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One of the many beautiful locations for your wedding at Glacier National Park.

 

Peak season is between Memorial Day and Labor Day. Locations are subject to restrictions on the length of the ceremony and the number of people and vehicles permitted.

 

For more information regarding the wedding permit process visit the park's Wedding Permit Page.

  

Photo: NPS/Gabriel Morrow

One of the many beautiful locations for your wedding at Glacier National Park.

 

Peak season is between Memorial Day and Labor Day. Locations are subject to restrictions on the length of the ceremony and the number of people and vehicles permitted.

 

For more information regarding the wedding permit process visit the park's Wedding Permit Page.

  

Photo: NPS/Gabriel Morrow

From the last pullout on Teton Park Rd before turning into Jenny Lake Rd. Looking southwest at the Tetons, across the northern end of Jenny Lake. My best guess is that the high peak in the back is the Grand Teton, with Mt Owen in front and to the right and Teewinot Mountain on the left. Storm Point might be the peak on the far right.

 

Friday, September 6, 2013; around 6:16 PM

© Sam Feinsilver 2013

One of the many beautiful locations for your wedding at Glacier National Park.

 

Peak season is between Memorial Day and Labor Day. Locations are subject to restrictions on the length of the ceremony and the number of people and vehicles permitted.

 

For more information regarding the wedding permit process visit the park's Wedding Permit Page.

  

Photo: NPS/Gabriel Morrow

One of the many beautiful locations for your wedding at Glacier National Park.

 

Peak season is between Memorial Day and Labor Day. Locations are subject to restrictions on the length of the ceremony and the number of people and vehicles permitted.

 

For more information regarding the wedding permit process visit the park's Wedding Permit Page.

  

Photo: NPS/Gabriel Morrow

One of the many beautiful locations for your wedding at Glacier National Park.

 

Peak season is between Memorial Day and Labor Day. Locations are subject to restrictions on the length of the ceremony and the number of people and vehicles permitted.

 

For more information regarding the wedding permit process visit the park's Wedding Permit Page.

  

Photo: NPS/Gabriel Morrow

The Waterbury RTS fleet lined up and awaiting morning pullout in June 2007.

Hwy 14 - Otter Pt Rd to Woodhaven - Construction of Slow Moving Vehicle Pullout

This was an awesome day. We left Egilsstadir early for the drive to Myvatn. We passed a number of waterfalls (with no pullouts or names) until we came to Rjukandafoss - a beautiful waterfall with several sections. When hiked as the trail and had some great views. Nice start to the day. Back on the road to cover what is known as the Big Sky Country of Iceland - pretty much a lot of nothing. We were headed for Dettifoss - a major waterfall on my Bucket List. It exceeded expectations. Absolutely stunning visually and auditory - it is massive. I tried some long exposure with a tripod but it felt like the ground was shaking. Heather let me check out another waterfall about a mile away - Selfoss. If Dettifoss wasn't around, this would be a major destination by itself. Very different than Dettifoss but awesome on its own. I stayed for a bit and just ogled everything. Simply wow. I returned to the car and Heather dragged me off to another trail with very cool canyon views. We heard there was a third waterfall very close by so naturally we went. It was amazing. There were about 2-3 other people at Hafragilsfoss. Good God Almighty - this waterfall was spectacular - and the guidebook said this was difficult to reach with a 4x4 and best skipped. I'm glad we ignored this (the road was actually a piece of cake). Side note - the area around here looked like Martian landscape. We were in Heaven! We reluctantly headed to Myvatn - the Icelandic equivalent of Yellowstone. It was nice but we must be jaded since we live so close to Yellowstone. All in all, a very nice day, and I definitely want to go back to Dettifoss and the other falls.

 

I took these photos in mid-September 2021.

Pullout N-Judah train from Metro East. 2.11.2014 (UK-style date) © 2014 Peter Ehrlich

Where The Embarcadero meets King Street. Milano pullout from Metro East on MMX. HDR image. 22.6.2015 (UK-style date). © 2015 Peter Ehrlich

Andrew records with a shotgun mic as Michael pedals a bike in a road-side pullout along a creek.

I didn't get a GPS reading and I can't figure out this location from Google Maps, so I kept it nebulous...

 

The double peak mountain slightly left of center may be Chimney Tops. If so, that is where one of the November 2016 fires that devastated Gatlinburg started. I'm not sure. There could be more than one double peak mountain in the Smokies.

Stopped a a pullout near Nipigon for a quick photo.

Turned our OK I think.

Mount Moran pullout ~ Moran, Wyoming

Location: Hwy 29 at pullout 1.5km south of Tumbler Ridge

 

Sign Text: In the summer of 2000, two young boys tubing down Flatbed Creek stumbled upon ankylosaur tracks - he longest dinosaur trackway in British Columbia at the time. This discovery was a turning point in the development of Tumbler Ridge and the Peace Region Palaeontology Research Centre, the first of its kind in British Columbia.

(Depoe Bay, Oregon) - View towards the south from a pullout along Highway 101 in Oregon. The moon light is lighting the sea

Upper Sylvan Falls, Sylvan Cascade, @3.5 miles west of the East gate of Yellowstone at a roadside pullout (north side of the highway w/rest area).

 

A short but fairly difficult scramble up the cascade leads to this 20' drop section of the cascade. I'll definitely be heading back next year.

 

Yellow-rumped (Myrtle) Warbler (Setophaga coronata) photographed at the Muddy Brook pullout in Williston, Vermont.

These observations of Jupiter’s auroras (shown on the left of the above image) at 3.36 microns (F335M) were captured with NASA's James Webb Space Telescope’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) on Dec. 25, 2023. Scientists found that the emission from trihydrogen cation, known as H3+, is far more variable than previously believed. H3+ is created by the impact of high energy electrons on molecular hydrogen. Because this emission shines brightly in the infrared, Webb’s instruments are well equipped to observe it. The image on the right shows the planet Jupiter to indicate the location of the observed auroras, which was originally published in 2023.

 

Read more: science.nasa.gov/missions/webb/nasas-webb-reveals-new-det...

 

Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Ricardo Hueso (UPV), Imke de Pater (UC Berkeley), Thierry Fouchet (Observatory of Paris), Leigh Fletcher (University of Leicester), Michael H. Wong (UC Berkeley), Joseph DePasquale (STScI), Jonathan Nichols (University of Leicester), Mahdi Zamani (ESA/Webb)

 

Image description: A two panel image. On the right is the planet Jupiter as seen in near-infrared light. Its clouds are dark blue and white in color, with some red spots within the clouds, while its poles are tinged with green, yellow and red. A box over the north pole is overlain with more data in shades of orange, displaying auroras as arcs and rings on the planet. To left, this area is shown larger in size and captioned “09:53:57 25 Dec. 2023."

  

A late pullout car. Sept. 26, 2015. © 2015 Peter Ehrlich

In Rocky My Pk on Old Fall River Rd - was the original dirt road to the top with several switchback's - one way road and that's going up. With a few pullouts for fa walk bout.

1011 is in the Market Street Railway's fantasy livery. 11/2/14. © 2014 Peter Ehrlich

I wonder why someone left these gray briefs at this pullout in the desert.

Photo taken looking up from a pullout just behind Tower Store, where the road crosses Tower Creek. The outcrop sits atop a long cliff of basalt columns.

This old and rusted out 1951 Ford coupe was parked in the weeds at the little state of New York pullout. Somebody had left the windows open, evidently unconcerned over what the rain might do to the upholstery. Who knows how long this car's been here, or why the state of New York hasn't hauled it off. I'm amazed that somebody hasn't stolen all the chrome.

 

I've always liked these old Fords, though I prefer the grill on the models that bookended '51. I don't know why they changed it up for just this one year. These cars were built of sterner stuff than, say, a 2013 Honda Civic, and the body's still solid enough that somebody with lottery money could probably restore it. It would cost about what you'd spend to buy 10 new Honda Civics straight off the lot.

Old Fall River Road in the Rocky Mountain National Pk is 11 miles long with a some pullout for a short look at the area.

Old bridge rails with Lincoln Highway lettering- Moved to this pullout off Interstate 80 at Mogul, between Verdi and Reno - September 1972. As of 2021, they are still in place, with some minor modifications to the road. Cropped at bottom. Scanned from a Kodachrome slide.

 

NV Mogul 1972 9 Lincoln Highway rails Interstate 80 Kodachrome 2022 RD 35mmScan330

After doubling up their train, a pair of UP’s lead 238 out of Inman as they drop down to Howell to meet 293 before proceeding towards Charleston.

  

Cardi B - WAP Lyrics

 

Whores in this house

 

There's some whores in this house

 

There's some whores in this house

 

There's some whores in this house (Hol' up)

 

I said certified freak, seven days a week

 

Wet-ass pussy, make that pullout game weak, woo (Ah)

 

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah

 

Yeah, you fuckin' with some wet-ass pussy

 

Bring a bucket and a mop for this wet-ass pussy

 

Give me everything you got for this wet-ass pussy

 

Beat it up, nigga, catch a charge

 

Extra large and extra hard

 

Put this pussy right in your face

 

Swipe your nose like a credit card

 

Hop on top, I wanna ride

 

I do a kegel while it's inside

 

Spit in my mouth, look in my eyes

 

This pussy is wet, come take a dive

 

Tie me up like I'm surprised

 

Let's roleplay, I'll wear a disguise

 

I want you to park that big Mack truck right in this little garage

 

Make it cream, make me scream

 

Out in public, make a scene

 

I don't cook, I don't clean

 

But let me tell you how I got this ring (Ayy, ayy)

 

Gobble me, swallow me, drip down the side of me (Yeah)

 

Quick, jump out 'fore you let it get inside of me (Yeah)

 

I tell him where to put it, never tell him where I'm 'bout to be (Huh)

 

I'll run down on him 'fore I have a nigga runnin' me (Pow, pow, pow)

 

Talk your shit, bite your lip (Yeah)

 

Ask for a car while you ride that dick (While you ride that dick)

 

You really ain't never gotta fuck him for a thang (Yeah)

 

He already made his mind up 'fore he came (Ayy, ah)

 

Now get your boots and your coat for this wet-ass pussy (Ah, ah, ah)

 

He bought a phone just for pictures of this wet-ass pussy (Click, click, click)

 

Pay my tuition just to kiss me on this wet-ass pussy (Mwah, mwah, mwah)

 

Now make it rain if you wanna see some wet-ass pussy (Yeah, yeah)

 

Look, I need a hard hitter, need a deep stroker

 

Need a Henny drinker, need a weed smoker

 

Not a garter snake, I need a king cobra

 

With a hook in it, hope it lean over

 

He got some money, then that's where I'm headed

 

Pussy A1 just like his credit

 

He got a beard, well, I'm tryna wet it

 

I let him taste it, now he diabetic

 

I don't wanna spit, I wanna gulp

 

I wanna gag, I wanna choke

 

I want you to touch that lil' dangly thing that swing in the back of my throat

 

My head game is fire, punani Dasani

 

It's goin' in dry and it's comin' out soggy

 

I ride on that thing like the cops is behind me (Yeah, ah)

 

I spit on his mic and now he tryna sign me, woo

 

Your honor, I'm a freak bitch, handcuffs, leashes

 

Switch my wig, make him feel like he cheatin'

 

Put him on his knees, give him somethin' to believe in

 

Never lost a fight, but I'm lookin' for a beatin' (Ah)

 

In the food chain, I'm the one that eat ya

 

If he ate my ass, he's a bottom-feeder

 

Big D stand for big demeanor

 

I could make ya bust before I ever meet ya

 

If it don't hang, then he can't bang

 

You can't hurt my feelings, but I like pain

 

If he fuck me and ask "Whose is it?"

 

When I ride the dick, I'ma spell my name, ah

 

Yeah, yeah, yeah

 

Yeah, you fuckin' with some wet-ass pussy

 

Bring a bucket and a mop for this wet-ass pussy

 

Give me everything you got for this wet-ass pussy

 

Now from the top, make it drop, that's some wet-ass pussy

 

Now get a bucket and a mop, that's some wet-ass pussy

 

I'm talkin' wap, wap, wap, that's some wet-ass pussy

 

Macaroni in a pot, that's some wet-ass pussy, huh

 

There's some whores in this house

 

There's some whores in this house

 

There's some whores in this house

 

There's some whores in this house

 

via Blogger ift.tt/2EinXjX

VERY nice WWII era Mahogany china cabinet manufactured by Empire Furniture CO., a FINE furniture manufacturer, long gone...this beautifully constructed and detailed cabinet has a pull leather topped "landing" shelf to assist when loading or unloading cabinet. Quality not found in newly manufactured furniture.

I learned in Yosemite that there are reasons for pull outs. I have learned on the Central Coast of California that there are reasons for pull outs. There are sea stacks like those I have admired in Oregon. Everything is here. Including (listen up friends from Utah) clean air.

We are big fans of utilizing every cubic inch of space. The idea of bigger being better is pretty yesterday. That is why we look to cool functional hardware solutions like these pants pullouts. If you're going to remodel, make it count.

Again, I dialed the clock back in time to when the big cloud was still playing tricks. Yep, another capture with a radical range of light, this time I'm in for three layers because it was shot deep enough to really capture the clouds. The shade was nearly black so there was a bit of lifting to get this close. Again, the scene is largely within the half-light of the morning clouding but this time the foreground is generally dumped much lighter, and the colors very well saturated. It is taken near the Endovalley picnic loop. This one seemed as though it successfully stretched across the two RAW layers. The mountains were light and I wish I had a shot maybe a 1/3 darker exposure but I was busy following Phil over to Fall River to look over the stream. The shade hosts a pretty flat light that I worked on as I could. The shade detail is terrific though this kind of lighting minimizes the noticeable beetle kill in the forests already plaguing the area. I don't particularly want to "paint all the trees." (Although I know how to get away with it.) The dead trees may soon render the view unshootable. I will try to stand in the sun for the next shot.

 

Fall River? Fall is one of the things this stream doesn't do well in this meadow! It is much better at meandering. I poked a pin into the map but it is not as good as Google. Meander is not true everywhere in it's course though. Here it is tranquil... for now! Just down from here, Lawn Lake dam broke some years back and caused a scouring now called an alluvial fan. Down stream it did a number on Estes Park when it reached the town. In the Endovalley meadow, damages are not detectable to the eye at all now. The stream is back to its meandering in a snake-like path. Somewhere along here a 38 inch cutthroat was dredged from its hole and blown onto the banks: a casualty of the flood. Don't read any of this story into fly fishing little bitty streams in Colorado though. I suspected that at least one of those fishermen might have been seasoned, though, when I saw him squat to a very low profile as he approached the stream. I suspect there may be fish or two to be caught from Fall River. However, I know my dear friend, (now deceased) Gary LaFontaine's words to be true though, "You can wade into a stream dressed like a Christmas tree, but you will have to wait a while longer for the fish to return." I won't divulge how I confirmed this actuality because we got enough folks pounding popular waters.

 

Phil wanted to try out his new park pass Tuesday and the temps were supposed to hit middle 90s in MAY so I knew I'd better be ready early. He's a real peach; don't tell him that! I didn't want to suffer down on the flats so I had a sandy, drink, orange and oh yeah my camera ready to go early. We're outta here. Eddie over in Utah, heh, heh, for the eclipse now but I already got to a TOTAL solar some time back.If it's 90s here, then its out of control there. And to be perfectly honest, they just opened Trail Ridge Road early and if it gets too hot, we could keep driving up... and up. Today we both were fairly light in shirts and never opted for anything heavier. We first headed for Endovalley Picnic ground near where the Trail Ridge and Fall River Roads divide. Fall River Road has yet to be opened because they probably have to visit Trail Ridge Road Regularly. Equipment is parked, at the ready, over there right now.

 

We inherited early clouding, something that often happens in the area. It seems the Rockies can generate local weather. After we got out of the truck, we both immediately noticed the unusual sky, already posted, and knew the trip would already be successful If I could snap usable images. With Phil pointing everywhere; I guess he wants ME to capture everything. Oh, the price! I knew this would take a bit of processing to coax out the max we saw but I exposed this with the intent of including the maximum detail I could on the lit and shaded scenes. The sky processing is the same as that described in the posting and the posting I made recently. Although I had quite a bit of work in this scene, I think I came close to the early morning lighting which was a stretch at best. Especially for the overcast part of the scene. Remember, I expose for the highlights in the clouds. Nikon usually serves up the rest in the RAW.

  

This image from Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) instrument shows a portion of the GOODS-North field of galaxies. At the lower right, a pullout highlights the galaxy GN-z11, which is seen at a time just 430 million years after the Big Bang. The image reveals an extended component, tracing the GN-z11 host galaxy, and a central, compact source whose colours are consistent with those of an accretion disc surrounding a black hole.

 

[Image description: A rectangular image with thousands of galaxies of various shapes and colours on the black background of space. Some are noticeably spirals, either face-on or edge-on, while others are blobby ellipticals. Many are too small to discern any structure. One prominent foreground star at top centre features Webb’s signature eight-point diffraction spikes. At lower right, a small region is highlighted with a white box. Vertical lines extend upward like a cone to the bottom corners of a larger box at upper right, showing a zoomed-in version of the highlighted area. The pullout features a galaxy labelled GN-z11, seen as a fuzzy yellow dot. Above it is another galaxy, seen as a fuzzy red oval.]

 

Read more

 

Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, B. Robertson (UC Santa Cruz), B. Johnson (CfA), S. Tacchella (Cambridge), M. Rieke (University of Arizona), D. Eisenstein (CfA); CC BY 4.0

This is kind of a funny waterfall. First, there is no signage for it. It's at the pullout on the Icefields Parkway for Bridal Veil Falls. There is no trail to it or anything. You only know it's there if it's quiet and you can hear it. I did some research before posting to find its name. This top falls is only about 20 feet. There's a second drop of about 15. The third drop was impossible to see without, well...jumping off the cliff. I estimate its height at about 200 feet.

 

It's fun when you can find these little hidden gems like this.

Location:

Hwy 14 at pullout in Jordan River.

 

Sign Text:

Here, the mouth of the river is known as diitiida (Drifted Ashore to the Pacheedaht (People of the Seafoam), and Ditidaht First Nations. At this ancient origin site, the two groups lived together as one people before the Great Flood. Spanish explorers who sailed by in 1790 marked the river on their map as "Rio Jordan."

Another 10 shot panorama from a pullout on the road between Reno and Virginia City.

The clouds and sunlight didn't exactly align for us on our one evening in the Tetons. I guess this just means I will have to come back!

See on a roadside pullout somewhere south of Farmington, New Mexico.

PACIFIC OCEAN (Nov 4, 2021) Information Systems Technician 3rd Class Mitchell Renner, from Loveland, Colorado, stows lines aboard Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser USS Mobile Bay (CG 53). Mobile Bay is conducting routine operations in U.S. 3rd Fleet. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communications Specialist 3rd Class Alonzo Martin-Frazier)

HDR image with colorful center. (IN other words, the PCC is in full color while the background is much less colorful. 26 Sep 15. © 2015 Peter Ehrlich

As I headed east through the area known as “Yellowstone Picnic” into Little America I came across a small crowd at a pullout with spotting scopes set up and cameras with long lenses pointed towards a spot far off the road to the north. I pulled over and looked through my binoculars. What should I see but a man with a fox dancing around his feet. My first through was, “What kind of idiot is that, going way out there and feeding a fox?!?!” Someone pulled up next to me and explained that the he was out there as part of a golden eagle research team. I still wasn’t able to put it together, but then he began skiing back to the road. As he neared it became clear that he had something large under his arm.

It turns out that there was a deer carcass (a winter kill – it’s not unusual for animals to drop dead from exposure and starvation in Yellowstone’s mean winters – or a wolf, mountain lion, or even coyote kill if the deer was sufficiently weak) attracting all the usual visitors. Golden (and bald) eagles are opportunistic carrion-eaters, so the researchers knew a goldie would show up sooner or later. The fox was just trying to defend its wonderful meal from that human who might be trying to steal it! Photo taken at an extreme distance in relation to my lens’s capabilities, but you can make out the fox and the net trap as well as the researcher. I believe the dark brown blob on the ground is the eagle.

My friends had seen two men skiing into that area before sunup (and had also concluded the men must be mad to be skiing in the cold, dark, pre-dawn). Apparently it was the two researchers going out to lay a bow-type net trap and finally, by 9 A.M., acquired their target when it came to feed.

The researcher brought the hooded eagle (a technique falconers have used for millennia that functions to keep the birds calm), with its dagger talons safely immobilized in an Ace bandage, and wrapped in a towel for warmth, back to the roadside. His colleague and project leader, Dave Haines, gave the small gathering a few minutes to photograph the bird before he and his colleague took it to a ranger station for banding, tagging, weighing and measuring, and overall examination and evaluation. It would be released when data collection was complete.

 

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