View allAll Photos Tagged howling

On May 23rd, 2011 The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Mountain-Prairie Region honored three of the most influential individuals in wolf recovery in the Northern Rocky Mountains: Ed Bangs, Steve Fritts, and Margot Zallen. Ed Bangs started the event with an hour-long presentation, “Wolf Conservation: The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly.”

 

Following the presentation, Regional and National leadership recognized the imminent retirement of Ed, Steve, and Margot with a variety awards for their contributions.

 

Photo credit: Heather Bell/USFWS

  

A second demolition truck with Che's image. It too was parked in the remote lot of the Chinese consulate in L.A. A gentleman nicknamed El Cabron owns the trucks and apparently has a soft spot for the revoluntionary.

People have to howl for others to hear - that was how this waterfall got its name, most probably. Notice a mother and her son climbed to the top of the cliff.

A hag variant that uses her voice to cause great damage, and also one of the "bad ex-wife joke" trio.

Filmed with Kodak Portra 400 at box speed.

Nikon F3

28mm

My entry to the LSB Contest 2017 in the category Overkill Oval:

The "Howling Hornet", a speeder bike designed for fast movements and causing severe damage

A coyote howls for its partners in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado. Image captured using a Canon 7D and 400mm lens; 1/1000 sec, f/8.0, ISO 200.

A few additional background noises as something sets these amazing creatures into audio motion. Pretty cool. You had to be there

Cuyahoga Falls

December 2013

Zeiss Ikon Rangefinder (ZM) | Carl Zeiss C-Sonnar T* 50mm f1.5 | Kodak BW400CN | Pakon F-135 Plus Scanned

 

Portfolio/Blog | Tumblr | Twitter

Photo by Sherrie Thai of Shaireproductions.com

We also could take some good pictures of the timberwolves. Here is one of them howling!

Leyla on the ancient wall howling with the ezan (call to prayer). Living in an apartment In the city we don't allow howling with the early morning and late night prayers, but she has much more freedom here in the village - and she takes full advantage of it! On another note, we are still waiting for notification from the powers that be as to whether they will 'release' the elderly for brief periods during weekend lockdowns. In hopes of that actually happening, we have started a shopping list but it's beginning to look as though they have once again forgotten us...

My entry to the LSB Contest 2017 in the category Overkill Oval:

The "Howling Hornet", a speeder bike designed for fast movements and causing severe damage

Beignet Fest 2017

City Park

Mid City

New Orleans, Louisiana

まだ帰らないと言っているおばかちゃん

When I first heard the wolves howling, I was momentarily out of sight of both them and the kids, and I thought it was the latter playing around. Not so: one started up again, and then others joined in. The first time in my life I've heard it for real, I think - and I was glad I'd taked the long lens with me to the zoo, too.

painted woodcut block on salvaged Douglas Fir

11” x 15”

Lisa Brawn

2012

 

A picture I took while on a road trip last month. Not sure which state I was in but it was probably Tennessee. I thought this cloud looked like a howling dog and the profile resembles Disney's Pluto.

 

Photo was taken during the day while inside the car looking through the windshield. I was not driving at the time :)

 

Howling Bells, live at Virgin Megastores

taken from a seriously bad reference but i cant blame that, lack of experiance with tattooing hair

Jaatikko and his tribe have known of the feral beasts that live on the same harsh cold lands, the matoran & rahi mostly mind their own business, unless one journeys too close to the others hunting grounds or den, the matoran respect the creatures and some have been fortunate to earn each others trust and bond a new friendship

 

Toa Jaatikko

Class: Tribal x Viking Knight

Kanohi: Ancient Huna

This modified kanohi allows its user to

hide in the icy winds and snow as the perfect stealth hunter.

and Valor to strike hard and fast.

spiked club, powerful shield bash & strikes from kicking. all dramatically increased

Element: Ice

Abilities: generate a field of cold mist to his advantage, forge hard ice walls, weapons and warriors

 

This Toa of Ice hails from a Tribe like no other, the same goes for Jaatikko and his fellow proud hunters and warriors. they are Aggressive, Strong and Mysterious like no other Toa and matoran have heard of or seen before. rookies are given the ultimate challenge of survival out in the wild, if one shall fail, never return, only the strong survive, those that return with a prize worthy of staying in the village must face one final challenge with those that passed before them. The victor has the honor to remain in the village, and a powerful kanohi as their true reward for their hard work and bravery. Jaatikko ranks up as a honored and respected warrior of his pack, even promoted to Toa status when he was chosen. Jaatikko wears armor of his fallen brothers and sisters he found during his dangerous journey of endurance. He wields a killer frost bite war mace and a ice crystal snowflake shield, very light weight but ultra durable. Lastly he wears Clawed Mata Foot Extension's that provides greater traction and defense.

 

Jaatikko continues his journey in the stormy wastelands to discovery his destiny and seek others like him, or will he befriend and tame wild rahi first?

 

Clawed mata feet extensions made by

Exota Forge - RC Ramos - PunkDrunk182

Badlands National Park

Shot outside a 7-Eleven store in Santa Clara (N Winchester and Newhall st.)

 

I have seen some funky names of energy drinks out there, but COME ON!

To me, a 'caffeine charged' monkey running around howlin' in a 'monkey suit' might be something I'd laugh at but certainly not something I'd want to drink

 

What I find interesting is the 'Multi-Vitamin' claim, because from what I read here the caffeine and sugar in these drinks make you pee away calcium, magnesium and zinc from your body.

Model: Katherine López - "As the sun goes down and darkness arrives, my mind flees from fear of death"

Model: Katherine López - "As the sun goes down and darkness arrives, my mind flees from fear of death"

The Postcard

 

A postcard bearing no publisher's name that was posted in Greenlawn, New York on Tuesday the 23rd. August 1910.

 

Greenlawn is a hamlet in Suffolk County. Located on Long Island in the Town of Huntington, the population was 13,742 in the 2010 census.

 

The card was posted to:

 

Millie Irving,

149, Columbia Avenue,

Jersey City,

New Jersey.

 

The message on the divided back of the card was as follows:

 

"Aug. 23 1910.

Dear Millie,

From Aunt Mary."

 

A Political Rift

 

So what else happened on the day that Aunt Mary posted the card?

 

Well, on the 23rd. August 1910, a rift between U.S. President William H. Taft and U.S. Vice-President James S. Sherman threatened to split the Republican Party during mid-year elections.

 

The rift was described in the New York Times as follows:

 

"It is without a parallel in the history

of the relations between the two

highest Government officials."

 

The occasion was the public revelation of Taft's criticism of Sherman, in a letter to a New York City party chief Lloyd Griscom.

 

Roosevelt "blacked Jim Sherman's other eye" by telling reporters that he was very much pleased with Mr. Taft's statement."

 

Hayden Rorke

 

The day also marked the birth of the actor Hayden Rorke.

 

William Henry Rorke, known professionally as Hayden Rorke, was an American actor best known for playing Colonel Alfred E. Bellows in the 1960's American sitcom 'I Dream of Jeannie'.

 

Hayden Rorke - The Early Years

 

Rorke was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1910. He was the son of screen and stage actress Margaret Hayden Rorke, and he took his stage forename from her maiden name.

 

Hayden Rorke attended Brooklyn Preparatory School, a Jesuit school, where he served as president of the Dramatics Society and the Student Government, and was a member of the Omega Gamma Delta Fraternity.

 

He continued his education at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, and began his stage career in the 1930's with the Hampden Theatrical Company.

 

Hayden Rorke in WWII

 

During World War II, Hayden enlisted in the United States Army, where he made his film debut in the musical 'This Is the Army' starring Ronald Reagan, for which he was uncredited as the stage manager, and as a soldier in the background.

 

Hayden Rorke's Post-WWII Acting Career

 

Following the war, Hayden left the Army and worked in small parts on Broadway, returning to Hollywood for the film 'Lust for Gold' (1949), again uncredited. However, it was an opening, and in later films, beginning with 'Rope of Sand', he is listed in the credits.

 

However he again shows up uncredited in the films 'Kim' (1950) and 'The Magnificent Yankee' (1950), as well as a couple of later films such as the Academy Award-winning 'An American in Paris' (in those days, small roles were often uncredited).

 

Hayden played the role of crooked businessman and murderer Arne Mason in episode 90 "Word of Honor" of the television series The Lone Ranger in 1952. He also appeared in episode 125 entitled "The Perfect Crime" of the same television series in 1953.

 

He continued to make movies, taking on supporting roles in films. Rorke also went uncredited as Clark Kent's psychiatrist in the Adventures of Superman episode "The Face and the Voice".

 

Hayden Rorke's Later Acting Work

 

In 1957, Rorke played Steve, the film agent, in the television series Mr. Adams and Eve, starring Howard Duff and Ida Lupino (then married in real life) as a fictitious acting couple residing in Beverly Hills.

 

Hayden played several guest roles on television, including Colonel Farnsworth in the short-lived 1964 sitcom No Time for Sergeants. He also appeared in three episodes of Perry Mason between 1960 and 1963. In his first role, he played the title character, Jay Holbrook, in "The Case of the Flighty Father" and Walter Caffrey in "The Case of the Violent Vest".

 

Rorke also appeared in television programs such as I Love Lucy, The Twilight Zone, Thriller, Peter Gunn, The Andy Griffith Show, Bonanza, Barnaby Jones, Mister Ed, Wonder Woman, The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show, The Beverly Hillbillies, and The Love Boat.

 

Rorke was best known for his role as Dr. Bellows, the NASA medical officer in the television sitcom I Dream of Jeannie. Bellows was constantly trying to figure out why Tony Nelson (Larry Hagman), an astronaut under Bellows' supervision, often behaved strangely, and to decipher his madcap antics, but he never figures out what is actually going on.

 

Bellows usually wound up making himself look like a fool in front of his own superiors.

 

Rorke's last film was reprising his role in the television reunion movie I Dream of Jeannie... Fifteen Years Later (1985).

 

In the early 1980's, Rorke returned to the theater. In May 1980, he starred with Joan Caulfield at the old Showboat Dinner Theatre in St. Petersburg, Florida, in The Pleasure of His Company. He also acted in Mr. Roberts in St. Louis, Missouri.

 

Hayden Rorke's Personal Life and Death

 

Rorke's I Dream of Jeannie co-star Barbara Eden described Hayden as a "prince" who was a good friend to all. She claimed that he always managed to keep up the spirits of the Jeannie cast, even in difficult circumstances.

 

Eden also wrote in her 2011 biography Jeannie Out of the Bottle that Rorke was "unashamedly gay," and that he lived with his partner, television director Justus Addiss for many years in Studio City, along with their menagerie of dogs, until Addiss' death on the 26th. October 1979. The couple would often invite the cast over for parties.

 

Hayden Rorke died at the age of 76 of multiple myeloma at his Toluca Lake home on the 19th. August 1987. He was survived by two brothers.

 

Eurasian wolf in Tama Zoological Park.

Juanite Stein of Howling Bells

An Arctic Wolf howls at the Berlin Zoo, in Germany.

1 2 ••• 12 13 15 17 18 ••• 79 80