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A blustery, but bright Saturday afternoon watching the boats heading out into the high tide Bristol Channel to battle with the waves.
38:52 Take the greatest picture you can of that in which you truly believe.
Quite simply...
beauty is everywhere.....
If you take the time to see it.
In the most obvious & the most unexpected places.
So slow down, take your time.
Life is short, enjoy each moment.
Macro Mondays - "Four"
Calloway Golf Ball #4 - Longboat Key Club Golf Course. Golf Ball 1.68 inches diameter.
Nikon D850 Nikkor 16mm/2.8D Fisheye Lens. PK-11A 8mm externsion tube.
Photo taken @ The Falls Golf Course
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Sunset%20Kissed/49/125/22
This is us - Jimmie Allen & Noah Cyrus
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kw9tL197xvM
This is us, this is us, this is us, yeah
This is trust, this is trust, this is trust, yeah
This is love, this is love, this is love, yeah (This is love, yeah)
I'm lucky every other lover got away (Got away)
I'm lucky that my heart was always hard to break
I'm lucky when you came along, I had a chance to take
Hairbase - VOLKSTONE - Bonni Hairbase @ MAN CAVE Event.
Earmuffs - PARE. - Dawl's Equinox Gacha @ MAINSTORE.
Outfit - GASET- TYAGO @ EQUAL 10.
Cows sheltering under the trees out of the mid-day heat, they didn't seem too keen for me to join them so I walked on.
202/365 in 2014
Pl. click on photo to enlarge.
Despite the morning fog that oftentimes envelopes the coastal towns of Southern California, this does not hinder the enthusiastic golfers from teeing up and enjoying their sport. It also does not slow down the eager photographer from doing whatever she can to get her shot, photographic that is. She leaves the golf shots to the pros who play at the famous Torrey Pines Golf Course.
Real People Series
"...Among the most clever of these cactus spine-dodgers is the desert cactus wren, which can perch upon the branches or dive into a tree of the awful Bigelow's cholla with perfect impunity. In fact, the cactus wren finds the company of cactuses so congenial that she not only spends a great deal of her time foraging for insects among their branches, but chooses to rear her family in a nest embraced and fortified by their needles. I doubt if there is a member of the wren family that better provides for the protection of her home.
Those who are used to associating the word "wren" with the tiny, sprightly, and vivacious bird of the Eastern States, with its happy, jocund, and joyous song, will find it hard to see how the cactus wren can be called a wren at all, for he is such a different fellow from the bird of their acquaintance. On the whole he is rather a coarse-looking bird with no prepossessing characters as to either form or color. Comparatively, he is rather a good-sized bird, having a length of eight inches from bill to tail-tip. The general color-tone is brownish gray with whitish under-parts prominently speckled with round and linear black spots, especially on the throat and fore part of the breast. The bill, like that of the rock wrens, is slightly bent. The song is an odd one and hardly musical, consisting generally of only a coarse prolonged clatter or low "chut-chut-chut." It is especially noticeable in the spring during the nesting season. The males are then unusually quarrelsome, hot-tempered, irascible fellows, pursuing one another in flight over long distances, scolding and giving vent to their peppery tempers and jealousies in shrill, angry, jaylike notes of warning."
Denizens Of The Desert
Edmund C Jaeger
View of the Fore River Bridge crossing the river (of the same name) from the Weymouth (foreground) over to Quincy (MA).
Today's OCS excursion crossing the Fore River on the approach to Rigby yard in South Portland, Maine. Unfortunately on the later part of the trip the shadows were starting to take over, and knowing the marsh in Scarborough would be well covered I opted for this location instead. The sun right down the pipe wasn't ideal but not much you can do with that.
The Pan Am final tour departs Portland, Maine for the last trip up to Waterville behind the honorary PAR #1 and #2, a pair of ex-CN FP9As traded in by the Conway Scenic. Pan Am replaced the searchlights here at CPF-197 (Fore River) around 2019 with LED G-Heads. As part of the PTC upgrades between Brunswick and Plaistow, even the newer signals will be replaced because, allegedly, CSX wants strictly incandescent signalling.
Fore River Transportation GE B23-7 102 (blt. in Jul 1978 as CR 1980) is switching their small yard as they pull through the parking lot on the wye track past a surviving historic structure from the days when this was a naval shipyard. Once their train is made up they'll pull down clear of the wye then shove back out to work the big Twin Rivers plant.
This plant is the railroad's only present customer and also the owner of the railroad company that operates the property on behalf of owner Massachusetts Water Resources.
To learn more about this cool little railroad and the Fore River Shipyard check out the detailed caption here: flic.kr/p/2juca6A
Quincy, Massachusetts
Thursday January 13, 2022
I thought I would post this for son Donnie,who is an avid golfer and jhbowman42who posted a couple of really nice mushroom photos
Dezember 2010 war ein sehr schneereiches Monat, wie man hier gut sehen kann. Leider lässt der Schnee in diesem Jahr etwas auf sich warten. Vielleicht wirds noch was, die Wettervoraussichten deuten auf Schnee hin.
December 2010 was a very rich snow month, as you can see here well. Unfortunately, the snow this year can be some time in coming. Maybe it gets even what the weather previsions indicate snow.
Kalvarienberg - Calvary
Bayern (Bavaria) - Deutschland (Germany)
Cham Oberpfalz
Dezember (December) 2010
ATX- plugin (redfield)
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