View allAll Photos Tagged explosive
From a couple of weeks ago. For some reason. the date taken doesn't show up anymore. Time for a better editing program.
Hey there!
I just returned from 4 day road trip cut 2 days short due to a illness in the family. I needed to be back home in case the condition got any worse.
I will be spending the evening here catching up on all your work over the past week, processing orders and returning emails.
Hope you have a great weekend!!!!!
Camera:Nikon D300
Exposure:0.004 sec (1/250)
Aperture:f/8.0
Focal Length:70 mm
Exposure:0.00
ISO Speed:100
Sheerness Seafront on the Isle of Sheppey, Kent.
HDR'ed then photoshopped to add that extra splash or two of colour.
I would post the original, but it's boring.......
It wasn't the most powerful storm in living memory to hit the south west, but it was certainly a great experience and provided a few good photo opportunities, albeit from a safe distance. Had this storm struck during August, I dare say there might have been a few people in Bermuda shorts and Hawaiian shirts stood on Porthleven Pier chancing it trying to get images on their mobile phones. Thank goodness for the 100-400mm beast of a lens and the fact that the storm occurred out of season.
A small seaside village in Nusa Penida, when the low tide appears the plots in which seaweed is grown, the villagers collect it to dry it and sell it to cosmetic and food companies.
Una pequeΓ±a aldea marina en Nusa Penida, cuando la marea baja aparecen las parcelas en las que se cultivan algas, los aldeanos las recolectan para secarlas y venderlas a empresas de cosmΓ©tica y alimemtaciΓ³n.
I was out walking the dog when I looked up and saw this going on in the sky - luckily I had my camera with me.
Pose by: Inspiration
Very intimate pose, easily adjustable for height difference!
Whenever your feeling Angry!
... count to ten
... π π‘ππ’ππππ
Make peace not warβοΈππβ€οΈβ’οΈ
Mature Black-necked Grebe (Podiceps nigricollis) ruffling its feathers.
Because of distance and motion blur, detail is not optimal. But it's really intriguing to see how they inflate to quadruple size.
They usually make a rocking motion too and shake their heads wildly, like a wet dog. (-;
Not sure what's been said
can't trust what's been read
just maligned this way instead
call me over, just be careful where I tread
this mess isn't fair when all's been said
can't forget these pains that grip my road ahead
every minute a battle against a thread
at what point does life rejoin the living bridgehead
I no longer believe the self-opined clinical aforesaid
the pangs of doubt overtake the hurting words left unsaid
a heart secedes all belief now home is a sickbed
explosive skies no longer take me by surprise in a world filled with dread.
by anglia24
10h45: 29/06/2007
βͺ
ββββββββββββ
Β© 2007anglia24
The explosive action of the ocean crashing against the rocks on one of Sydney's Northern Beaches early on a warm summers morning.
Not only an enormous sight, but a sensational sound...
Blown away by the beauty that revealed itself yesterday! Conditions and situations lined up for a special day and I was not disappointed. Right when I snapped this shot I yelled like I was at a sporting event. I'm still buzzing from the emotion that I felt during this session.
If anyone is interested please follow my work also on Facebook at www.facebook.com/BobBowmanPhotography
The Mineral Range railroad heads south to service Pepin-Irecoβs Dyno Nobel (dynamite) distribution facility which supplies the mines in the area with blasting explosives.
The trackage history around Ishpeming is about as confusing as it gets, once littered with rails from multiple mines and carriers. The MP 172 marker represents the DSS&A's distance from Sault Ste. Marie, though it became consolidated trackage with the former C&NW "Loop Line" from Cascade Junction to Ishpeming, with the changes driven by Cliffs. This section specifically, from Winthrop Junction to Pluto, was brought back to life in 2002 to serve Dyno Nobel and since then (2013) the Mineral Range has acquired the 12 miles of track to handle copper and nickel concentrate from the Humboldt Mine in connection with CN and the LS&I.
The Mineral Range Railroad is the second railroad of the same name, the original a narrow gauge mining outfit which went bankrupt and was folded into the DSS&A in 1949.