View allAll Photos Tagged docks
We went back to the dog park with a dock. We were fortunate enough that not many people are out and we were able to practice some more.
Baby sister gave it a try as well... It did not end very well. In fact, she kind of fell in like a bag of rocks and just went straight under. That was enough for her to call it a day and she was content retrieving off of land.
I laughed...
This was from my photo walk today! My camera died on the shot to the right and was the only shot I was able to get. If I would have had a bit of battery life left I would have backed up another foot to get the right hand side of the dock completely in the shot and made sure the dock was in the middle. That is my own critique of myself! Haha.
Gloucester Docks Tall Ship Weekend May 24th - 27th 2013.
This was the Phoenix moored up outside the Biddle Warehouse enjoying the last of the suns rays. The dark foreboding clouds cleared (briefly) to let through the late evening sun.
© CSN Photography
CBMM's Members-Only Marina offers amenities included climate-controlled Showers, use of bicycles, cooler, grill, ice availability on campus, and much more
Here's the "before" picture of our dock, before I demolish and replace it with something exactly the same, if hopefully a bit safer and less hideous. There being no water left at this end of the pond, now's the time.
The Albert Dock is a major tourist attraction in the city of Liverpooland the most visited multi-use attraction in the United Kingdom, outside London. It is a vital component of Liverpool's UNESCO designated World Heritage Maritime Mercantile City and the docking complex and warehouses also comprise the largest single collection of Grade I listed buildings anywhere in the UK.
Exploring the Neponset River Estuary and Boston Harbor, with the Neponset River Watershed Association, the Neponset Society, and the Milton Yacht Club, aboard the Laura V, August,15 2013. Photo by Karan Sheldon.
Looking down James Street to the modern, new developments of Liverpool's docks.
Photographer: Paul Stafford for TravelMag.com
If you want to use this photo free of charge, please link to www.travelmag.com
Aperture: f/5.6
Shutter Speed: 1/400
A top down photo of connecting pieces of wood on a dock. (Edited)
The Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum in St. Michaels, MD offers wonderful amenities and one-of-a-kind experiences docking at its members-only marina. Day and overnight docking available for CBMM members along the Miles River and St. Michaels Harbor. Learn more at cbmm.org.
Part of the shoreline restoration of Muskegon Lake includes extending this dock so people can walk into the wetlands without disturbing them.
I was strolling along a marina pier near a man who was walking his poodle. The poodle and I had already shared an enthusiastic greeting, but he had places to go and moved on farther down the dock. It was only then that I noticed this beauty standing silently on another pier across the water, intently watching the poodle.
Castlefields boat dock is typical of the many on the Black Country canal system of the period and is equipped to build new working craft and to repair those of iron or composite construction. The dock can accommodate three boats, drawn sideways out of the water by winches onto the slip.
Nothing on the boat dock was wasted and most of these buildings are made from reclaimed boat timbers.
The main buildings are the 1880s brick blacksmith’s forge containing a large general-purpose hearth with hand-operated bellows, the nail and rivet store, a woodshed, paint store and stable.
The two wheeled ‘rolling sheds’ were moved up and down the length of the boatyard on rails to provide shelter and allow work to continue in all weather.