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Photo taken at the Lean Deck Clinic by Kenneth Yeung. Permission is allowed for use in your blog, website or presentation as long as you adhere to the stated Creative Commons license for this photo/image. Attribution must be included and a link back to this photo page is required.
Photo/image credit should read: (cc) Kenneth Yeung - www.snapfoc.us
Lean Machine played Volunteer Appreciation Night at the opening of Brier Week in Edmonton. They are a subset of the much larger Retrofitz.
Lean-To Thursday!
Lean-To:
Dimensions: 10’ W x 50’ L x 12’ H
8’ Pole Spacing
Click Here! pioneerpolebuildings.com/portfolio/project/30-w-x-50-l-x-...
#LeanToThursday! #PPB #PioneerPoleBuildings
Yellowstone's famous (or infamous, depending on your point of view) bull elk #10, on the last lap of winter. Spring green-up couldn't come soon enough.
Lean or dead branches. Rivière ouareau in the background. OK, I become romantic back into the nature.
The Town Named "Gulch"
Well, kind of. The townsite of Aroya was platted in 1907 by the Union Pacific Land Company. Although the post office opened in 1889, and the Kansas Pacific reached this point in 1870 and constructed a depot, it is difficult to say exactly when this town was founded. Aroya, by the way, is a corruption of arroyo, Spanish for "gulch." Aroya grew slowly, with peak years being between 1910 and 1920. Around 100 people called Aroya home at its peak, but the town soon began to decline. In 1965, the post office was closed, and by the 1970's, only two residents could be found in the town. Today, it lies totally abandoned.
I was not expecting much on the trip to Aroya, but was very much surprised at what remains. The schoolhouse has been on my "Most Wanted to Photograph Places in Colorado" list for quite some time now, so getting to see and shoot it was a great delight.