View allAll Photos Tagged monochomatic
Manipulated photograph- people on a beach at low tide.
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None of my work is Ai assisted and is copyright Rg Sanders aka Ronald George Sanders.
Interested in acquiring my work?
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16x24 in 60x40 ct
None of my work is Ai assisted and is copyright Rg Sanders aka Ronald George Sanders.
Shot at the Detroit Zoo
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Interested in acquiring my work?
Contact me
None of my work is Ai assisted and is copyright Rg Sanders aka Ronald George Sanders.
After spending the winter on home rails, Florida East Coast's SD70M-2 locomotives were leased to Norfolk Southern while the monochomatic Class 1 is power short. Like my grandparents, they came north for Summer, in this case ending up in the intermodal pool between New Jersey and Georgia. Here FEC 106 is at track speed running through the village of Walnut Bottom after sunset, a faint trail of exhaust bending out the stack as the train hustles west.
California's beaches are incredibly popular, with an estimated 150 million day visits generated annually by tourists and residents. A significant portion of these visits, about 54%, are concentrated at just 15 beaches. This isn't one of the 15
The landscape in the Tehachapi mountains is characterized by grasslands. This native vegetation shapes the larger environment of rolling hills.
During the dry seasons of summer and fall, the grasslands take on a golden hue. In contrast, winter and spring rains transform the hills into a lush green, and wildflowers add vibrant spots or splashes of color across the landscape.
While the area supports many native plants, it is also home to numerous non-native species introduced over the centuries. The grasslands, in particular, are dominated by non-native annual grasses brought to California in the mid-19th century, which have since become naturalized.
Balboa Park, a 1,200-acre cultural oasis in San Diego, began as "City Park" in 1868, and was renamed in 1910 to honor Vasco Núñez de Balboa, the first European to see the Pacific Ocean from the Americas. It gained fame for hosting the 1915 Panama-California Exposition, which shaped much of the park's architecture and character.
Over the last 20 years, on average, there have been 30 confirmed suicides at the Golden Gate Bridge every year. In 2023, while the net was still under construction, there were 14 confirmed suicides, reducing the average number of suicides by more than half. While the net was under construction, the majority of suicides occurred when people found gaps where netting was not yet installed and jumped.
As of January 1, 2024, the Golden Gate Bridge now has a continuous physical suicide barrier installed the full length of the 1.7-mile span. The suicide deterrent system, also known as the net, has been installed on the east and west sides of approximately 95% of the Bridge. In some areas of the Bridge, due to ongoing construction or design factors, vertical fencing is in place instead of or in addition to the net.
Heliopsis Helianthoides - Oxeye sunflower or ox-eye daisy, is native to eastern and central North America. It produces both pollen and nectar for a wide variety of pollinating insects including flies, bees, beetles and butterflies. Leave the seed heads up in the fall and birds will eat the seeds.
The two main towers of the Golden Gate Bridge are 746 feet (227 meters) tall above the water line. They extend over 100 feet below the water's surface as well. The towers were the tallest bridge towers in the world when the bridge was completed in 1937
The Monterey Cypress is recognized, world-wide, as the iconic tree of the California Coast. Once one of the rarest trees in the world, naturally found in only two small groves within a few hundred yards of the Pacific Ocean on the Monterey Peninsula and at Point Lobos, it is now planted throughout the world in favorable locations. It seems to thrive in foggy coastal areas, where ocean winds and salty sea spray make it extremely difficult for other species of trees to even survive. In fact, wind abuse sculpts it into the unique and picturesque shape for which it is famous – a strongly contorted growth habit reminiscent of trees found in alpine timberlines.
The U.S. commercial Dungeness crab fishery began in San Francisco in 1848, (before Washington became a state) and has been regulated in the state of California since 1895. Today, the West Coast commercial Dungeness crab fishery exists in Oregon, Washington and California, with the California fishery divided into two separate management areas: North and Central, delineated by the Mendocino-Sonoma county line.
The Tri-State Dungeness Crab Commission is hosted by the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission and is led by experts from each state’s fish and wildlife departments. The commission works to enforce synonymous regulations across the three states, such as size limits and season length, and provide fisheries management recommendations to state and federal lawmakers.
Like many inventions, the sailboat probably originated in ancient Egypt. Around 4000 BC, Egyptians assembled a simple rigging system and suspended a piece of cloth in the air to pull basic log boats along rivers.
These vessels were long and narrow, and their simple rigging was difficult to control. However, the Egyptians had discovered that wind could do the work instead of oars.
By 3000 BC, the idea had spread extensively in the region, and sailboat design became more advanced. Most sailing still took place inland, and square sails became common throughout the ancient world.
Castlewellan Lake and smoke trails from a fire over a mile away drifting on the slow breeze. The decision to go black and white sometimes is down to the colour being a bit flat and not doing much for the picture , on this occasion it was far to strong and saturated and overpowering the scene!
Love locks are a romantic tradition of attaching padlocks to landmarks to symbolize everlasting love. The tradition is believed to have originated from a Serbian story about a couple who pledged their love on a bridge before World War I. The tradition has spread globally and can be found on bridges, lamp posts, fences, and monuments.
There are several places to find love locks near the Golden Gate Bridge, including:
Battery Spencer overlook in Sausalito.
The National Park Service discourages the practice of attaching love locks because they can damage structures and pollute the area with discarded keys. In 2015, a section of the Pont des Arts footbridge in Paris collapsed due to the weight of the padlocks.
I met Nate outside the NYC photo expo last weekend ..He was just watching the door...anytime you get 10k photographers together someone is getting there picture taken....Thanks Nate