View allAll Photos Tagged offthebeatenpath

Montrose is a former village in Sioux County, Nebraska. The townsite is located near the intersection of the Powder River Trail and the Cheyenne & Black Hills Stage Road and is now a part of the Oglala National Grassland. Montrose was established in 1887 on a ford across Hat Creek by immigrants from Austria, Germany, & Luxembourg. It was named from its lofty elevation (mont) and native rose bushes (rose).

In 1890, fear of the Ghost Dance cult led the settlers to construct a fortified bunker. Omaha Bishop Richard Scannell confirmed 46 Catholics at the church in June 1899. By 1904, the settlement had a school, a blacksmith, and a general store. In 1910, the settlement's population peaked at 24 inhabitants.

Montrose had a post office from 1887 to 1948. In 1953, the schoolhouse was moved away from the townsite.

All that remains of the town is the historic Immaculate Conception Catholic Church built by the settlers there in 1887, and the Warbonnett Historic Site.

 

Found abandoned inside the old Slick High School.

 

Havilah and Bodfish, Kern County, California. Downtown hotel. Corlew's Silver City - manufactured ghost town. Old buildings from all over the Kern Valley have been hauled in and re-arranged in the form of an old western town.

 

Corlew's Silver City, Bodfish, Kern County, California. Corlew's Silver City is a not a real ghost town, but a manufactured one. In the sixties and seventies, Dave and Arvilla Mills found several old, historic buildings from all over the Kern Valley region, hauled them to Bodfish and rearranged them to re-create the old western town of Silver City.

 

While the town itself is not real, nearly all of the buildings are authentic. Brought in from all over the area, from Keyesville to Isabella, from Whiskey Flat to Kernvale - many old towns and mining camps that are just a faded memory, or lost under the waters of nearby Lake Isabella. The Corlew family purchased the attraction and re-opened it in 1992, and have spent many hours restoring the buildings to an authentic state. Some of the buildings include the Isabella Jail, church, hotel, post office, saloon, and more.

 

Corlew's Silver City is waaaay off the beaten path, tucked away in the southern foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, roughly an hour northeast of Bakersfield, a few miles from Lake Isabella. It's a bit of a faded tourist stop, a little worse for wear from the ravages of time - but that's partly by design, because the buildings are meant to be preserved in a state of 'arrested decay'. A bit of tourist-trap kitsch with the creepy mannequin displays, but still worth the visit for old western buffs and history enthusiasts.

 

For more information on Corlew's Silver City, visit Their Official Website.

Or, visit the information page on www.ghosttowns.com/states/ca/silvercity.html.

 

Picture taken December 16, 2007. Photo #30 of 60 of my Havilah and Bodfish' photoset.

 

This photograph is free for use on the internet under the 'Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial' license. You are free to copy, distribute, transmit and/or adapt this photograph without seeking permission first, as long as you provide attribution to the photograph (preferably by linking to this web page, or including the phrase 'Copyright Matthew Lee High'), and as long as the the photo is not used for commercial purposes. For more information about Creative Commons licenses, visit creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/deed.en.

Morning light over Lake Braies (Italian: Lago di Braies), situated at the foot of Seekofel (2,810m), part of the Prague Dolomites, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, in South Tyrol, northern Italy.

 

© All rights reserved. You may not use this photo in website, blog or any other media without my explicit permission.

Morning on Chiselbury Camp.

 

Overnight camp out in Chiselbury Camp, an Iron Age hill fort on the top of Fovant Down, famous for it's Great War camp badges carved in the chalk of its slopes. A 40+ mile ride from home in Southampton, up to Salisbury via Romsey and the National Cycle Network Route 24, then to Salisbury Racecourse where I picked up the old cattle drove that goes all the way to Shaftesbury.

Dusk falling meant I overshot my destination in the poor light! I rode another mile or two to Ansty before realising my mistake, and had to backtrack, so by the time I reached the old fort I had missed the sunset there and it was properly dark.

The sunrise made up for that though. Up at 5.30 and a short walk to the chalk cap badges while I brewed up some tea.

Back on the road shortly after, keen to get back before the midday heat.

Dusk light over the Temple of Apollo (Portara), an ancient Greek temple constructed in the 6th century BC, with Naxos Town (Chora) in background, on the west side of the island of Naxos, part of the Cyclades island group, in Greece.

 

© All rights reserved. You may not use this photo in website, blog or any other media without my explicit permission.

Intentionally shaped with distinctive characteristics that convey that the tree was shaped by human activity rather than deformed by nature or disease. A massive network of constructed pre-Columbian roads and trails has been well documented across the Americas, and in many places remnants can still be found of trails used by hunters and gatherers. One unique characteristic of the trail marker tree is a horizontal bend several feet off the ground, which makes it visible at greater distances, even in snow. Even today, modern hunters look for horizontal shapes while hunting deer, elk, and moose.

Kerinci region, Sumatra, Indonesia

 

Bento Wetlands

Decorated rose window for Chiesa Rettoria Madonna della Greca (Church of Madonna della Greca), oldest church in the old town of Locorotondo ("round place" in Italian), in Metropolitan City of Bari, Apulia region, southern Italy.

 

© All rights reserved. You may not use this photo in website, blog or any other media without my explicit permission.

Havilah and Bodfish, Kern County, California. The Wells Fargo building. Corlew's Silver City - manufactured ghost town. Old buildings from all over the Kern Valley have been hauled in and re-arranged in the form of an old western town.

 

Corlew's Silver City, Bodfish, Kern County, California. Corlew's Silver City is a not a real ghost town, but a manufactured one. In the sixties and seventies, Dave and Arvilla Mills found several old, historic buildings from all over the Kern Valley region, hauled them to Bodfish and rearranged them to re-create the old western town of Silver City.

 

While the town itself is not real, nearly all of the buildings are authentic. Brought in from all over the area, from Keyesville to Isabella, from Whiskey Flat to Kernvale - many old towns and mining camps that are just a faded memory, or lost under the waters of nearby Lake Isabella. The Corlew family purchased the attraction and re-opened it in 1992, and have spent many hours restoring the buildings to an authentic state. Some of the buildings include the Isabella Jail, church, hotel, post office, saloon, and more.

 

Corlew's Silver City is waaaay off the beaten path, tucked away in the southern foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, roughly an hour northeast of Bakersfield, a few miles from Lake Isabella. It's a bit of a faded tourist stop, a little worse for wear from the ravages of time - but that's partly by design, because the buildings are meant to be preserved in a state of 'arrested decay'. A bit of tourist-trap kitsch with the creepy mannequin displays, but still worth the visit for old western buffs and history enthusiasts.

 

For more information on Corlew's Silver City, visit Their Official Website.

Or, visit the information page on www.ghosttowns.com/states/ca/silvercity.html.

 

Picture taken December 16, 2007. Photo #25 of 60 of my Havilah and Bodfish' photoset.

 

This photograph is free for use on the internet under the 'Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial' license. You are free to copy, distribute, transmit and/or adapt this photograph without seeking permission first, as long as you provide attribution to the photograph (preferably by linking to this web page, or including the phrase 'Copyright Matthew Lee High'), and as long as the the photo is not used for commercial purposes. For more information about Creative Commons licenses, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/deed.en.

Dawn light over the imposing rock face of the Seekofel (2,810m), part of the Prague Dolomites, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, by Lake Braies (Italian: Lago di Braies), in South Tyrol, northern Italy.

 

© All rights reserved. You may not use this photo in website, blog or any other media without my explicit permission.

Gran Turismo stopover in Baker City Oregon

 

Had a great time checking out all the amazing super cars visiting Baker City Oregon during the Gran Turismo Oregon

  

Night view of the Saint Nicholas Fortress, a single stronghold that guards the Mandraki harbour, in the Medieval City of Rhodes, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the best-preserved medieval towns in Europe, on the island of Rhodes, part of the Dodecanese island group, in South Aegean, Greece.

 

© All rights reserved. You may not use this photo in website, blog or any other media without my explicit permission.

Social Distancing in Burnt River Canyon in Baker County

 

A beautiful Spring day exploring the Burnt River Canyon between Durkee and Unity in Baker County Oregon . Lots of wildlife, and it's calving season so lots of baby cows too

 

The Burnt River Canyon near Durkee is always one of our favorite drives for taking in the majestic scenery of Eastern Oregon and watching wildlife along the way.

For more information about Burnt River Canyon or other Baker County back roads and scenic byways visit the Baker County Tourism website at www.travlebakercounty.com

  

Low angle view of Banyu Wana Amertha Waterfall (Air Terjun Banyu Wana Amertha), located in North Bali, Indonesia.

 

© All rights reserved. You may not use this photo in website, blog or any other media without my explicit permission.

Social Distancing in Burnt River Canyon in Baker County

 

A beautiful Spring day exploring the Burnt River Canyon between Durkee and Unity in Baker County Oregon . Lots of wildlife, and it's calving season so lots of baby cows too

 

The Burnt River Canyon near Durkee is always one of our favorite drives for taking in the majestic scenery of Eastern Oregon and watching wildlife along the way.

For more information about Burnt River Canyon or other Baker County back roads and scenic byways visit the Baker County Tourism website at www.travlebakercounty.com

  

The Creighton Lied Art Gallery presents the Bachelor of Fine Arts Exhibit of four senior students Rachel Bennett, Heather Burk, Michael Mayer and Peter Walsh. Each student is required to present his or her most recent work and identify the themes. These four candidates offer a wide range of artistic forms:

Rachel Bennett presents Dichotomies – figurative paintings

Heather Burk presents Off The Beaten Path – graphic design

Michael Mayer presents The Process – photographic new media

Peter Walsh presents Self In Story – figurative sculpture in installation

  

For more information, see

www.creighton.edu/ccas

www.facebook.com/creightonccas

www.twitter.com/creighton_ccas

Exposed roots gripping the red earth of Anaga, Tenerife. A testament to nature’s endurance, these tangled lifelines hold firm against time and erosion in this mystical forest.

Sheep and sunbathers at the park in Västra Skogan, Stockholm, April 27, 2007.

Mt. Kunyit is an active volcano in the Kerinci Seblat National Park, Sumatra, Indonesia. The trek to the crater takes about six hours, and passes through beautiful cloud forests and beside fumrole volcanic vents. In the middle of the crater lies a bubbling hotspring, and what locals call "Taman Dewa" or "The Garden of the Gods." It has a spiritual, mythical place in local folklore, and is the site where local hero Depati Parbo meditated to supposedly gain invulnerability to Dutch bullets during the war for Kerinci.

See more detailed descriptions of the pictures at www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.592735630778650.1073741...

and read more about the Kerinci area at www.wildsumatra.com

Looking closer at this abandoned, weathered farm house (or storage shed) in Inland northern California, one can see the chicken wire window screen only stops the big bugs. Looking at the openings on the far wall, even bigger critters can enter. Tar paper may have once covered the walls.

 

Location map is only in the general area.

A visit to an ancient man made underground grotto (cave) that was equipped with olive oil making equipment during the Middle Ages. In this photo is a 15th century olive oil press.

Sights around Civita di Bagnoregio

Social Distancing in Burnt River Canyon in Baker County

 

A beautiful Spring day exploring the Burnt River Canyon between Durkee and Unity in Baker County Oregon . Lots of wildlife, and it's calving season so lots of baby cows too

 

The Burnt River Canyon near Durkee is always one of our favorite drives for taking in the majestic scenery of Eastern Oregon and watching wildlife along the way.

For more information about Burnt River Canyon or other Baker County back roads and scenic byways visit the Baker County Tourism website at www.travlebakercounty.com

  

Giant cliff by Myrtos Bay, on the island of Kefalonia, Greece.

 

© All rights reserved. You may not use this photo in website, blog or any other media without my explicit permission.

MV Sea Gypsy, a Burmese junk, cruising in the Mergui Archipelago, Myanmar

Havilah and Bodfish, Kern County, California. Downtown hotel. Corlew's Silver City - manufactured ghost town. Old buildings from all over the Kern Valley have been hauled in and re-arranged in the form of an old western town.

 

Corlew's Silver City, Bodfish, Kern County, California. Corlew's Silver City is a not a real ghost town, but a manufactured one. In the sixties and seventies, Dave and Arvilla Mills found several old, historic buildings from all over the Kern Valley region, hauled them to Bodfish and rearranged them to re-create the old western town of Silver City.

 

While the town itself is not real, nearly all of the buildings are authentic. Brought in from all over the area, from Keyesville to Isabella, from Whiskey Flat to Kernvale - many old towns and mining camps that are just a faded memory, or lost under the waters of nearby Lake Isabella. The Corlew family purchased the attraction and re-opened it in 1992, and have spent many hours restoring the buildings to an authentic state. Some of the buildings include the Isabella Jail, church, hotel, post office, saloon, and more.

 

Corlew's Silver City is waaaay off the beaten path, tucked away in the southern foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, roughly an hour northeast of Bakersfield, a few miles from Lake Isabella. It's a bit of a faded tourist stop, a little worse for wear from the ravages of time - but that's partly by design, because the buildings are meant to be preserved in a state of 'arrested decay'. A bit of tourist-trap kitsch with the creepy mannequin displays, but still worth the visit for old western buffs and history enthusiasts.

 

For more information on Corlew's Silver City, visit Their Official Website.

Or, visit the information page on www.ghosttowns.com/states/ca/silvercity.html.

 

Picture taken December 16, 2007. Photo #29 of 60 of my Havilah and Bodfish' photoset.

 

This photograph is free for use on the internet under the 'Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial' license. You are free to copy, distribute, transmit and/or adapt this photograph without seeking permission first, as long as you provide attribution to the photograph (preferably by linking to this web page, or including the phrase 'Copyright Matthew Lee High'), and as long as the the photo is not used for commercial purposes. For more information about Creative Commons licenses, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/deed.en.

The Creighton Lied Art Gallery presents the Bachelor of Fine Arts Exhibit of four senior students Rachel Bennett, Heather Burk, Michael Mayer and Peter Walsh. Each student is required to present his or her most recent work and identify the themes. These four candidates offer a wide range of artistic forms:

Rachel Bennett presents Dichotomies – figurative paintings

Heather Burk presents Off The Beaten Path – graphic design

Michael Mayer presents The Process – photographic new media

Peter Walsh presents Self In Story – figurative sculpture in installation

  

For more information, see

www.creighton.edu/ccas

www.facebook.com/creightonccas

www.twitter.com/creighton_ccas

The Creighton Lied Art Gallery presents the Bachelor of Fine Arts Exhibit of four senior students Rachel Bennett, Heather Burk, Michael Mayer and Peter Walsh. Each student is required to present his or her most recent work and identify the themes. These four candidates offer a wide range of artistic forms:

Rachel Bennett presents Dichotomies – figurative paintings

Heather Burk presents Off The Beaten Path – graphic design

Michael Mayer presents The Process – photographic new media

Peter Walsh presents Self In Story – figurative sculpture in installation

  

For more information, see

www.creighton.edu/ccas

www.facebook.com/creightonccas

www.twitter.com/creighton_ccas

Havilah and Bodfish, Kern County, California. Corlew's Silver City - manufactured ghost town. Old buildings from all over the Kern Valley have been hauled in and re-arranged in the form of an old western town.

 

Corlew's Silver City, Bodfish, Kern County, California. Corlew's Silver City is a not a real ghost town, but a manufactured one. In the sixties and seventies, Dave and Arvilla Mills found several old, historic buildings from all over the Kern Valley region, hauled them to Bodfish and rearranged them to re-create the old western town of Silver City.

 

While the town itself is not real, nearly all of the buildings are authentic. Brought in from all over the area, from Keyesville to Isabella, from Whiskey Flat to Kernvale - many old towns and mining camps that are just a faded memory, or lost under the waters of nearby Lake Isabella. The Corlew family purchased the attraction and re-opened it in 1992, and have spent many hours restoring the buildings to an authentic state. Some of the buildings include the Isabella Jail, church, hotel, post office, saloon, and more.

 

Corlew's Silver City is waaaay off the beaten path, tucked away in the southern foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, roughly an hour northeast of Bakersfield, a few miles from Lake Isabella. It's a bit of a faded tourist stop, a little worse for wear from the ravages of time - but that's partly by design, because the buildings are meant to be preserved in a state of 'arrested decay'. A bit of tourist-trap kitsch with the creepy mannequin displays, but still worth the visit for old western buffs and history enthusiasts.

 

For more information on Corlew's Silver City, visit Their Official Website.

Or, visit the information page on www.ghosttowns.com/states/ca/silvercity.html.

 

Picture taken December 16, 2007. Photo #23 of 60 of my Havilah and Bodfish' photoset.

 

This photograph is free for use on the internet under the 'Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial' license. You are free to copy, distribute, transmit and/or adapt this photograph without seeking permission first, as long as you provide attribution to the photograph (preferably by linking to this web page, or including the phrase 'Copyright Matthew Lee High'), and as long as the the photo is not used for commercial purposes. For more information about Creative Commons licenses, visit creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/deed.en.

The main entrance into Civita di Bagnoregio.

Barriles (known also as Sitio Barriles or by the designation BU-24), is one of the most famous archaeological sites in Panama. It is located in the highlands of the Chiriquí Province of Western Panama at 1200 meters above sea level. It is several kilometers west of the modern town of Volcán. This places the site in the Gran Chiriquí culture area (encompassing Western Panama and much of Southern Costa Rica, parts of the even broader Intermediate Area or Isthmo-Colombian Area). The site was originally named for several small stone barrels found in the area, although these have also been found elsewhere in the Río Chiriquí Viejo valley and in Costa Rica. This area has a cool, spring-like climate with a pronounced rainy season between May and November, and a dry but windy season the rest of the year. The region lies on the western flanks of Volcán Barú, a dormant volcano and the highest mountain in Panama.

 

Like El Caño in Central Panama or Panamá Viejo in Panama City, Barriles is one of the few archaeological sites in Panama regularly accessible to the public. The northwestern portion of the site is accessible to the public through the Landau finca (which is a private property), who have a variety of artifacts on display in their yard, in the walls of a fake excavation block, and in a small private museum. Not all of the artifacts on display were found on-site. The family offers guided tours of the collections and their gardens in both Spanish and English. Donations are greatly appreciated.

 

The site is believed to have once been a socioceremonial center with a substantial residential population between 500-1000 individuals. It contains a small mound which was once associated with a row of 14 statues. Ten of these depicted solitary individuals, while four included one individual- often chubbier, taller, wearing a conical hat and ornaments- riding atop the shoulders of a naked man, though some of these individuals also wore conical hats. Many scholars have interpreted these double individual statues as evidence for the existence of higher and lower status social groups within Barriles. A large metate (grinding stone) whose border was adorned by tiny stone heads has also been interpreted as evidence for violence or human sacrifice in the past. Many of the statues and the metate are on currently display in the Museo Antropológico Reina Torres de Araúz in Panama City.

 

source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barriles

The Creighton Lied Art Gallery presents the Bachelor of Fine Arts Exhibit of four senior students Rachel Bennett, Heather Burk, Michael Mayer and Peter Walsh. Each student is required to present his or her most recent work and identify the themes. These four candidates offer a wide range of artistic forms:

Rachel Bennett presents Dichotomies – figurative paintings

Heather Burk presents Off The Beaten Path – graphic design

Michael Mayer presents The Process – photographic new media

Peter Walsh presents Self In Story – figurative sculpture in installation

  

For more information, see

www.creighton.edu/ccas

www.facebook.com/creightonccas

www.twitter.com/creighton_ccas

Morning light over the picturesque harbour town of Symi, on the island of Symi, part of the Rhodes regional unit, in South Aegean, Greece.

 

© All rights reserved. You may not use this photo in website, blog or any other media without my explicit permission.

Friends family and family friends..

 

Taken at the Blue Lagoon near Huntsville Texas

    

Havilah and Bodfish, Kern County, California. The old post office. Corlew's Silver City - manufactured ghost town. Old buildings from all over the Kern Valley have been hauled in and re-arranged in the form of an old western town.

 

Corlew's Silver City, Bodfish, Kern County, California. Corlew's Silver City is a not a real ghost town, but a manufactured one. In the sixties and seventies, Dave and Arvilla Mills found several old, historic buildings from all over the Kern Valley region, hauled them to Bodfish and rearranged them to re-create the old western town of Silver City.

 

While the town itself is not real, nearly all of the buildings are authentic. Brought in from all over the area, from Keyesville to Isabella, from Whiskey Flat to Kernvale - many old towns and mining camps that are just a faded memory, or lost under the waters of nearby Lake Isabella. The Corlew family purchased the attraction and re-opened it in 1992, and have spent many hours restoring the buildings to an authentic state. Some of the buildings include the Isabella Jail, church, hotel, post office, saloon, and more.

 

Corlew's Silver City is waaaay off the beaten path, tucked away in the southern foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, roughly an hour northeast of Bakersfield, a few miles from Lake Isabella. It's a bit of a faded tourist stop, a little worse for wear from the ravages of time - but that's partly by design, because the buildings are meant to be preserved in a state of 'arrested decay'. A bit of tourist-trap kitsch with the creepy mannequin displays, but still worth the visit for old western buffs and history enthusiasts.

 

For more information on Corlew's Silver City, visit Their Official Website.

Or, visit the information page on www.ghosttowns.com/states/ca/silvercity.html.

 

Picture taken December 16, 2007. Photo #34 of 60 of my Havilah and Bodfish' photoset.

 

This photograph is free for use on the internet under the 'Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial' license. You are free to copy, distribute, transmit and/or adapt this photograph without seeking permission first, as long as you provide attribution to the photograph (preferably by linking to this web page, or including the phrase 'Copyright Matthew Lee High'), and as long as the the photo is not used for commercial purposes. For more information about Creative Commons licenses, visit creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/deed.en.

Stockholm, Sweden. Taken from the island called Stora Essingen just about 30 meters from the light rail station.

 

That's the Tranebergsbron in the distance. The Tranebergsbron is also known as Nockebybron.

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