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An unusual sight .. a wombat at the beach. He was pretty determined, moved at quite a pace and swam across a small creek to get there.
Edsel Pacer 1958 convertible - El Prado, Centro Habana, Cuba.
Esp 👉 Patrimonio de la Humanidad por la UNESCO en 1982. La Habana se encuentra en la costa noroeste de Cuba.
Eng 👉 UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1982. Havana lies on the northwest coast of Cuba.
Fra 👉 Au patrimoine mondial de l'UNESCO en 1982. La Havane est située sur la côte nord-ouest de Cuba.
A pair of locomotives bring up the rear of a northbound coal empty on KCS just north of Lanagan, Missouri.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Candid street photography from Glasgow, Scotland. Such an awesome piece of facial hair as I captured this guy pacing back and forth. Enjoy!
I have a few pacing shots of SOO SD60M's, too, and this one from December 2011 is probably the best one. I like the low light of a clear late autumn/early winter evening, and I even got a bit of a self-portrait with the shadow of my trusty Mercury Milan in the lower right. I'm still driving that car today, with over 213,000 miles on it.
A visit to Hengoed to photograph the last of the class 37 workings also afforded the chance to grab a few Pacers running about. Here 143606 heads into the station with a Penarth bound working.
Buffalo & Pittsburgh train SIBF (Salamanca to Buffalo) is headed north through Chaffee in the late evening hours as we pace the train along highway 16 and snag some pan shots.
With the Bozeman Turn on the drawbar, MRL 355 glides into Livingston on MRL's 2nd Sub. The big, 20 cylinder EMD would ease its train into the yard to wait for a helper set to assist over Bozeman Pass.
MRL LB (Laurel to Bozeman and return)
MRL SD45 #355
MRL SD40-2XR #263
Livingston, MT
May 2nd, 2022
ONR 512 begins the return trip after a lengthy dramatic delay in Noranda. Protestors against the Copper smelting plant began laying down underneath their train waiting to reverse into the plant.
After a few hours of delay the were able to begin work shortly before sundown.
With only a few miles left to the El Segundo mine, Escalante Western's trio of SD40s are roaring right along with their empty train. Despite not only the very brief crash course in pacing a train, but also having a very small window of opportunity where the tracks are close enough to the highway with no obstructions, I think my wife did a pretty decent driving job to make this shot happen!