View allAll Photos Tagged greyclouds
Kees, Diana and the Mustang in front of their house, about to leave for the castle where the wedding was held.
I've never seen a couple enjoy themselves as much at their own wedding as these two did. Everything was perfect. Thank you, guys, for making me a part of it :-)
Stock Image Ref: MS45378
Description: Steam Train Crossing the Ribblehead Viaduct in the Yorkshire Dales England
© Mark Sunderland All Rights Reserved
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Here is the front entryway into the railway museum, I took this as we were driving past. It's situated right next to the Bathurst railway station.
Viewed from Detaille Island
From Wikipedia: Détaille Island is a small island off the northern end of the Arrowsmith Peninsula in Graham Land, Antarctica. From 1956 to 1959 it was home to 'Base W' of the British Antarctic Survey and closed after the end of the International Geophysical Year (IGY). It is now often visited by Antarctic cruise ships but is otherwise unoccupied.
Thanks to the mens' hasty departure and the necessity that they take little with them, Base W is an eerily preserved time capsule of 1950s Antarctic life. The base had been intended to host dog-sledging survey parties which would cross the sea ice to the nearby Antarctic Peninsula, but the ice was dangerously unstable. When Base W was vacated, heavy sea ice prevented resupply ship Biscoe from approaching closer than 50 kilometres (31 mi), despite the assistance of two U.S. icebreakers. So the men were forced to close up the base, load sledges with only their most valuable gear and use dog teams to reach the ship.
(File: DMC8768)
Driving through the countryside I saw this scene. A field of brilliant yellow Rapeseed flowers overlooked by a dramatic stormy sky.
The crop is used to make Rapeseed oil.
This panorama was taken on Samsung Mini phone! The lesson here is always have a decent camera with you. You never know when a nice shot will pop up.
Unfortunately the phone compressed the image size a bit too much....doh!
These posts are everywhere in the city. They can be very annoying specially when doing street photography since they are very where and usually not a pleasant sight. But I guess not all the time. :)
vancouver, british columbia, canada
1971
dredging barges
vancouver harbour
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com
I had a friend from London staying for the weekend and we had a day out in Brighton. It was a beautiful, sunny day, so I was wearing just a T-shirt under a light coat. We went for a walk on Brighton Pier, but when we glanced to our right we could see what was coming our way! It's a shame I didn't have my usual camera with me, but I was glad I had my little compact in my pocket to record what happened.
North Western Slope Of Camels Hump
Thanks for your visits, favs and comments. As always, appreciated very much!
© all rights reserved by Elise T. Marks. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.
My photographs are available for purchase
the river teviot, at the auld weensland cauld, lower mansfield. rising fast after a night of heavy rain, the river here can flood the road and houses on the left causing great damage, and the hawick rugby club at mansfield park a few yards downstream. hawick, scottish borders, scotland. view large
More of the miserable weather at Delamont Country Park. This is such a pretty place when the weather is nice. Here the dark clouds and dry stream (feeder for Strangford Lough as far as I can tell) give it an ominous, post apocalyptic feel :-) (photo taken here)
This picture is an HDR created from 9 exposures (-4 to +4 at 1 stop intervals) combined in photomatix.
Here is another shot that I captured as we were driving along the Hume highway heading towards Moss Vale, in NSW Australia.
This picture is so titled after the mythological river of forgetfulness, as this was a gondola ride that you would want to forget. Drenched to the skin as the heavens opened up, two inches of water sloshing around your feet, nowhere to hide from the relentless pounding of rain during a late summer storm, but still, a moment that I will always remember, perhaps with a more romantic twist than when I experienced it!
Balangay or bangka-double outrigger pump boat for touristic use in one-day trips to the Honda Bay islands off the NW shore of the city moored at the Baywalk dock. Puerto Princesa-Palawan-Philippines.
September 24, 2020 - Today the cornfield across from the radio station was being harvested. As I was leaving work, this was the scene. I snapped the photo from the end of the station's driveway before heading home to spend the evening with my wife.
A 2-car Scotrail passenger train passes the ruins of Lubnaclach Cottage near Corrour in the wild landscape of Rannoch Moor in the Highlands of Scotland.
My wife had noticed some rain clouds rolling into our area.. I decided to snap a few pictures. A few minutes later we had thunderstorms moving through.
Storm clouds gathering as I was leaving work. By the time I got close to home, I was seeing lighting. Then soon after my wife and I were home, it started to rain.
...but here are some runes I can read - Grimsetter, the aerodrome in Orkney (aka KOI) - and another wild sky...
The Isle of Oxney was once part of the Coastline bordering Romney Marsh with the River Rother in a Channel to its North. The channel Silted and the River moved away to the west connecting Oxney with the surrounding low land in the 18th century. Oxney was once the haunt of smugglers, as was much of that coastline.
alberta, canada
1971
jasper national park
part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf
© the Nick DeWolf Foundation
Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com