View allAll Photos Tagged hooks

hook me up with a pair of foams around sizes 9-10

Crew of HLV “Poolgracht” hooking on lifting gear on heavy cargo, Dighi Port India

...keep a steady face while your imagination is being adopted and steered accordingly.

thank you and have a safe journey:)

Leica M6

Zeiss 35mm f/2 Biogon T* ZM

Ultrafine Xtreme 400

Continuing a series of experimental photos with a Kodak No. 2A Brownie (circa 1915).The Brownie does not have labeled settings, so instead I will list it as stops and their modern day equivalent. If you are lost, I suggest starting with the first photo in the corresponding album.

 

I've always loved lighthouses, and I figured taking the Brownie out for a trip through Sandy Hook Bay was in order. Nothing crazy, but I was the only person there taking photos... and definitely the only person there with a Brownie.

 

Shutter: 50

Focus: NA

Aperture: Stop 3 (f32)

Ilford 124

  

The wheel bug uses stealth and hooks to capture prey. The beak administers poison and enzymes to digest the meal then doubles as a straw for easy feeding. The wheel may serve as a protective mantle similar to the bony plates that protected dinosaurs like stegasaurus and triceretops. He does kind of look like a dinosaur ... no he's a wheel bug!

High up in the roof at Claymills Victorian Pumping Station. The steam-powered pumping station was built to dispose of waste from the Burton on Trent breweries. Burton's sewage was later added to its load. The station is now being restored by a team of enthusiasts who have already made huge progress.

The Hook Head lighthouse, guiding light for centuries in various forms.

 

Explored! August 3rd Highest Position #348

Prosthetic limb flower seed.

Tengo tantos nenes/as nuevos por presentar que no sabía por donde empezar... me he decidido por Maltés, que era el que tenía más a mano jeje

Otro muchacho malote XD

Tree snails are this raptor's favorite prey but frogs, salamanders, small mammals and insects are also taken. When it finds a tree snail it holds it with its talon and uses its beak to pry open the shell. The nest is a flimsy platform of sticks is built by both sexes. The Hook-billed Kite lays two to three buff-white eggs marked with red-brown. Incubation is by both sexes. Semialtricial young stay in the nest 35–45 days and are fed by both sexes. This raptor is often considered sluggish and retiring, preferring to perch inside leafy canopy when not flying. (Wikipedia)

Hook Lighthouse

Hook Head

Co. Wexford

Ireland

Ex-Dorking Greystone & Limestone Co. 3' 2" (and a bit!) gauge 0-4-0T 'No.5.Townsend Hook', Fletcher Jennings works No. 172L of 1880 alongside the Pilgrim's Way at Brockham Museum on 1st June 1969. The boiler on the left is from William Bagnall 'Polar Bear', ex-Groudle Glen Railway in the Isle of Man.

 

© Copyright Gordon Edgar - No unauthorised use

Hook Peninsula, County Wexford, Ireland

2016-06-26

The bread hook from our stand mixer, against window blinds.

Hook Mill was built in 1806 and ceased operation in 1908.

East Hampton

Long Island, NY

March 2009

exploration of an abandoned tool & machinery works

 

the shop floor, complete with multiple dangling chains, rusty hooks, cables and crumbling decay

 

...and yes, despite the great light it does look like a dungeon.

 

Please view it large.

Long exposure along the Wexford coastline, Hook Head Lighthouse, Ireland.

Butches hook to hang the shopping bags on by the front door.

A slightly alternative view of Porthgain harbour, but one I hope you'll like. This old hook was just begging to be used as foreground interest but in the end I decided to put it center stage and use the background more for context.

 

A Must see On Black

Got my mohairs all dyed, and began rerooting!

 

Rerooting is haaard :( Making the holes was bad enough but its punishment for the hands pushing that crochet hook through repeatedly!

 

I just have the hairline to do really, I can get away with the gaps, but I think I'll add another row in the first two gaps xD

 

Thats after I wait 3 days for my hands to recover and my smaller hook to arrive!

Hook and Ball by The Crochet Crowd

Hook Lake Bog

Wisconsin State Natural Area #242

Hook Lake Wildlife Area

 

Dane County

Note: John faced some cancer in 2015. Sondra is his wife...

 

How tardy and bizarrely uncharacteristic of me to "come up short" Carol, on the genealogical history of the deceased equine entity called Tony.

 

Actually the initial send had more text....in my whimpering inadequacies.... I encountered a road block that was insurmountable for my chemo-laced brain.....I cried until Sondra came to my mewling puddle of shameful "masculine-tech" whining on the floor.....she tried to solve the dilemma .....and had "lift-off" for only a portion of the rocket.....basically it was a cluster fuck, a message that was intended for one planet.....but the message splintered,........you received some of the text, and some of it will arrive on Saturn's second inner ring, around 2525. The video that I tried to include with the text....imploded, folding in-ward unto itself.....consuming its life and frames until it resembled a tiny black jube-jube lying on the sidewalk.........not even the slugs were interested.

 

Tony was 22 when he died.....born in Saskatchewan......had papers.....not the kind of papers that illegal refugees have....but papers that proved he was pure Percheron. Tony was and is the only papered horse we have ever owned. Both his parents....sire and brood mare were registered Percheron. Percheron is a French heavy horse breed.....that basically opened the west, plowed the soil and pulled the goods.

In my world, being papered and registered means nothing....what does matter .......do I like what I see. And with Tony ....it was all good.

 

I'n John R's world of horses, registered and papered has meaning.

 

Sondra and I bought Tony along with another horse named Spider.....they were a team.....had worked as a team, pulling wagons and sleighs and also as a logging team for a teamster/logger/farmer/truck-driver from the 100 Mile House area of BC's Caribou region. Spider was a giant of a horse, also Percheron, not registered and not papered. Spider weighted about a ton, Tony was around 1800 lbs......

Spider was tall, quite a bit taller than Tony, so they looked a bit mis-matched....both horses were black as coal..........Tony had one white sock, rear right, if you are looking up the dirt chute........and both had their tails docked.... I'm not a fan of docked tails, but that's the way they came.

The year was 2004, when we heard about these boys being available.....we already had a team.....two wonderful Belgian/Percheron crosses, both unpapered and un-registered, that were named Pat and Mike, that we bought in 1999.

We were thinking of easing up on using Pat and Mike, as we were logging quite a bit. We wanted a younger team.....and Tony and Spider were around 10 ......a little side bar to horse trading.....a horse trader if he's trying to sell a horse , when confronted with the question .....

"so, how old is this horse"......will almost always tell you, he's 9. (old enough to know better but young enough to be strong and eager)(keep that in mind Carol, when it comes time to trade the old boy in)

To really know how old a horse is.....you look at his teeth, and if you know how to read the markings on their teeth, you can come to within a year or two. Many a 9 year old has turned out to be 17 or even older.

 

Sondra and I heard about the big blacks being for sale.....made some time to come up from the farm to have a look.

Always an adventure....searching out horses.

So up to the 100 Mile House area.....it was early summer....this area, high in elevation, excels in showing its beauty during the summer. It's sparsely populated.....a few small towns dot the region, to offer commerce and alcohol......the area is home to ranches, lots of large acreages, raising and growing beef..... As well as the ubiquitous logging industry.......give us some trees to exploit.

It's a gorgeous part of the province Carol, a high plateau, spotted with numerous lakes, expansive lodge pole pine forests, and these old, well worn ranch settlements.

It was one of these ranches that Tony and Spider were residing ......log house, log out-buildings, log fences, log barn.........right on the edge of a good sized lake.

Tom the owner was ready for us when we arrived....horses were at the hitching rail....harnessed and ready to perform.

But you never jump right into the task at hand .....you have to have the BC chats first.....sort of like kicking the tires when you are looking to buy a "new to you" truck......so the three of us are walking around the horses, hands running over their bodies, asking questions that don't always pertain to horses, "do you know such and such, he has a logging team near Princeton"......." where did these boys come from"...."when did you last use them"....."any problems"....."how are their feet"........"do these boys come with the harness"..... "how long have you lived up here"......."no kidding, I know Ted Guisbrech, we logged together over near Rock Creek".........and so on.

Then .....you ask if it would be ok to see them walk around.........he may say sure, take the lines, or he may say....sure, let me walk them first and then you can have a go.

All this seemingly unimportant prater......registers...it is all telling us about his relationship with his horses.....does he want to make sure the horses are calmed down when it comes time for us to drive them, .......does he think they might be a bit spooky if we take the lines.....is he setting the standard by showing us how he handles them.....all part of the game.

I want him to walk the horses around, to see what kind of relationship he has with them.....how he holds the lines ......where he stands.....how he gets them to move, does he "kiss them up", or "click" them up .....(two very distinct sounds in the horse world)....or does he remain silent, and communicate through the lines.....do they move on their own, when he grabs the lines......does he say their names to get them to move.......does he hold the lines....firm.......loosely.....does he slap the horses rears with the lines to get them to walk.....all of this shows me how this guy gets along with his horses.....gentle, coarsely, frantic, lazy, attentive, casual, ....and this gives me some incite into what we might be buying.

It's such a dance.....you want it to fall into place....you've invested 6 hours of travel one way......you like the initial viewing.....you need a team .....you want it to work. The foot work, the rhythm, the music, the touch, all these "things" need to be right for the dance to feel good...the flow....and eventually the coupling.

Where was I. .....oh yea.... Tom is walking the boys around, they have their harness on, the harness is well worn, with some minor binder-twine fix-it's......binder-twine....the non-natural material they use to tie bales of hay with.....it is ubiquitous with the horse world.....binder-twine is the rural duct-tape....you use it everywhere to tie down, to tie up, to keep apart, to shorten and to lengthen, you use it for clothes lines, and dog leashes, you use it to mark the planting lines for lettuce and carrots.....It almost always comes in the colour orange.....but now they have introduced the colour blue. It the very old days they used wire to wrap bales.

Tom walks the boys around the corral.....whoa-ing them up then asking them to step up(move ahead).....making them "gee" and "haw".....right and left......I watch how his hands work the lines.....lightly.....aggressively.....does he verbally communicate or is it all done with touch (pressure with the lines)......so the lines are long strips of leather or polypropylene that are attached to the bridle, a sort of head set that has the bit, the metal bar that is inserted to the horses mouth, attached to......so every time you pull on the lines it activates the bit......in a good or bad way.....gentle with the lines equates to gentle with the bit......aggressive with the lines, equates to harsh rough bit movement..........I'm certain Carol you've experienced this with the Hun. To get his attention (his noodle buried in a Conan movie) you sometimes have to jerk his bit.

 

So what you want to see as a perspective buyer, is the owner driving the horses around in a calm atmosphere.....no rodeos.....using "soft" hands........you want the horses displaying a zen.......a zone where they are willing to do what you ask of them.

Think Pointer Sisters......."I want a man with a slow hand....I Want a lover with an easy touch. I want a lover who will take some time. Not come and go in a heated rush"

 

Now that's what makes a perfect teamster.......Sondra points out that in the equine world, every teamster thinks he has soft hands. Phew, was that air leaving my body!

 

Then we attach the horses to the double-tree......sometimes made from hard wood and now usually made from metal.....this is the devise that is attached to two big leather straps that are attached to the horses harness.....these straps are called tugs....and then the double tree is attached to the device you want the horses to pull....ie. a wagon, a sleigh, a rake, a mower, or for our purposes a log. The double tree drags on the ground, so sometimes does not drag smoothly, as it gets caught up on debris , small babies, stumps, empty beer cases, that sort of thing......logging horses get acclimatized to this irregular pull and constant clanging, and are not spooked by the sound or pull.....uninitiated horses go ballistic....as they can never run away from the ragged feel, and the scary sound.

Tony and Spider were great.....and after numerous manoeuvres and requests.....lots of backing up, going forward.....asking them to take one step forward and whoa......asking them to stand while putting the lines on the ground......some horses will creep forward....

hooking them up to a big log and pulling it around.....doing the same tasks that we asked of them without the log..... we put them back to the hitching rail......removed their harness.

I ask Tom how "they load"......how easily do they go in a trailer.....a very important feature.....especially for people who move their horses around....like horse loggers.....always going to different sites.......some horses react to trailers like a 9 year old boy going to the dentist.....it can be hell.....and I've participated in many "rodeos" trying to get unwilling horses in a trailer. Both hard on the horse and the handler. Feet stepped on, smashed around by hyper animals, and that's before you get them in the trailer..... Securing them in the trailer is even more ramped up in terms of activity. So having calm, easy going horses to load...can be the deal sealer or breaker.Tom assures me that they "load easy"

 

We let the horses cool down......and then I picked up every foot......you want a cooperative horse when trimming hooves.....looked in their mouths to check teeth......hands feeling all over their bodies.....feeling and looking for bumps, irregularities, sores.....seeing how the harness fits them, any rubs, buckle wear, .......you try and do a full inspection..........just like the 50 point checkup that your Audi receives every 6 months.

 

For me it's all fun.....a chance to visit with another teamster.....to check out his stock....see new country.... hear some new lies and stories.

All the while the test drive and chit-chat is happening, Sondra and I are communicating about what we think about the team.....likes and dislikes....this is all done without talking....it's done with eyes, eye brows, facial wrinkles, nostril flares, smiles, hands, and head nods.....we don't want to diss the owner about the abilities of his team, or challenge anything he says about them.....we just register silently the good and bad......we didn't drive 6 hours to tell someone they have a badly mannered team of horses. It's a sort of rural respect and politeness that seems to prevail in rural Canada.

More generalized talk takes place....we find out more about his place.....some of the jobs he did with the team.....his daughter comes out of the house and jumps up on a saddle horse and rides around.....learn that he's bought a truck and car wash in 100 Mile House.....very entrepreneurial ...... He wanders off to feed some animals.... And Sondra and I kick a few horse buns around and decide yes, we want the team......

The negotiations are straight forward....we pay $4000....

In most horse transactions you buy the horse and the seller provides you with a halter and a lead rope......usually the most worn out and manure stained ones he can find in the tack shed.....often repaired with binder-twine, that use to be orange.

We manage, through friendly haggling, to get the harness, a double tree, and some pieces of harness "thrown in" with the 4 grand. We are happy with the deal, he's happy with the deal.

He agrees to feed the horses for a week, and Sondra and I will return the following weekend with our horse trailer, pick them up and bring them to Trinity Valley.

 

This adventure was wonderful.....a great way to start a new relationship with a new team......we were anxious to play with them, learn more about them.......and see what they could do.

The boys turned out to be all we wished for.....great addition to our already mature and well behaved team of Pat and Mike.....

Spider as he got older developed a rear hip malfunction.....that eventually made it very difficult for him to get up, after he would lie down for a rest and or a roll. At the end I was having to lift him up with the tractor....too complicated to describe, believe me it was as hard on me as it was on Spider.....Spider learned not to lie down too much .....and when he did, he'd try to position himself strategically on a slope so when it was time for lift-off, gravity would help. One time Spider lay down in his corral....winter time....in a hollow and couldn't rise up......thrashed around for awhile, making his bed a skating rink....total ice, caused by his body heat, ..... and even more difficult for him......finally as darkness was settling in I managed to get him up......this was becoming a problem.

In spring time I had a chat with the big boy......I was tiring of the effort it took to get him back up on all "four"...... Eventually the time came and he had his final lie-down.......

 

After Spider died, Tony was confused and then sad.....no more mate.....these horses when they are teamed up.....often act as one......they eat side by side, they rest side by side......when one heads off in a direction, the other one will follow......when one decides to let it all out and race around the field, full throttle, the other one copies. They are often joined at the hip. So Tony was bummed when Spider passed on, ........and he got little sympathy from the other team......at this point on the calendar, our original team of Pat and Mike, had both died, and we had bought another team, Jackie and Star, younger than both Spider and Tony, and this new team became our "go to team".

Jackie and Star, also Percheron's, also black, but with un-cropped tails, dragging on the ground, beautiful, true warriors......Don Monjoy was so proud of us for staying black, and staying Perch......this team was young, bold, frisky, and dominating. So Tony went to the bottom of the pecking order, and just wasn't too sure where he fit in. Sondra and I continued to show love and attention his way.....and Sondra would harness him and drive him around, but we always felt he was somewhat confused.......and missing his mate. But through that wondering, he was always a treat to be around.....he was extremely handsome.....very curious.....enormously smart.........and we always said he had a great ass.... And we will miss him.

 

Well now he can rejoin Spider......they can be a team again.

It's a good idea to give the hooks a little curl on the bottom, it will bond with the concrete and stay put better.

Interior of the Sandy Hook Diner. This is a very old diner. Note the pipe going between the front wall and the back wall: it's to keep the walls from spreading out. You can see that the front wall leans out towards the top. It's wonderful to eat here--such a sense of history, and the food is really good. You get a nice feeling of community interacting with other patrons and the staff.

This crochet hook head was originally about 10" long and tapered to a tiny little wedge of a crook on the end of a much larger dowel handle than the head. About 6.5" of it had been drastically tapered to the tiny head, which completely altered both the ability to hold yarn, much less consistency in loop sizes for the stitches it could make. I had to remove the original head, but also wasn't sure how much of the hook I could salvage without completely cutting it down super far due to the original tapering.

 

Here's where I'm at with it. The hook is now 7.5" long. The head is still tapered more than I like, but due to the original tapering, the only way I can get a bigger head and bowl out of this hook is to take it back to 5.25" long. Which is kind of short, especially compared to the original length. I will be checking with the owner to see what she thinks before moving forward on this hook.

My bike parked in Hook on a cold Saturday afternoon

Gag grouper are caught on hook-and-line from a charter boat in the Gulf. The gonads of female gag are brought back to the lab in St. Petersburg for analysis.

Horse mouth showing 200 arcade hook on 206

One of three similar images showing I'm assuming members of the Hook family outside the family home. This is a dorrway that has appeared in a number of earlier shots.

  

See more images from this fascinating Edwardian Hook family album.

One of the few hook lifts found in the URM fleet along with an old Freightliner and Isuzu. This manual gearbox Iveco was built with a Succi frame on top and mainly pulled recycling around Kimbriki tip, but also serviced the 15m containers at the Warringah council depot when required.

Hook Lake Bog

Wisconsin State Natural Area #242

Hook Lake Wildlife Area

 

Dane County

The magic hour

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