religious place - Catholicism rules in Spain. Unfortunately many are only a few feet away from the building next to it and it is difficult to get a decent shot of them. Seville is also famous, historically, as a producer of ceramic tiles. A building isn’t complete without a tile display of some sort and it would be very easy to make a project out of tiles alone. It may be a little boring for any companions though!

 

We walked the length of the embankment a couple of times, it has graffiti from end to end, several miles of massive concrete walls covered in everything imaginable, from marker pen scribbling to works of art. It was suggested to me that allowing people to paint here might prevent them from daubing property and monuments in the city- it hasn't! Most alleyways and shutters have been attacked to a greater or lesser degree. Spain has very high youth unemployment and maybe this plays a role. To be truthful though we haven't seen a city that's free of graffiti. The other problem is dogs- or what they produce, it's everywhere, absolutely everywhere, in a week we saw only one person remove his dogs mess. Fortunately the city streets are cleaned exceptionally well, some of the cleanest we have come across, men (and a lot of women) and machines are washing and sweeping endlessly.

 

Having had the wettest winter on record at home - almost three months of rain - we didn't want more rain but we got it. The upside was the water and the reflections that it created made photography on the cobbled streets more interesting, particularly at night. I usually find that it takes me a while to get into the groove on a trip and this one was no different, I didn't start shooting with total disregard - street shots- for a couple of days. Whilst the locals wore quilted jackets and scarves we got down to tee shirts at times, the warmer afternoons would be welcome in summer, never mind January, in Huddersfield. I envied the cyclists, being able to train in temperatures like this in winter - I wish! You need a lot less willpower to get out there and train hard in pleasant weather.

 

From a photography point of view I had a frustrating time, I never felt to get to grips with the place- other than on the streets at night. Writing this on my phone on the flight home, I haven't a clue what I've got to work with when I get back. I usually edit first and write later. Generally I have a first look, I'm disillusioned, I then revisit and see things differently- thankfully! Architectural shots with a grey sky could be destined for the monochrome treatment, we'll soon see. I'm still editing stuff from our London trip before Christmas, it's getting decent views in black and white and I quite enjoy looking at them myself.

We visited most of the notable tourist destinations, and went up anything that we could. Seville doesn't have a high point-it's flat! Nothing really stands head and shoulders above the city. The Cathedral tower is over 300 feet but the Cathedral itself fills a lot of the view on some aspects. Being square and having to look through bars in recesses you don't really get a completely open aspect. A new 600 foot tower is close to being finished, it's an office block and I couldn't find any mention of it being a viewing point in the future.

 

Oranges were the last thing on my mind when I suggested going to Seville. There are 25000 orange trees in Seville and now is the time that they are laden with big-and sour- Seville oranges, they are everywhere, apparently they are the property of the city authorities and will be harvested and sent to the UK to be made in to marmalade at some point in the near future. These trees will soon be covered in fragrant blossom, the city will smell beautiful for a couple of months. Studying the surrounding area it would be good to tour in March or April I would think, the scents, longer days and better weather would make for a fantastic trip. One for the future. The sunrise on our final morning was the best of the week, this was what we had looked forward to, we had to leave for the airport at 9.00...... Needless to say it was raining hard as we drove the last twenty miles home. Nothing new there then.

 

As usual I have aimed to present a pretty extensive collection of photographs of our chosen destination, some, at first glance will be pretty mundane shots of everyday life on the streets, often though, close inspection will reveal something humorous, something that needs a bit of thought. Others are definitely just people going about their holiday or work. Travelling with someone else it wouldn’t be fair to spend an inordinate amount of time trying to nail the perfect long exposure or HDR image of a cathedral or similar in perfect light – the one stunning shot to add to the portfolio- it’s not really my thing, I go for an overview of the place in the time available. Looking at the postcards locally it becomes obvious that stunning shots of some of these buildings are hard to come by. Heavily corrected converging verticals were quite obvious – and most likely will be in my own shots. As the owner of tilt and shift lenses I never travel with one – ever! My knees are already creaking from the weight of the bag.

   

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Seville January 2016

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This is the cleanest I will be all day.

19/12/14

not the cleanest view that I have through them....

BC is gearing up to have world's cleanest LNG facilities as noted in new legislation introduced by Environment Minister Mary Polak.

 

Having the world’s cleanest LNG facilities means protecting the air and water in BC, which is why Premier Christy Clark made this a priority for the minister’s mandate and why meeting this commitment today is so important.

 

READ MORE: www.newsroom.gov.bc.ca/2014/10/bc-to-have-worlds-cleanest...

We're moving tomorrow! So we're packing everything up now. This is my desk with everything but basic computing functionality removed.

 

(Not pictured: External hard drives, TonePort audio interface/guitar amp sim, speakers, headphones, guitars, Axiom MIDI keyboard, iPhone, USB hub [currently not used]... and a mound of papers.)

All back on board before departure from Limassol.

One of the cleanest Lightnings I've seen; F.6 XS899 returns on Binbrook's runway 03 after live firing on a towed banner with XR763, Tuesday 24th July 1984. Banner towing was courtesy of a 100 Sqn Canberra.

The cleanest water I have ever seen in my life!! This is the sea, and not a swimming pool!

By May 1940, the Nazi occupation authority announced that Kraków should become the "cleanest" city in the General Government, an occupied, but unannexed part of Poland. Massive deportation of Jews from the city were ordered. Of the more than 68,000 Jews in Kraków when the Germans invaded, only 15,000 workers and their families were permitted to remain. All other Jews were ordered out of the city, to be resettled into surrounding rural areas.

Arched entrance to Kraków Ghetto, about 1941.

 

The Kraków Ghetto was formally established on March 3, 1941 in the Podgórze district, not in the Jewish district of Kazimierz. Displaced Polish families from Podgórze took up residences in the former Jewish dwellings outside the newly established Ghetto. Meanwhile, 15,000 Jews were crammed into an area previously inhabited by 3,000 people who used to live in a district consisting of 30 streets, 320 residential buildings, and 3,167 rooms. As a result, one apartment was allocated to every four Jewish families, and many less fortunate lived on the street.

 

The Ghetto was surrounded by walls that kept it separated from the rest of the city. All windows and doors that gave onto the "Aryan" side were ordered bricked up. Only four guarded entrances allowed traffic to pass through. In a grim foreshadowing of the near future, these walls contained panels in the shape of tombstones. Small sections of the wall still remain today.

 

Young people of the Akiva youth movement, who had undertaken the publication of an underground newsletter, HeHaluc HaLohem ("The Fighting Pioneer"), joined forces with other Zionists to form a local branch of the Jewish Fighting Organization (ŻOB, Polish: Żydowska Organizacja Bojowa), and organize resistance in the ghetto, supported by the Polish underground Armia Krajowa. The group carried out a variety of resistance activities including the bombing of the Cyganeria cafe, a gathering place of Nazi officers. Unlike in Warsaw, their efforts did not lead to a general uprising before the ghetto was liquidated.

Bundles abandoned by Jewish deportees from the Kraków Ghetto, March 1943

 

From May 30, 1942 onward, the Nazis implemented systematic deportations from the Ghetto to surrounding concentration camps. Thousands of Jews were transported in the succeeding months as part of the Aktion Krakau headed by SS-Oberführer Julian Scherner. Jews were assembled on Zgody Square first and then escorted to the railway station in Prokocim. The first transport consisted of 7,000 people, the second, of additional 4,000 Jews deported to Belzec extermination camp on 5 June 1942. On March 13-March 14, 1943 the final 'liquidation' of the ghetto was carried out under the command of SS-Untersturmführer Amon Göth. Eight thousand Jews deemed able to work were transported to the Plaszow labor camp. Those deemed unfit for work – some 2,000 Jews – were killed in the streets of the ghetto on those days. Any remaining were sent to Auschwitz.

cleanest toilet around. It just looks dirty.

Everyone always shows the cleanest of desktops, but mine is a little more busy and open than that. The Black Friday PNY 240GB SSD (€33) in the Stockplop wood plop external USB 3 housing.

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Each device is equipped with an internal cutting edge ASM USB 3.0 controller with UASP support, offering high end performance. Stockplop strives to ensure that you get the speed that SSDs provide. Data transfer rates can reach beyond 400MB/s

 

My first ever edited image in Luminar.

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