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An epic trip - 6-hours, 30-miles from Ouray to Lake City, Colorado - with rough rocky patches, switchbacks, shelf roads, and sweeping vistas all the way, reaching almost 13,000 feet at the summit. A Jeep Badge of Honor trail for good reason.
From TrailsOffroad.com: In the late 1800’s, miners started digging for gold, silver, lead and other ore in the San Juan Mountains. They needed a way to get people and the ore out to the nearby towns. Those roads left by the long-abandoned mines are now some of the most famous off-road trails in the books. Engineer Pass, a 30-mile trail, is one of them and is part of a trail now known as the Alpine Loop.
There are multiple mine ruins to view and explore the grounds of along the way including the Hard Tack Mine and the Michael Breen Mine.
Mile after mile provides new and more amazing views of Colorado and the San Juan mountains. Oh Point and the official summit have breath-taking panoramas of the mountains.
This trail goes well above the timberline at just over 12,900’. With the altitude comes stunning views of the mountains to the north including the Uncompahgre, Coxcomb, Wetterhorn and Wildhorse mountain peaks. The view is so expansive at Oh Point that on a very clear day, you might be able to see all the way to Utah if you turn your eyes to the west.
"Needle Tower," by Kenneth Snelson. Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC.
See shot from March 2010: Frozen Dance.
Engineers hats, conductors hats, necklaces, stickers, these are the kinds of things we plan to have as gifts for riders….
Locomotive : P42DC
Locomotive ID : 137
Location : Cumberland Sub - Ambrose
Date : January 2nd 2011
Remarks : Amtrak PO30 Approach Grasshopper Engineer Nasser at the helm waves at the group ....
Spotted this on my way to my car in a parking lot this morning. Shot it with my 1.3 megapixel VerizonLG camera phone.
It's obviously a label from a snowshovel or a jacket or some such thing that came off and ended up in the snow. I thought it was amusing to see a big pile of snow with a label on it informing me that it was "Winter Engineered".
Seems apt, no?
Randstad's Engineering employee confidence index reports that engineers are more confident in the economy. Learn more at www.randstadusa.com/workforce360/jobs-the-economy/confide...
COHOES - Engineer Soldiers from Detachment 1, 1st Platoon, 1156th Engineer Company (Vertical) based in Kingston and some members of the 152nd Eng. Co. clear brush and debris from around Lock 15 on the outskirts of Cohoes on June 15.
The City of Cohoes requested the assistance of the N.Y. National Guard to assist in restoring and renovating this historic area in order to transform it into a bike and walking trail for the city residents. The area was once an extension of the Erie Canal.
GALVESTON, Texas (June 4, 2015) – The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Galveston District celebrated the Corps’ and U.S. Army’s 240th birthday with an awards ceremony to recognize the Employee, Engineer, Regulator and Supervisor of the Year, induct a USACE Galveston District retiree into the Gallery of Distinguished Civilian Employees as well as to honor staff for their contributions to the community, state and nation.
GALVESTON, Texas (June 4, 2015) – The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Galveston District celebrated the Corps’ and U.S. Army’s 240th birthday with an awards ceremony to recognize the Employee, Engineer, Regulator and Supervisor of the Year, induct a USACE Galveston District retiree into the Gallery of Distinguished Civilian Employees as well as to honor staff for their contributions to the community, state and nation.
An Oregon Air National Guard member assigned to the 142nd Civil Engineer Squadron uses a welder on part of the secondary fence at Task Force Diamond Back near, Yuma, Arizona, as part of Operation Jump Start on April 18, 2007. Oregon and Massachusetts Air National Guard Civil Engineers teamed up during their two-week mobilization from April 14-27, 2007, to support Operation Jump Start along Mexico–United States border that provides enforcement of border security and construction of a border fence by U.S. National Guard troops. (Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman John Hughel, Oregon Air National Guard Public Affairs)
FORT BELVOIR COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers photo by Marc Barnes
(RELEASED) June 30, 2010 -- Charles Edwards (right) explains the inspection procedure for oxygen pipes installed in Building C (Oaks Pavilion) to visiting West Point senior class cadets Gavin White (left) and Kevin Bennett during a tour of the Fort Belvoir Community Hospital project site.
Edwards is an electrical engineer working with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Norfolk District. White -- who hails from Monroe, Mich. -- and Bennett -- from Marblehead, Mass. -- visited the project site as part of a West Point summer student internship program.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Norfolk District is managing design and construction of the Fort Belvoir Community Hospital as part of Base Realignment and Closure 2005 programs currently ongoing at Fort Belvoir.
GALVESTON, Texas (June 4, 2015) – The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Galveston District celebrated the Corps’ and U.S. Army’s 240th birthday with an awards ceremony to recognize the Employee, Engineer, Regulator and Supervisor of the Year, induct a USACE Galveston District retiree into the Gallery of Distinguished Civilian Employees as well as to honor staff for their contributions to the community, state and nation.