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Flickr Collaborators and Posers. Lazy sunday theme.
This is the only pic I was able to snap before lag and crashing got me.
I guess I'm missing a couple, so someone add please if known... uggh.. I can't remember who was the horse (Colt /Ian/Jeff maybe?), but the horse was amazing. Sepp is not in this pic but he was there and some other people, so feel free to just add everyone who was there please. I can't seem to add a couple either.
En medio y medio de Oporto, con "poca" gente pasando... MENUDOS DOS!!! UN CANONISTA Y UN PENTAXERO MUERTOS!!!
A mi se me ocurren las ideas pero luego prefiero no ponerme, no vaya ser que luego se cuelguen fotos como esta...
Foxspain: www.flickr.com/photos/foxspain/
Tartarugo: www.flickr.com/photos/34752199@N06/
Sony A300 + DT 18-70.
Flickr Collaborators and Posers. Look of the day theme, sunday's shoot, 11/15/2009.
Briona wears:
[CoL] - Ingrid - Cardigan Black
a piece of candy - cathy olive top
*COCO* - LeatherBelt silver
Sn@atch - Not a victim Leather Pants
*COCO* - RidingBoots
(NS) Rock'nRolla Chain
Hair: Armidi Hair - The Ginza
Skin: Dutch Touch - JoLie
Arriva London Volvo B5L Hybrid HV94 passes Charing Cross Road whilst carrying a 29 service for Trafalgar Square
Vehicle Details
Operator: Arriva London
Fleet Details: HV94
Registration: LJ13 FCP
Vehicle Type: Volvo B5L Hybrid, Wright Eclipse Gemini 2
Photographer unknown
Brand new Ferrocarril del Pacifico M636s 655 and 656 are awaiting delivery (in what is most likely Montreal) to the sunny climates of Mexico from Montreal Locomotive Works in this June 1972 view.
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
June 1972
Train of the Day
1/10/19
Worldways also seemed to live in shadow of Wardair at Birmingham, but I always enjoyed seeing their TriStars and, here, DC-8s. C-FCPS was on her way to London Stansted and Toronto (WG927) .
Mercedes-Benz Tourismo M/3 s3 (C59Ft)
Walls, Higher Ince
Museum Road, Portsmouth
02 September 2025
(BF67 WLJ)
FC Petrocub 4-1 Woodford East
Essex Alliance League
Senior Division Cup Final
Saturday 20th May 2023
At Dagenham & Redbridge FC
Ferrocarril del Pacifico M-424 566 (M6114-07 7-80) @Nogales, Sonora 12-29-82. How things change! in 1982, I was elated to get a shot of a unit with a widenose cab, now they're everywhere
''Let us go then, you and I,
When the evening is spread out against the sky
Like a patient etherised upon a table''
I've been solo backpacking along the Fife Coastal Path from late Saturday afternoon till Wednesday morning (yesterday 28/11/18), in some mixed weather - for instance, I enjoyed a few minutes sun on Monday!! but the main-course was wind and rain; in downfall showers as regular as Neptune's tides were companionably crashing beside me for much of this salt-scented hike. Though, its true that the rain came rolling in a lot more frequently than the tides. But, for whatever reason(or lack of it) I am drawn back to Scotland as the tides are by the moon and so must take it as it comes, for agency may sometimes surrender to a loss of resistance, much as the compass-needle can do nothing else but strive for the north.
The trail is a mix of direct coastal walking; for me the hightlighs of the outing but there is quite a bit of tarmac on the route where a lack of public rights of way or physical obsticals impede progress along the coast, but this (unusually for me) was not problematic. Fife's eastern coastline is a string of gem-like towns and fishing villages, where character, vernacular architecture and history combine in a modernity that keeps it close, they delight and impress in easy succession. Largo, Crail, and the heady fishing villages and rugged seascapes around the Ness of Fife are a sheer pleasure to traverse. Then commeth St. Andrews where golf and University neophytes predominate but for my money youth-fuelled pheromones, testosterone and long blond hair have the edge. I finished it off with a really 'wild' stormy camp in the Tentsmuir Forest followed on Wednesday morning by an easy forestry walk to the rain-sodden Tay Road Bridge a thirty minute tramp across it and I was in Dundee and it was all over. And so the sands of time trickle down the trouser-leg of destiny! This is a really good and enjoyable walk covering 93 miles (navigating in the dark always increases my mileage)! in a reasonably quick three and a half days tramping, so that's OK, but please, next time - give me a bit more sunshine..
From Dundee I got trains back to North Queensferry where my car had been left parked beneath the red iron of the Forth Railway Bridge late on Saturday afternoon. When I set off rain was falling on an umbrella'd bridal party, but we all have our concerns and mine was underfoot. When I arrived back rain was falling still and I headed home through storm and gale, no doubt the bride and groom had as good a time as I........
T.S.Eliot fans will recognise my Prufrock intro quotation.
Alexander Selkirk was born in a cottage on this site around 1679. He survived one of the most famous shipwreck adventures in history thanks to Daniel DeFoe whose novel - Robinson Crusoe was based on this episode of Selkirk's life.
The plaque above the door lintel reads:-
In memory of Alexander Selkirk mariner.
The original of Robinson Crusoe who lived on the island of Juan Fernandez in complete solitude for four years and four months. He died 1726 Lieutenant of HMS Heymouth aged 47 years.
This stone is erected by David Gillies, net manufacturer on the site of the cottage in which Selkirk was born.
Daniel DeFoe 1660 - 1731?