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A brace of Delaware-Lackawanna ALCOs storms the grade to Pocono Summit with cars from the Norfolk Southern interchange at Slateford Junction. With all traffic arriving off the NS at Taylor now, there are no Portland Turns like this one. But business is healthy and loaded grain, as well as lumber and propane, from Scranton still creates a need for monster lash-ups. Lead C636 3642 would receive a new diamond logo before the next Spring thankfully.
The angled red butte in the center the photo, Devil’s Leap, sits on the northwest side of Red Basin southwest of Shell Wyoming. The red siltstone, shales and sandstones belong to a series of Triassic rock geologists call the Chugwater Formation. The Bighorn Mountain rise in the background. The canyon on the right side of the photo is Shell Canyon. This view can be found along the Red Gulch/Alkali National Backcountry Byway in Bighorn County.
Credit: Kaithleen's Helena Dress --- Esclusive items for Access Event --- more details in Blogg .
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lunarubydeveraux.blogspot.com/2020/09/devil-in-me_27.html
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In the wild you have to rely on your instincts alone
and i find in life if you dont youll only end up dead.
so be wild
be primal
be a hunter
or become the prey
These plants are nasty. The popular name Devil's Claw understates the features of Ibicella lutea, Proboscidea louisianica, and Proboscidea parviflora. They could equally be called Devil's Breath or Devil's Snot. You don't want to grow these plants if you have small children or pets that blunder into your garden plants.
Ibicella and Proboscidea plants get big. If you live in an area that has hot summers, expect the plants to be at least a meter (3 feet) across. They have a rather unpleasant smell—something like rotting gym socks. The smell won't put you off lunch but it does serve as a warning to remind you to keep away. And keep away is something you may want to do. The leaves and stems are covered with a resinous slime that you can't easily wash off. It gets on your clothes. It gets on your hands and arms. It gets on your garden tools. It won't come off. And then there are the seed capsules. Those suckers are evil. They are very sharp. They are designed to snag onto animal feet and hold on until the poor beast dies. From a plant information source
The springtime clouds are coming and going at Devils Lake State Park in Wisconsin, as Wisconsin & Southern's Reedsburg bound train L463, hugs the east shore of this gorgeous natural lake.
WSOR L463
WSOR 4051,4052
Devils Lake, WI.
May 7, 2016
Devil’s Matchstick, Pilophorus acicularis.
On the trail to Silver Falls, Mt. Rainier National Park. Up is up. 10-image focus stack.
25 Sept 2021; 09:30 EDT; Velvia as shot
A Thorny Devil (Moloch horridus) moves across a desert sand-plain as the sun rises on what will be an oppressively hot day on the Barkly Tableland in the outback of Australia.
Canon EOS 5D Mark IV, Laowa 15/4 1:1 Macro Lens and a little diffused flash.
Devils Lake is a beautiful 23-acre shallow lake located adjacent to Cascades Lakes National Scenic Byway about 30 miles southwest of Bend. The water's exquisite turquoise color and scenic views makes this lake a delightful place to visit for travelers on the Cascade Lakes Highway.
Devils Lake was formed by a lava flow that lies as a mass of jumbled volcanic rock at the lake’s east end. It is a shallow lake with an average depth of just over 3 feet and a maximum depth of 10 feet.
Near emerald-green Devils Lake, a jumble of lava boulders tumbles down from Devils Hill. Archaeologists have found evidence of Native American encampments here, along with pictographs on Devils Hill dating back thousands of years. As NASA readied for its moonlanding missions in the 1960s, astronauts trained in these lunar-esque lava fields. Astronaut James Irwin carried a sliver of rock from Devils Hill on his Apollo 15 mission and left it on the moon. (Taken from Travel Oregon).
I got this shot one week before the road into this area closed for the winter. The lake had started to ice over.
Amazing northern lights display after sunset in Senja, Troms - Norway.
On the background the Okshornan peaks also named “devil’s jaw”.
Sitting in my living room, I glanced outside to see this strange fog bank
developing over the bay. So I grabbed my camera and literally ran down to
the sand to capture this.
The speed at which this fog bank developed was truly amazing. Within four
minutes, it came on shore and totally enveloped the beach and Strand.
Within ten minutes, it was gone. Weird. Reminded me of that creepy 70's
movie about the mysterious Bermuda Triangle.
Every time that you fuck with me, I wanna let you go
But I can't 'cause I don't really know how to let you know
• Hair: WINGS-HAIR-ER0705
• Shirt: CURELESS REDLABEL / Stephane Ensemble
• Pants: toksik - Remnant Pants
• Shoes: toksik - Remnant Pants
• Wing: ~MR~ - Fallen Evil
• Crucifix: [TNK x TRV] SANCTUM PUNISHER - (GOLD)
With horns and a red eye, this could bird could be a bit of the devil himself, but wow, such a beautiful bird! I watched a group of six for about an hour and took far more photos than I needed. Kind of hard to tear yourself away from such a beauty!
Taken 12 May 2022 in Anchorage, Alaska.
Ed e' cosi' che il diavolo si innamoro' dell'angelo.
Non sapendo che l'angelo aveva un 'anima dannata......e il diavolo un cuore d'oro
And that's how the devil fell in love with the angel.
Not knowing that the angel had a damned soul ... and the devil a heart of gold
Tasmanian devil (Sarcophilus harrisii), the world's largest living carnivorous marsupial native exclusively to the island state of Tasmania, Australia.
Since 1996, a rare, contagious, and fatal cancer has devastated the population, causing an 80% decline in sightings. While they became extinct on mainland Australia roughly 3,000 years ago, conservation groups like Aussie Ark began reintroducing healthy devils to a sanctuary in New South Wales in 2020 to create an "insurance population".
Two Tasmanian Devils live at the San Diego Zoo.
Conservation status: Endangered
Thank you for your views and comments. They are all greatly appreciated.
Devils Tower National Monument, a unique and striking geologic wonder steeped in Native American legend, is a modern-day national park and climbers' challenge. Devils Tower sits across the state line in northeast Wyoming. The Tower is a solitary, stump-shaped granite formation that looms 1,267 feet above the tree-lined Belle Fourche River Valley, like a skyscraper in the country. Once hidden below the earth’s surface, erosion has stripped away the softer rock layers revealing the Tower.
The two-square-mile park surrounding the tower was proclaimed the nation’s first national monument by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1906. The park is covered with pine forests, woodlands, and grasslands. While visiting the park you are bound to see deer, prairie dogs, and other wildlife. The mountain’s markings are the basis for Native American legend. One legend has it that a giant bear clawed the grooves into the mountainside while chasing several young Indian maidens. Known by several northern plains tribes as Bears Lodge, it is a sacred site of worship for many American Indians. Devils Tower is also remembered as the movie location for “Close Encounters of the Third Kind.”
The stone pillar is about 1,000 feet in diameter at the bottom and 275 feet at the top and that makes it the premier rock climbing challenge in the Black Hills. Hikers enjoy the Monument’s trails. The 1.25-mile Tower Trail encircles the base. This self-guided hike offers close-up views of the forest and wildlife, not to mention spectacular views of the Tower itself. The Red Beds Trail covers a much wider three-mile loop around the tower.
Credit, Black Hills & Badlands Tourism Association
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