View allAll Photos Tagged haystack
The dominate characteristic of these farmettes are the haystacks. The people stack the hay in a way to resembles squat, fat bowling pins. They’re like some strange Jim Henson muppet or some immobile wholly creature living in the last bastion of the Pleistocene era. I guess it’s a good thing to do with hay, but I noticed there wasn’t much livestock out there.
August 26, 2017
A perfect day to hike - low humidity and cool temperatures.
Elk Lake parking lot and hike to Panther Gorge via the Elk Lake Marcy trail. We will hike over the shoulder of Pinnacle and through Marcy Swamp to get to Panther Gorge, which lies between New York's first and third highest mountains, Marcy and Haystack. This area hosts some of the most remote backcountry hiking in the Adirondacks.
Cuts, bruises, a new 46er, hiking out in the dark (13 hour day) full sky of stars, shooting stars and alas, no bear or moose.
Haystack Rock in Cannon Beach, OR
You are free to use this image with the following photo credit: Peter Pearsall/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Pamela Blalock's MIT Haystack Populaire ranks as one of the most surreal cycling experiences I've had; riding up to the radio telescope structures is awe inspiring.
I did this one on a fixed gear, not my usual wide-range geared bike. Spinning down Vose Hill at 200 RPM was…fun!
Highlights for the hungry included Ride Studio Café, Gene's Chinese Flatbread, Great Brook Farm's ice cream, and I'm told we were close to some killer cupcakes at Keyks in Chelmsford.
more at www.fotolog.net/foxglove .
and if FL doesv't paly nicely next week I am moving here permanently
Camera: Franka frankarette: 1960s rangefinder.
Haystack seastack, Cannon Beach. OR
Cannon Beach, a city in Clatsop County, Oregon, United States, is an affluent tourist resort destination.[3] Because of its proximity to Portland, Oregon, it is particularly known as a weekend getaway spot for Portlanders.[4] The population was 1,588 at the 2000 census. The 2007 estimate is 1,680 residents.[5]
According to Oregon Geographic Names, Cannon Beach was originally named Ecola, after the creek that empties into the Pacific Ocean to the north of the city. In 1922 it was renamed Cannon Beach (after the name of the beach that extends south of Ecola creek for eight miles, ending at Arch Cape) at the insistence of the Post Office Department because the name was frequently confused with Eola.
Description courtesy of Wikipedia.