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Tip of the tallest arrow. The Devils Arrows are made from the same type of rock as Brimham rocks, Millstone Grit is unusual to this area and the stones are believed to have been transported from the nearby Knaresborough area
Jersey The Devil performing at Drag Spectacular January 2019 - UWE LGBT+ hosted in the Queenshilling
Boiling the eggs for deviled eggs. If you don't have an egg timer like this, get one. It is fantastic. I found this one by Taylor at Williams Sonoma.
Come on over to my DevilishDesigns shop for all your handmade steampunk and industrial jewellery
www.etsy.com/shop/DevilishDesigns?ref=si_shop
www.folksy.com/shops/DevilishDesigns
Im also here on facebook come take a look, i dont bite ;-)
Devil's Elbow Bridge is a feature of the Wyrley & Essington as the canal quietly snakes between the residential areas near Wednesfield. This September 2003 shot shows the bridge in shadow whilst the canal is full of unsightly green gunge.
Milano, 15/01/2011 devil wears prada magazzini generali
nella foto devil wears prada
foto:Prandoni francesco
This is devils marbleyard. After a brief hike along the belfast trail you reach the marbleyard; a giant area of huge bolders that range from the size of a car to the size of a house. It is a fun climb/hike all the way up to the peak of the mountain at which time you can pick up the Appalachian Trail. It is beautiful and makes for a fun hike.
Devil's Causeway will be a trip we come back to next year in the spring. There were beautiful creeks meandering through small valleys. The Flat Tops amazing to see with all the snow that occurred during our camping trip.
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Elemental Studios Photography © 2009
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MUST BE VIEWED IN STEREO TO FULLY APPRECIATE!
A 3D (stereo) crosseye view.
TO SEE THIS IN 3D, there's a tutorial here:
Jim Beam's Devil's Cut Launch Party in Dallas Texas. Event was held at Cowboy's Red River. Pictures shot by Randy Peterson of The Distillery Media.
The area is located near Wauchope, approximately 114 km south of Tennant Creek, in the Northern Territory. The site is known as Karlu Karlu to the land's Aboriginal traditional owners. The ‘Devils Marbles’ or ‘Karlu Karlu’ with its gigantic, rounded granite boulders, some spectacularly poised, is a remarkable landscape. Scattered clusters of these ‘marbles’, including many balancing rocks, are spread across a wide, shallow valley. The Devils Marbles is a nationally and internationally recognised symbol of Australia’s outback.