View allAll Photos Tagged lobster...
Equipment on a dock ready to be transferred to a lobster boat. This photo was taken at the Five Islands harbor area. The painted pattern on buoys are unique to an individual fisherperson.
Beadnell is a village and civil parish in Northumberland, England.
Containing the only west-facing harbour entrance on the east coast of England, Beadnell is a tourist base, the town consisting largely of holiday homes, with some small-scale fishing.
The parish church is the Anglican Church of St. Ebba (named after Saint Æbbe the Elder, founder of abbeys and daughter of King Æthelfrith), built in the eighteenth century as a chapel and rebuilt in 1860. A sixteenth-century pele tower remains as part of the public house, The Craster Arms.
Near the harbour are historic limekilns dating from 1747, which were later used for curing herring. They are now owned by the National Trust. Beadnell is within the North Northumberland Heritage Coast and the Northumberland Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Beadnell Bay, a sandy beach stretching 2 miles (3.2 km) to the south, contains a nationally-important colony of little tern and the largest mainland colony of Arctic tern in the United Kingdom. The beach was awarded the Blue Flag rural beach award in 2005.
I was making a facehugger, and it ended up a lobster. I'll go back and finish the facehugger later -- actually, it came out looking pretty good, but just a tad too large. In fact, this lobster is way too big for minifig scale, too. But, really, I'm not going for scale with these, but rather as small as possible while still being recognizable and detailed enough to my satisfaction.
That's a 1x3 plate that all the minifig hands are clipped to. And, even with them all on there, there's still (just barely) enough of the studs' tops left protruding above for the three tiles to stick onto and stay put. Sweetness.
For those of you who overindulged in turkey dinner, how about some nice healthy lobster for Boxing Day instead of turkey leftovers :-)
This is the morning catch that the hard working lobster fishers brought into the harbour at Trout River, Newfoundland.
26/12/2016 www.allenfotowild.com
and had to wait an extra day to drop the traps because of a storm. Two more storms predicted for us this week - could be dangerous for the fishers...
On the docks in Portland, Maine. I swung up to Portland yesterday afternoon hoping to get some pictures of some fishing boats lined up at sunset. Unfortunately the sun ducked behind some clouds early in the evening and there wasn't much light to work with. I made the best of it though, and this arrangement of traps caught my eye against the bright red background of a warehouse!
#AbFav_ORDER
A lobster trap is a portable trap which traps lobsters or crayfish and is used in lobster fishing.
In British English a lobster trap is called a lobster pot.
A lobster trap can catch more than one lobster at a time.
Lobster traps were traditionally constructed out of wood but they are now usually plastic.
An opening permits the lobster to enter a tunnel of netting. Pots are usually constructed in two parts, called the “chamber” and the “parlour”.
The lobster initially enters the chamber, and then moves through another tunnel of netting onto the parlour where there is bait.
Lobster pots are usually dropped to the sea floor about a dozen at a time, and are marked by a buoy so they can be picked up later.
I ALWAYS find them photogenic, I have a whole collection of images of them...
Take care, be safe!
THANK you, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
Lobster pots, traps, clutter, baskets, quayside, nautical, colour, Scarborough, Yorkshire, horizontal, Nikon D7000, "Magda Indigo"
#AbFav_SEA_CLUTTER
A lobster trap is a portable trap which traps lobsters or crayfish and is used in lobster fishing.
In British English a lobster trap is called a lobster pot.
A lobster trap can catch more than one lobster at a time.
Lobster traps were traditionally constructed out of wood but they are now usually plastic.
An opening permits the lobster to enter a tunnel of netting. Pots are usually constructed in two parts, called the “chamber” and the “parlour”.
The lobster initially enters the chamber, and then moves through another tunnel of netting onto the parlour where there is bait.
Lobster pots are usually dropped to the sea floor about a dozen at a time, and are marked by a buoy so they can be picked up later.
I ALWAYS find them photogenic, I have a whole collection of images of them...
Take care, be safe!
THANK you, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
IT IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN (BY LAW!!!) TO USE ANY OF MY image or TEXT on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
Lobster pots, traps, clutter, baskets, quayside, nautical, colour, Scarborough, Yorkshire, horizontal, Nikon D7000, "Magda Indigo"
These flowers, from my home garden, belongs to the genus Heliconia. Heliconia is a genus of about 100 to 200 species of flowering plants . Common names for the genus include lobster-claws, wild plantains or false bird-of-paradise. The last term refers to their close similarity to the bird-of-paradise flowers .
My Photoblog- My Third Eye...!