View allAll Photos Tagged moody
We filled up our water jugs and water bottles with cold natural spring water fresh flowing from the mountain and piped out to the roadside here, like we did yesterday at Caesar's Head Spring (cf. www.flickr.com/photos/131996261@N05/albums/72157718944557828 for my album of a dozen photos)
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Sit and sip and fill up with fresh flowing cold spring water.
Our first time here: we found it and we love it!
The best of our 848 captures are in a mini-themed album:
• Outing to Oconee State Park, SC – 2021APR13
◦ Moody Spring – 2021APR13 – SC Highway 107
◦ Oconee State Park, SC – 2021APR13 – Mountain Rest, SC
◦ Wigington Overlook – 2021APR13 – SC Highway 413, SCok
Hope you enjoy this 25% of 16 spring captures we took today!
X-MEN's Mystique in her lair.
The goal here was to create something a bit on the dark side but maintain rich hues. I chose this doll because of her vibrant red hair. Even with darker lighting, it still looks bold. She's such a gorgeous doll, and I absolutely love her in this blue Bold for Opulence Vanessa dress!
Peter Goldthorpe "Inside the Snowdome" (right)
Oil on linen.
153 x 138 cms
Joshua Andree "Storm Bay (Brought to you by)" (left)
Oil on canvas
122 x 153 cms
These two blue paintings each tell a moody story. Peter Goldthorpe has just been announced the 2021 Glover Prize People's Choice winner, based on a popular vote. www.examiner.com.au/story/7166345/tasmanian-artists-win-b...
Peter's work is a view of Cradle Mountain from the western side (one not often seen in photographs):
"On this day I was enjoying the wild nip of winter and the tracery of snow on the plants but disappointed not to be seeing anything beyond fifty metres. With the easing of the wind, came an opening of the scene, before it was swallowed once more by blizzard."
Joshua's work is of the iconic Storm Bay in southern Tasmania. Part of this is used for salmon farming and is an essential part of Tasmania's relatively small economy. Joshua writes:
"The Atlantic salmon industry in Tasmania is worth an estimated 497 million dollars annually. 497 million is the dollar value that is placed upon the purchase of an ageless landscape. It would be easy to paint a nice landscape of Storm Bay with pretty blue sky and puffy clouds reflected in calm waters. But it's not that. It's a complex environment with rich cultural and social history. Further, it is inherently scarred by the presence of pens that just don't belong. An eloquent allegory for the presence in the landscape of those and their ancestors who impart them."
Overcast and moody sunrise from Putty Beach Headland in the Bouddi National Park on the Central Coast, NSW, Australia.
An unexpected burst of cloudiness in Darwin's dry season - usually we're on cloudless boring sunsets at this time of year! Lucky us! :D
Sunset ~ Ibis ~ Florida Everglades U.S.A.
South Florida ~ Palm Beach County, Florida
(three more photos 'from this night' in the comments)
This shot was taken at low tide at Whiteabbey in a large pool of water left as the tide receded. The ripples in the sand seem to be pointing towards the fabulous reflection of the moody clouds and the golden light from the sunrise. Harland and Wolff cranes, Samson and Goliath, are just visible peeking above the horizon.
Legananny Dolmen
Legananny (believed to be from the Irish: Liagán Áine meaning "Áine's standing stone") is a townland 5.6 km (3.5 miles) north of Leitrim, County Down, Northern Ireland. It contains the ancient Legannany Dolmen which has stood for between 4000 and 4500 years. It is made up of three large stones standing upright with a very large stone sitting on top of them. It has been linked with the Irish goddess Áine.
The townland borders four other townlands, these are: Benraw, Leitrim, Sleivenboly and Clonvaraghan. Legananny has a population of around 100 people, most of these being farmers and their families. Slieve Garran is the biggest hill in Legananny.
This is a small town nearby named Port Moody,B.C., and this was the end of the line for the Trans Continental Railway joining the Canadian provinces from the Atlantic Ocean with the Pacific Ocean in the 1800's ?
I just love how moody this shot of Virgin Atlantic's A330 looks as it is seen here departing runway 23R at Manchester Airport and being hit by some wind.
Bit of a wash out day, thought the clouds were breaking but they just got worse!
Nikon D750
Nikon 20MM F1.8G @ F11
ISO @ 50
Exposure @ 300 seconds
Formatt Hitech 6 Stop ND Firecrest Filter
Manfrotto tripod with 3 way head
Here is another ancient photo and the caption I originally wrote at the time on RP.net as I slowly migrate all my photos from over there to here on Flickr:
Here is a view looking out the North Portal of the Moody Tunnel at about MP 353.7 from the Aurora (ARR business car #2000) riding the rear of the southbound Denali Star passenger train. This was the last season for Moody Tunnel (the ARR's last between Anchorage and Fairbanks that had yet to be bypassed or daylighted) as it was in the process of being daylighted in early 2008.
Check out this link to see some great photos taken about six months later when the last of it was blown up: www.alaskarails.org/sf/Moody/index.html
Near Denali Park, Alaska
Thursday September 6, 2007
Taking advantage of some gloomy weather, I headed for the woods under the Roaches and the conditions were amazing!
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Moody weather last Sunday. From left: Rigi Hochflue, Rigi Scheidegg, and Rigi Kulm. Cropped, no other editing.
A beautiful lake in the Glacier National Park in Montan. The scene was very moody and beautiful to capture after a short hike