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A long established but underdocumented bike path in Miami is the Snake Creek bike trail. It runs along the canal and serves as a connector between coastal North Miami Beach (NE 165th ST/22nd Ave) and the mini-industrial center of Miami Gardens (~NE 196th ST/2nd Ave). It starts out as a simple bike lane (a little further back but also pictured here, left) and becomes separated the rest of the way (separation also starts in this picture). The bidirectional bike lane is to the left of the one way traffic, and is diverted further up (as indicated by the sign pointing to the right). Although the start of the (separated!) bike path seems a bit neglected with rocks and bits of glass on the ground, the path is well maintained throughout the rest of the route.
PATH PA-1A 688 (St Louis 1965) leads Newark-bound train into Harrison NJ. 7-24-87
PATH cars of classes PA-1 and PA-2 came in two body styles, A-cars with a cab at one end and C-cars which were cabless; all were motored.
The PATH compared favorably to the New York Subway when I was there, with clean air-conditioned cars with transverse seats. They even had a railfan seat like the cars in Chicago. It's too bad (according to the comments I've read) that they've become pricks since 9-11. They have a good operation and should be proud of it. Railfans aren't terrorists. With most of the information they need available publicly and the invention of very inconspicuous cell phone cameras, why would a real terrorist be hanging around on a platform with a camera you can see for a mile? (Yes, I know PATH owned the World Trade Center, or at least the ground it was on and that their Hudson Terminal was directly beneath it--but hassling railfans isn't going to make their system safer)
My bear version of the girls of The Path. A short horror game by Tale of Tales.
Seriously, check it out.
I had not wandered round the garden of Fairview Hotel for several years now, and found it not only just as beautifully maintained, but also full of new nooks and crannies and beautiful little stone buildings, many of which with speciality restaurants. Probably my favourite hotel in the whole world!
I think these might actually be an invasive species called Fragmites, but I'm not sure. From the observatory deck, this peculiar narrow path of these plants stretched off for several hundred feet. I think there might have been a dirt road there in the past.
Used GND filters, total of 5 stops difference, on the sky. Not much post processing, just brought out a little more contrast and then desaturated a bit. Not HDR or DRI.
Fujifilm Iso 200, Pentax Asahi SP500, 28mm Helios objective.
No edition done to this or any of my photographs unless it says so, not even cropped, from negative to flickr!
Thank you to all for your comments, faves, notes and expos!.-
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Posadas - Misiones - Argentina
More Info: - Wikipedia -.-
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Canon 5D Mark II
EF 70-200mm F4L IS USM @ 78mm
f/32
1/15
ISO 100
0 EV
Flash:No
- Shoot in RAW and processed with Lightroom
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© Pablo Reinsch Photography
Please don't use this image without my permission.
From Pin Mill at High tide we walked up to the Cliff Plantation forest, catching glimpses of the Orwell as we walked. Deeper into the forest we saw sunlight through trees lighting up leaves in autumn colours and a variety of fungi in the shadowy undergrowth. We walked through then around the edge of the forest making our way down to the edge of the Orwell and then back up along the cliff top path until we came to the steps down towards the houseboat community. Some are living in what were abandoned wrecks of traditional vessels, some such vessels are just abandoned.