View allAll Photos Tagged hell.
Map of the three walking trails at the North Blackfoot Rest Area, along northbound I-15, near Idaho Falls, Idaho.
Hells Canyon Spectacular
120 min
Fly south, up the Snake River, past the Grande Ronde, Salmon, and Imnaha rivers. We travel low level into the visual wonder that is Hells Canyon (and to Hells Canyon Dam). Carved by the waters of the Snake River, this is North America’s deepest gorge, with the river being more than a mile below the peaks on the Oregon side and 8,000 feet below the Seven Devils Mountains range on the Idaho side. Spectacular views from the depths of the canyon, from the mountain and ridge tops, and from every level in between. Truly, there is no better way to see more of the canyon than by helicopter. On the return trip, we fly over what the Nez Perce call the “land of winding rivers”, timbered hills, through Joseph Canyon, and over fertile farmland. In all, an experience to last a lifetime.
2020 April Hell's Kitchen and 42nd St during Coronavirus Protection Medical distancing in Clinton Neighborhood Coronavirus COVID-19 near Times Square - AD Advertisement side walk forty second St and 9th Ave NYC 04/11/2020 New York City Subway sign Traffic looking South skyscraper department store sign Blue Sky Saturday Easter Weekend forty second
hell hole. found this painted on steel girder. third level of the huber coal breaker. the stairs up to this level were missing alot of sections.
huber coal breaker. ashley, PA. in operation from 1939 to 1976. coal breaker w/ a power plant. the breaker is 11 stories tall at 134 ft.
Cleaned the head, primed and painted - gloss rather than flat as I grabbed the wrong can! Shortened the handle to get rid of bad wood - but had some small chips as I set the head - must have been a bit "not straight"!
Wedge is the original s-shaped one, I added the wood wedge to make sure things stay tight.
Boiled Linseed Oil on the handle.
Railroad bridge connecting Queens and the Bronx. Taken from a train which was imminently about to cross over it.
Hells Gate is an abrupt narrowing of British Columbia's Fraser River, located immediately downstream of Boston Bar in the southern Fraser Canyon. The towering rock walls of the Fraser River plunge toward each other forcing the waters through a passage only 35 metres (115 ft) wide.
É... tudo o que me motivo a fazer parecem ser paródias. Sempre sacaneando alguma coisa. Ou eu sou realmente pouco criativo, pois trabalho smepre na base dos outros, ou tenho uma boam ania de pegar um trabalho sério e avacalhar. Acho que a segunda opção... ou não. Bom, a mudança é bobinha, mas passei horas para ajeitar essa merda. Principiante é foda...
Enfim, não vou explicar, senão perde a graça.. tirem suas conclusões!
Agora um adendo sobre vocês, do Flickr. Vocês são adoradores de imagens, logo, vocês adoram ao demônio! Isso segundo uma pichação evangélica, ali na altura do Caju {sim, um crente vândalo [embora eu não tenha nada contra vândalos (e sim, eu queria escrever uma sentença tipo matemática, com parênteses, colhete e chaves)]2+5}. Hehehhehehe
Bom, esse é o início de tudo, onde vou postar o que eu fizer de lega, ou de escroto... ou de legal-escroto. Enfim, fodam-se. Era para olhar, nem era tanto para ler. Inté a próxima!
Hell Beck runs into the gelt from up near Talkin area, not quite sure exactly. These shots taken from a few year ago when the beck was fairly lively.
01:04:04 on the Hell-Fire 10K, even faster than the ROR 10K
Blog covering this story ... peterjemmett.blogspot.com/2019/10/heart-attack-to-10k-par...
Hells Gate Geothermal Park is set in 50 acres with a large variety of thermal features. Walk past steaming fumeroles and hot pools of boiling MUD so violent they are unnerving. Follow the footsteps of ancient Maori Warriors through the swirling clouds of steam, past the hot pool where the Maori Princess “Hurutini” lost her life, see the violent geothermal activity of the Inferno and the Kakahi Falls, the largest hot waterfall in the Southern Hemisphere. Here, warriors would bathe in the sulphurous waters to heal their wounds after battle and remove the “tapu” (sacredness) of war
A view of the Bumpass Hell geothermal area from the trail leading down to it. This is the most well known of the park's geothermal features. In fact, it is the largest geothermal area in the US outside of Yellowstone.
It is named after Kendall Vanhook Bumpass, an explorer who lived in the area in the 1860's. One day, he was showing some people the area when his leg fell through the muddy crust covering a mud pot, severely burning his leg. The hell part of the name should be obvious.