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A passenger boat crossing the lake with long trail on the water surface.
Photo taken at Tongging village, northwest side of Lake Toba, District Karo, North Sumatra - Indonesia
Please feel free to visit my Toba Series :
Spent in Switzerland for work followed by a week in France these past couple of weeks. Spent most mornings up at the crack of dawn and going to bed late at night meant I've been pretty much knackered these past few days.
This was one of the first image taken in Lucerne, which is just such a picturesque town and thankfully only a 15min train trip from where I was based.
This image is composed of 2x images vertically stitched
Malham Cove, Yorkshire Dales National Park
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The Torch Relay team crossed the bridge to the other side of Kakabeka Falls.
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More often or not my local dog walk eventually has us walking across the railway crossing. The dogs hate it, many a time we are stuck with the barriers down and Toby and Oscar make an enormous row. Toby the Russell takes up the job of machine gun yapping and Oscar the yorkie howls like a wolf, what scene. Went we get there when they are up it becomes a race to get across with both dogs pulling with all there might, and if the crossing alarm goes of half way across there’s hell to pay. As Carla was with me last night, as we crossed she took both dogs and I nipped back to take a snap. I do like taking these photos of a winter sunrise or a summer sunset as the sun aligns with the rails, but it was a noisy affair last night. Eeee don’t do that, it’s naughty, they have cameras, yap, yap, yap, hoooooowl, anyway I have to be quick anyway and I took two fast frames. This one the disappearing lines are broken by a crossing bus, but I decided it added to the photo as it emphasises the shimmering heat of the ground, that’s if you can make out that detail in Instagram.
After bringing a load over to the Portsmouth Naval Ship Yard, CSX Local L063 (DO1) returned with 2 spent fuel “caskets” and a caboose. Crossing back from Maine to New Hampshire across the Piscataqua River via the Sarah Long Bridge. The power would be swapped in Portsmouth Yard and would become train S-955. Photo taken in Kittery, ME February 15, 2024.
This is a shot of the Second Severn Crossing taken about 6 weeks ago. The sky as you see was awesome about an hour before sunset with those sweet rays bouncing all over the place.
Never got round to uploading it until now so......ta daaaaaa
Go Team GB, loving the Olympics. Hope your all watching :)
The Severn Bridge (Welsh: Pont Hafren), sometimes also called the Severn-Wye Bridge is a motorway suspension bridge spanning the River Severn and River Wye between Aust, South Gloucestershire (just north of Bristol) in England, and Chepstow, Monmouthshire in South East Wales, via Beachley, Gloucestershire, a peninsula between the two rivers. It is the original Severn road crossing between England and Wales and took three and half years[3] to construct at a cost of £8 million.[4] It replaced the Aust ferry.
The bridge was opened on 8 September 1966, by Queen Elizabeth II, who hailed it as the dawn of a new economic era for South Wales. The bridge was granted Grade I listed status on 26 November 1999.[5]
Paine’s Bridge, Chatsworth, Derbyshire, England.
590nm IR-converted Pentax K-5
SMC Pentax 1:3.5 35mm
Iridient Developer
No 51 for 52 in 2020 Challenge.
10/100 for 100x: The 2020 Edition, photos taken in National Trust properties.
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南5西3 junction, Sapporo, Japan
Either the slit is incredibly high, or she has got her skirt the wrong way 'round.
A sunny day in February 1993 finds mine run U44 dropping down the short spur from the N&W yard to the loadout at Mullins Coal. The spur crossed both the Interstate Railroad's main line (out of frame to the right) and Glamorgan Branch (foreground). Today there is little trace of either the spur or the coal tipple it served.
(Scanned from Kodachrome 64 slide.)