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The Kingsville dock is located on the north shore of Lake Erie in southwestern Ontario. Not only is it the home of many commercial fishing boats, but also serves as the winter dock for the MV Pelee Islander ll. This ferry, along with it’s fleet mate the MV Jiimaan, transports people and vehicles from March to December to Pelee Island, the most southern inhabited part of Canada.
Navigando tra gli atolli mauriziani
perdonate la scarsa definizione dovuta al passaggio da una vecchia stampa al digitale
Gebänderter Fidschileguan ♂ (Brachylophus fasciatus)
Der Gebänderte Fidschileguan (Brachylophus fasciatus) ist eine von vier Arten der Fidschileguane.
Der Gebänderte Fidschileguan erreicht eine Kopf-Rumpf-Länge von durchschnittlich 17 bis 18 Zentimetern. Die Gesamtlänge liegt bei rund 70 Zentimetern, der Schwanz kann also über 40 Zentimeter lang werden. Das Gewicht beträgt bis zu 200 Gramm. Es gibt aber auch größere Exemplare mit fast einem Meter Länge. Er ist somit ein großer Vertreter aus der Familie der Leguane, jedoch kleiner als der Grüne Leguan, dem er ähnlich sieht. Die Tiere haben einen flachen Körperbau. Auf dem Rücken tragen sie einen kleinen, kaum sichtbaren Kamm. Der lange Schwanz läuft zum Ende hin spitz zu. Die Finger und die Zehen sind mit sehr langen, spitzen Krallen versehen. Das Weibchen ist einheitlich grün gefärbt. Das Männchen hingegen trägt ein Bändermuster aus hellgrünen und dunkelgrünen, dicken Querstreifen am Körper, der Hals ist mit einem hellen Fleck versehen.
The Banded Fijiguana (Brachylophus fasciatus) ♂ is one of four species of Fijian iguanas.
The banded Fijiguana reaches an average head-torso length of 17 to 18 centimeters. The total length is around 70 centimetres, so the tail can be over 40 centimetres long. The weight is up to 200 grams. But there are also larger specimens with a length of almost one meter. It is therefore a large representative of the iguana family, but smaller than the green iguana, which it looks like. The animals have a flat physique. On their backs they wear a small, barely visible comb. The long tail tapers towards the end. The fingers and toes are provided with very long, pointed claws. The female is uniformly green in colour. The male, on the other hand, wears a ribbon pattern of light green and dark green, thick horizontal stripes on the body, the neck is provided with a light spot.
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Please don't use my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. All rights reserved - copyright © Stefano Scarselli
Many thanks to you ALL for the views, faves and comments you make on my shots it is very appreciated
It takes all the young men and women from the village in Padgudpud, Philippines, working as a team, to haul in a long net full of small tuna late in the afternoon.
Canadian Pacific GP38AC 3002 rests next to lines of stored GSNX coal hoppers at Muskego Yard, Milwaukee, after being dropped off by a manifest. The 3002 is one of a batch of nineteen GP38ACs built by Canada's GMDD in 1970-71. The GP38AC, as built by both GMDD and EMD, is essentially a standard GP38 but uses an AR-10 alternator instead of the GP38's generator. 261 units were produced for ten railroads and one utility company; almost all that have not been scrapped have since been rebuilt, but CP's are an exception. They are also notable for the fact that, for a significant portion of their careers, a group was assigned to CP's isolated trackage on Vancouver Island, BC, where they were at some point relettered for E&N Railfreight (Esquimalt & Nanaimo, today's Southern Railway of Vancouver Island, a subsidiary of the Washington Group's Southern Railway of British Columbia, SRY) before being returned to the rest of the CP system (obviously they were re-relettered). A standard geep at Muskego was a sight for sore eyes, as GP33C-ECOs have been the mainstays of yard and local power in Milwaukee for a number of years now. This unit would later go on to Portage, for local work based from there.
With a M249 SAW in hand, ready to protect his island!
Heavily inspired by Mike the Alaskan boi and The Chef!
Oh, this IS my photo.
A Cape Island style fishing boat, mostly used for lobster fishing, is an inshore motor fishing boat found across Atlantic Canada having a single keeled flat bottom at the stern and more rounded towards the bow. The Cape Island style boat is famous for its large step up to the bow. They are known for being good "sea" boats, and riding the swells well. The design originated on Cape Sable Island, Nova Scotia about 1905.
The final scans! This is one of a few slides - chosen at random - from the last batch I have had scanned. I saved then until last as I thought they were the most 'boring' :)
Biz jets, light a/c, gliders, helis, balloons!
Now when I look at them they aren't quite so 'boring'!
Here we see a smart looking Britten-Norman BN-2A Islander seen on my once only visit to Inverness airport back in 1981.
Turns out this is quite a rare shot, as G-AXXG never made it to fly with air Orkney, as apparently it suffered a forced landing on a hill near Aviemore, Scotland on it's delivery flight to the Orkney Islands! It was only recovered by British Airways S.61N in March 1983. The aircraft ended up in Uganda as 5X-BEE and again, unfortunately, was written off on landing at Kaabong, Uganda on 9th Mar 1990.
A small collection of light/biz aircraft can be seen behind the Islander, including HS.125 G-BAZA.
G-AXXG c/n 143 BN-2A-2 early build Islander, completed as G-51-62 in 1970. Registered G-AXXG and delivered to GKN, destined for Air Orkney in 1981 but (as above) never delivered - sold to an airline in Uganda as 5X-BEE and flew until 1990 when written off on landing.
One of my favourite light aircraft types - I even made a visit to the production line at Bembridge on the Isle of Wight.
Taken with a Soviet made Zenith TTL camera and standard lens. Scanned from the original Ektachrome slide (lower quality than Kodachrome) with no digital restoration.
You can see a random selection of my aviation memories here: www.flickriver.com/photos/heathrowjunkie/random/
A few of my teen islanders performing a dance for Tangaroa, god of the sea. For Miss Teen USA on InSim. Interesting tidbit: Tangaroa is described as being yellow-haired, so when Pacific islanders encountered Europeans for the first time, they thought they were his children.
"No man or woman is an island. To exist just for yourself is meaningless. You can achieve the most satisfaction when you feel related to some greater purpose in life, something greater than yourself." -Denis Waitley
This ferry has apparently taken the place of the Sugar Islander II as it has been in dry dock at MCM Marine in the Soo for quite sometime.
Sandy Cove, Digby County, Nova Scotia
Nikon D850
AF-S Nikkor 14-24mm f/2.8 G ED
For more landscapes, seascapes and travel, check out my Instagram.
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■ Please don't use my images for any purpose, including on websites or blogs, without my explicit permission.
■ S.V.P ne pas utiliser cette photo sur un site web, blog ou tout autre média sans ma permission explicite.
© Tom Freda / All rights reserved - Tous droits réservés
The well known Islanders are having a party because that is my last Iron builder entry.
This is my 13th build for the Iron Builder with Matthew De Lanoy.
The seed part is the Brick Round 2x2 Dome Bottom.