View allAll Photos Tagged flathead
A few snaps from today's Rat Bastards Infestation at the XXX Root Beer Drive-In in Issaquah.
Sony A7II
Tamron 90mm f:2.5 Adaptall Macro
Fotodiox TAM-NEX Adapter
Photo by Erika Williams: Scouting for Whitebark Pine on Doris Peak, standing at 7400ft looking down on Doris Lakes.
Photo by Constantine Powers
35.5" Flathead Catfish caught in the Susquehanna River at Conowingo Dam on 5/4/19
Largest natural freshwater lake west of the Mississippi. In stark contrast to every other town we'd seen so far, condominiums along the lake are going for $750,000.
Presoak measurements:
Waist 30 5/16"/77cm
Inseam 35.5"/90.1cm
Thigh 10 11/16"/27.3cm
Knee 7 15/16"/20.2cm
Leg opening 7 9/16"/19.2cm
Front rise 9 3/4"/24.7cm
Rear rise 13 3/8"/33.9cm
Post soak measurements:
Waist 29 5/16"/74.5cm
Inseam 33 5/8"/85.4cm
Thigh 10 3/8"/26.4cm
Knee 7 3/4"/19.7cm
Leg opening 7 1/4"/18.4cm
Front rise 9 1/4"/23.5cm
Rear rise 12 13/16"/32.5cm
Crane urinal from the 1970's. Note the concrete block wall behind the fixture, most places this would be tiled. Also note the non ceramic tile floor
Flathead catfish Pylodictis olivaris are an introduced / invasive species in North Carolina that can consume considerable amounts of prey given their wide mouths and large body size.
Researchers at NCSU are conducting a telemetry study to examine their movement / migrations in the Cape Fear River, including passage at a rock arch rapids at Lock and Dam #1.
One of these days (ok, maybe not this year, so more like one of these years...) I'm gonna go rafting down this river. I can't wait to get back into camping and all that again, too...
On a recent trip to West Virginia I got all of my goals: a flathead catfish, 2 species of map turtles, and a softshell turtle. Not bad!
Flathead catfish Pylodictis olivaris are an introduced / invasive species in North Carolina that can consume considerable amounts of prey given their wide mouths and large body size.
Researchers at NCSU are conducting a telemetry study to examine their movement / migrations in the Cape Fear River, including passage at a rock arch rapids at Lock and Dam #1.
This catfish was recaptured one day after being tagged with a sonic transmitter, and the suture was healing very well.
I caught this 14 lb flat head cat fish in the smith mt lake at halesford bridge area. This fish hit a small white trout magnet about 10:30 p.m. in early may of 2007. Because I didn't expect the 14 ponder to hit my ultra light tackle, it took a little over one hour to land this good catch with the 6lb test line that was on my little rod and real.
Another take on the boat slips along Flathead Lake not too far south of Kalispell, Montana. I added ND Grads for this shot to manage the sky a bit. A bit of a dreamy look to it.
Nikon D700
ISO 100
24-70mm lens at 34 mm
f/22
8 seconds
2021, Updated info/details per commenter "Peter Cartwright" [as can be seen below in "comments" section].
Quote: "British registration agency (DVLA) says 1933 Austin Seven of 747cc. I think this car is a special with a strong resemblance to the Seven Ulster model of 1930-32. The Ulster had a 24 bhp engine unblown or 33 with a Cozette supercharger. Austin built 168 Ulsters but most seen today are replicas."
Thank you Mr. Cartwright for that contribution.