View allAll Photos Tagged fall2020
A view of an orange Adirondack chair at Baker University on the third weekend of October (which usually is when the Maple Leaf Festival occurs every year - but due to the Coronavirus pandemic, this year's festival was cancelled).
Baldwin City, Kansas
Saturday morning 24 October 2020
Day 273/366 of Project 365 (Tuesday, 2020 September 29 - 142nd consecutive daily photo): Part of a skein of Canada Geese (Branta canadensis). Having spent the day feeding, resting, and socializing on the nearby St. Joseph River, these birds will spend the night roosting on Crescent Lake. This is a pattern that will be repeated throughout the coming months as long as the lake remains ice-free.
Day 289/366 of Project 365 (Thursday, 2020 October 15 - 158th consecutive daily photo): Light rain and cloudy skies produced this spectacular sunset.
Anche se sta attraversando un momento davvero difficile, non sarà certo una zucca beffarda a spaventare la combattiva Molly. Buon Halloween a tutti!
Eng: Even if it's a really hard time for her, it's not going to be a mocking pumpkin that scares the combative Molly. Happy Halloween to everyone!
A bald eagle flying near The Farmer's House along MO-273, southeast of Weston.
Platte County, Missouri
Saturday afternoon 7 November 2020
Lone tree and field behind The Farmer's House on a clear and sunny autumn afternoon.
Platte County, Missouri
Saturday afternoon 7 November 2020
An 18-piece set. These are known as Allen keys or Allen wrenches in the U.K., Australia, Canada, and the U.S.
Flickr Lounge - Weekly Theme - Hand Tools
'Two of a kind but not the same' 🌎🌿
Please do not use or reproduce this image on Websites/Blog or
any other media without my explicit permission.
A closeup of a red maple leaf at Baker University on the third weekend of October (which usually is when the Maple Leaf Festival occurs every year - but due to the Coronavirus pandemic, this year's festival was cancelled).
Baldwin City, Kansas
Saturday morning 24 October 2020
Day 298/366 of Project 365 (Saturday, 2020 October 24 - 167th consecutive daily photo): The morning's early light reflects an array of warm autumn colors on the smooth surface of Crescent Lake.
“The primary concern of the desert life is to seek God, to seek salvation. The memorable phrases which have been preserved are remarkable not so much for their special depth, as for the fact that someone was struck very deeply by them and held on to them as coming from God. They became a rule of life for them. We must be open and trusting...and attentive to special ‘words of salvation’ that come to us in reading, sermons, conferences, or direction, as God’s special words for us.”
-Thomas Merton, A Course in Desert Spirituality
Day 287/366 of Project 365 (Tuesday, 2020 October 13 - 156th consecutive daily photo): The dynamic fall colors of Michigan's deciduous hardwoods are reflected on the surface of Crescent Lake in Berrien County.
Day 326/366 of Project 365 (Saturday, 2020 November 21 - 195th consecutive daily photo): On this overcast November morning, there was no hint of a breeze, nor any ambient noises, to disturb the silence or quietude at Crescent Lake.
Flickr Lounge - Weekend Theme - All Kinds of Weather
A church in Barnaul built in 2009.
An onion dome is a dome whose shape resembles an onion and is usually associated with Russian architectural style.
A pair of Canada Geese reconnoiter the Great Lakes marsh at the Galien River County Park in Berrien County, Michigan, on a rainy and overcast morning in late September.
In a sense, prayer begins where expression ends. Thew words that reach our lips are often but waves of an overflowing stream touching the shore...The wave of a song carries the soul to heights which utterable meanings can never reach.
-Abraham Joshua Heschel, Man's Search for God, pg. 39
The beginning of a new day, as reflected in a 12-over-12 double-hung window on the historic 19th-century Pears Mill in Buchanan, Michigan, USA. This structure is an integral part of the Downtown Buchanan Historic District (NHRP #09000678).
Blooms of chicory and goldenrod growing precipitously from a vertical stone wall add touches of color to the background of water cascading down the spillway at Pears Mill in Buchanan, Michigan.
Jesus refused to summon twelve legions of angels. Elijah did not come to save him from death. The cross of Jesus, precisely as a ‘natural’ event in the real public world of human affairs and history, is already on Holy Saturday the quintessential moment of meaningless horror. Seen retrospectively from after Easter, it becomes the ultimate true signpost to God, to God’s work in the world, to God’s purposes for the world. And, indeed, to God’s ultimate dealing with evil in the world. The trail of broken signposts leads to the broken God on the cross.
-History and Eschatology Jesus and the Promise of Natural Theology, N. T. Wright