View allAll Photos Tagged combine

My hubby took this photo of Table Rock State Park and I applied the tilt shift to it. I love tilt shift!!!!! What do you think?

 

p.s. Tilt shift gives images (or parts of images) a miniature effect. I love to try new things.........mix things up a little. :0)

 

Feel the Effect

Combined two images in a multiple exposure of London. I think the light trails help capture the buzz of London and the fast-paced-energy the city holds.

After combining with the QAEX in Gilberton and holding for the NRFF at EMX, the Mountain Job drifts into Tamaqua to end their day at the yard.

Combine harvester in the field next to Lyveden manor house

Just a picture of this brute machine which farms all the grain. This is realy typicall for the time of the year in France.

This German Built Combine is seen hard at work in a Wheat Field near Patrington in East Yorkshire ..

Having combined their train at Manor Loop as opposed to the normal practice of doing it here at Moorabool Loop, ACD6052 and ACC6032 roll under the Geelong Ring Road at Lovely Banks on the 17/6/23 with 7MP1 TGE superfreighter to Kwinana, G535 is out of sight mid-train having bought the second portion down from Victoria Dock.

 

Video available at: youtu.be/5VgdzaHQtLg

Inspired by the combiner mechs like Voltron or Megazord, i decided to build my own with five mecha dragons.

It took me 3 mounth and 3413 LEGO bricks to achieve this 45cm tall mech.

Each dragon's heads is a cockpit where you can fit a minifigure.

 

You can see the transformation in this video : www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNZnmCw0gvY

Inspired by Orrange

Here I tried a different background with the Northern Harrier: She's been moved from Steigerwald NWR to Lake Vancouver.

Colourful Case IH, Combine, Grand Forks, North Dakota.

Nearly finished "before" combine car and an additional tree. Some more landscaping and a few more interior details and the before version will be complete.

The modern combined harvester, or simply combine, is a versatile machine designed to efficiently harvest a variety of grain crops. The name derives from its combining four separate harvesting operations—reaping, threshing, gathering, and winnowing—into a single process. Among the crops harvested with a combine are wheat, rice, oats, rye, barley, corn (maize), sorghum, soybeans, flax (linseed), sunflowers and rapeseed. The separated straw, left lying on the field, comprises the stems and any remaining leaves of the crop with limited nutrients left in it: the straw is then either chopped, spread on the field and ploughed back in or baled for bedding and limited-feed for livestock.

Inspired by the combiner mechs like Voltron or Megazord, i decided to build my own with five mecha dragons.

It took me 3 mounth and 3413 LEGO bricks to achieve this 45cm tall mech.

Each dragon's heads is a cockpit where you can fit a minifigure.

 

You can see the transformation in this video : www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNZnmCw0gvY

Uploading 3 archive Farming shots as such a miserable day again. 2023 has not started off with much brightness. All taken on farms in Norfolk a few years ago

A green John Deere combine harvester moves swiftly through a golden wheat field under a clear sky, harvesting crops and kicking up dust in its wake. In just one hour, it can devour a field... a striking image of modern farming efficiency.

Sony A99, Sigma 150-500 EX HSM

This Massey Ferguson 510 combine looks pretty good for its age, since it is about a half-century old. I don't know if this one is still in use, but a lot of them are. I will see if it is still parked here in a few months after the snow melts.

A super day for combining some sprig barley. Sun and wind giving good drying - and producing nice colours for a photograph. This was a simple handheld shot at f11.0. Iconic farming scene at harvest time, Shot near Comber, County Down, Northern Ireland.

Four different instruments on SOHO show a large CME on Nov. 6, 1997. The sun is at the center, with three coronagraph images of different sizes around it. The streaks of white light are from protons hitting the SOHO cameras producing a snowy effect typical of a significant flare. ..Credit: NASA/SOHO..---..CME WEEK: What To See in CME Images

 

Two main types of explosions occur on the sun: solar flares and coronal mass ejections. Unlike the energy and x-rays produced in a solar flare – which can reach Earth at the speed of light in eight minutes – coronal mass ejections are giant, expanding clouds of solar material that take one to three days to reach Earth. Once at Earth, these ejections, also called CMEs, can impact satellites in space or interfere with radio communications. During CME WEEK from Sept. 22 to 26, 2014, we explore different aspects of these giant eruptions that surge out from the star we live with.

 

When a coronal mass ejection blasts off the sun, scientists rely on instruments called coronagraphs to track their progress. Coronagraphs block out the bright light of the sun, so that the much fainter material in the solar atmosphere -- including CMEs -- can be seen in the surrounding space.

 

CMEs appear in these images as expanding shells of material from the sun's atmosphere -- sometimes a core of colder, solar material (called a filament) from near the sun's surface moves in the center. But mapping out such three-dimensional components from a two-dimensional image isn't easy. Watch the slideshow to find out how scientists interpret what they see in CME pictures.

 

The images in the slideshow are from the three sets of coronagraphs NASA currently has in space. One is on the joint European Space Agency and NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, or SOHO. SOHO launched in 1995, and sits between Earth and the sun about a million miles away from Earth. The other two coronagraphs are on the two spacecraft of the NASA Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO, mission, which launched in 2006. The two STEREO spacecraft are both currently viewing the far side of the sun.

 

Together these instruments help scientists create a three-dimensional model of any CME as its journey unfolds through interplanetary space. Such information can show why a given characteristic of a CME close to the sun might lead to a given effect near Earth, or any other planet in the solar system...NASA image use policy.

NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.

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Combine Harvester and an abandoned farm house, Leader, Saskatchewan

Combined from two exposures: 30s @ f/11 and 55s @ f/11

More harvesting action.

Combined observations from NASA’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) and Hubble’s WFC3 (Wide Field Camera 3) show spiral galaxy NGC 5584, which resides 72 million light-years away from Earth. Among NGC 5584’s glowing stars are pulsating stars called Cepheid variables and Type Ia supernova, a special class of exploding stars. Astronomers use Cepheid variables and Type Ia supernovae as reliable distance markers to measure the universe’s expansion rate.

 

Learn more.

 

Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, and A. Riess (STScI)

 

Wheat harvest is in full swing. A combine harvester on North Beveland.

Some more progress. Adding cables & Combine walls, widened the middle gap to represent the Citadel's 'active' state for a bit more visual interest. Currently planning on a 32x32 base for stability & surrounding landscape.

6MB4 approaches Picton station as the down Canberra/Griffith Explorer passes by, 20/10/2018.

This is a Combine Harvester made by Port Huron Engine and Thresher Company in the early 1900's, to harvest grain crops. It would cut the grain, separate the grain from the stems, retain the grain and eject the chaff and stems. Quite a time and labor saver back in its day! Texture by Leslie Nicole Photography www.flickr.com/photos/leslie_nicole/4288320297/in/set-721...

in Lot-e-Garonne the harvest has started in what to Scottish eyes are huge fields of wheat!

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