View allAll Photos Tagged pullout

Agave utahensis (Utah agave)

Habitat with Forest rappelling on Neon Sunset at Calico Hills second pullout Magic Bus Red Rocks, Nevada.

December 21, 2007

#071221-0106 - Image Use Policy

Also placed in Agavaceae.

With the Bay Bridge in vew. 2 Nov 14. © 2014 Peter Ehrlich

The stanchion cross-piece at the pullout makes for a pretty good scratching post. Most bison get used to heavy tracking collars (for scientific research and wildlife management purposes) but it might be worth a try to rub it off!

Location:

Hwy 113 at pullout along Kitsumkalsum Lake

 

Sign Text:

The ancient transportation corridor between two major river systems, the Skeena and Nass, was originally used by Indigenous Peoples and later by trappers, miners, loggers, homesteaders, and telegraph linemen. A public road finally connected the Kitsumkalum and the Nisga'a territories in 1979.

Eagles' Rest area, Riverland's Migratory Bird Sanctuary, West Alton, Mo. Taken from pullout along Highway leading to Alton Bridge-about 1/4 mile before the bridge. Looking north, Mississippi river is on the other side of the tree line. Note white street sign bottom center.Image taken about 5PM, 5/6/17. Mississippi was 13.7 feet over flood stage at 10.00AM, reportedly. Riverland drive is not underwater at about 5pm, but is closed. Audubon Bldg. and grounds appear to be undamaged since they are higher up-not pictured in this image.

 

Stickers Factory

      

Design that sticks. By George Toubalis

 

Simple Rulles

* Quality Vinyls

* Quality Cutting

* Quality print.

* Lamination

 

Fish Category

Sharks Stickers

 

Fishes Salt Water Stickers

 

Fishes Fresh Water Stickers

    

Photographed standing on the bridge over Soda Butte Creek (mostly ice-snow covered in this scene) at the Lower Barronette ski pullout.

Special eight page pullout Guild supplement. (8 of 8)

 

TO ENLARGE - either:

 

1. Right-click the image then choose Original or...

2. Select View all sizes from the Actions tab then choose Original

This Interpretive pullout is at one of the locations where the Emigrant Trail crosses State Highway 28. The site was thought to be the Parting of the Ways, but was later shown to be the intersection of the Point of Rocks to South Pass Stage Route and the Emigrant Trail. This is a fee-free site and is ADA accessible.

  

PHONE: 307-352-0256

 

EMAIL: rock_springs_wymail@blm.gov

 

ADDRESS: Rock Springs Field Office

280 Highway 191 North

Rock Springs, WY 82009

 

LATITUDE/LONGITUDE: 42.284464 / -109.05896

 

FEE: no fee

 

DIRECTIONS: From Farson travel east on US Highway 28 to Mile Marker 24. The site is on the north side of the highway.

 

BLM Photo

  

Special eight page pullout Guild supplement. (1 of 8)

 

TO ENLARGE - either:

 

1. Right-click the image then choose Original or...

2. Select View all sizes from the Actions tab then choose Original

Macneil, Joe, Roy and I left Bodie in the late afternoon. We had determined we were going to focus on autumn colors. Macneil had scouted a place called Aspen Grove Campground. On the way there, we pulled over at several pullouts along Conway Summit.

 

This photo was taken very late afternoon looking toward what I believe they call Matterhorn Peak.

 

This photo is part of a series of images captured during a road trip to the Eastern Sierra of California in October of 2011. Most images were captured along US-395, in Mono Lake, Bodie, June Lake Loop and some in Yosemite Valley, California.

 

Conway Summit (el. 8,143 feet ) is a mountain pass in Mono County, California. It is traversed by U.S. Highway 395, which connects Bridgeport and the East Walker River on the north side of the pass to Mono Lake and Lee Vining to the south. It marks the highest point on U.S. 395.

 

Conway Summit is named after John Andrew Conway, a settler in the area in 1880. Geographically, it was formed from an upland plateau by the sinking of the land in the Mono basin area. The Sawtooth Ridge of the eastern Sierra Nevada, topped by 12,279-foot Matterhorn Peak, rise to the west of the pass; Green Creek and Virginia Lakes, in the Sierra Nevada to the west of the pass, are two local destinations for fishing, camping and aspen trees. The Bodie Hills and the infamous Bodie ghost town lie to the east.

 

Muni's second Blackpool "Boat" is in refresher training service for the annual Heritage Weekend. Scan from a slide. 6.9.2018 (UK-style date). © 2018 Peter Ehrlich

Pullout car for tripper F-Line service, Jan. 30, 1997. © 2011 Peter Ehrlich

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.

This was an infrared shot that I did a little cartooning with but I also took a similar shot in regular color.. Quite a difference in the result... Happy Fence Friday, Everybody...

Two queen over queen over queen bunk beds plus a double pullout!

Pullout car. An Orion hybrid coach is behind, leaving Mission Street. Nay 30, 2009. © 2013 Peter Ehrlich

Agave utahensis (Utah agave)

Habitat with Kim just finishing Neon Sunset at Calico Hills second pullout Magic Bus Red Rocks, Nevada.

December 21, 2007

#071221-0104 - Image Use Policy

Also placed in Agavaceae.

Special eight page pullout Guild supplement. (3 of 8)

 

TO ENLARGE - either:

 

1. Right-click the image then choose Original or...

2. Select View all sizes from the Actions tab then choose Original

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.

Special eight page pullout Guild supplement. (7 of 8)

 

TO ENLARGE - either:

 

1. Right-click the image then choose Original or...

2. Select View all sizes from the Actions tab then choose Original

Special eight page pullout Guild supplement. (6 of 8)

 

TO ENLARGE - either:

 

1. Right-click the image then choose Original or...

2. Select View all sizes from the Actions tab then choose Original

The light rail project is adding bus pullouts to either side of the Bybee Bridge in SE Portland to provide riders with direct access to the MAX station. Elevators and stairways are being built from the bridge to the station platform, which is the long white strip running horizontally in the photo. The station lies between the Eastmoreland and Westmoreland neighborhoods.

Beside a large pullout alongside U.S. 84 in northern New Mexico

Special eight page pullout Guild supplement. (4 of 8)

 

TO ENLARGE - either:

 

1. Right-click the image then choose Original or...

2. Select View all sizes from the Actions tab then choose Original

Pulling out for Heritage Weekend. On the Embarcadero Connector, between Folsom and Howard Streets. Ferry Portal for Muni Metro is alongside. HDR image. September 26, 2015. © 2017 Peter Ehrlich

Special eight page pullout Guild supplement. (5 of 8)

 

TO ENLARGE - either:

 

1. Right-click the image then choose Original or...

2. Select View all sizes from the Actions tab then choose Original

Special eight page pullout Guild supplement. (2 of 8)

 

TO ENLARGE - either:

 

1. Right-click the image then choose Original or...

2. Select View all sizes from the Actions tab then choose Original

One 18" IKEA cabinet, containing an ironing board, two kinds of baking sheet holders, a basket drawer, and another pull-out. It took a hacksaw and a Dremel to make it all fit (the pull-out, which was $5 in the As Is department, has been customized to fit this arrangement), but it's all there and works nicely!

 

Bungalow kitchens were all about interesting built-in storage solutions, so although this is modern, it's very much in keeping with traditional bungalow functionality.

 

This is the only base cabinet in our kitchen that is a traditional cabinet -- that is, not a set of drawers. (Well, except for the sink cab.) Drawers everywhere else, yay! But I really didn't want stuff to end up piled in the back of the cab like in my old kitchen (where the cookie sheets and baking pans were haphazardly piled and usually required me to remove half of them to find the one I was looking for), so hopefully this design will prevent much of that. Also, built-in fixtures are neat.

Red Birch cabinets with flat beadboard panels. Marble countertop with an apron-front, under-mount sink. The island features a wine rack end with custom pots/pan pull-outs and 2 bin trash/recycle pull-out . The pantry cabinets has four pull-out shelf units. The breakfast counter and custom cherry stools were designed to match the dining room chairs. The kitchen also has a cookbook shelf, display shelves and under cabinet lighting.

das nasenhaar störte und wurde kurzerhand entfernt. und zupf weg war es. kurz darauf war das haar nicht mehr gesehn... hm...

 

die party fand in berlin statt und nicht in brandenburg

photo done with my panasonic lumix dmc-lx1 leica-lens dc vario elmarit weitwinkel 28mm 16:9 wide angle 8mp 1:2.8-4.9 / 6.3-25.2 asph

check my blog.drmotte.de/

 

Stickers Factory

      

Design that sticks. By George Toubalis

 

Simple Rulles

* Quality Vinyls

* Quality Cutting

* Quality print.

* Lamination

 

Fish Category

Sharks Stickers

 

Fishes Salt Water Stickers

 

Fishes Fresh Water Stickers

    

The pullout route for all F-Line cars, and those on the E-Line, like 1009, is via the T-Line from Metro East. A Bayview-bound Breda's in the background. September 25, 2016. © 2016 Peter Ehrlich

Here's a really good look at why these birds are called golden eagles.

In the arms of eagle researcher Dave Haines

 

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.

 

Teddy, about 45 inches long, takes a rest in a pull-out bed of wood.

L: 50 cm W: 37 cm H: 57 cm

/

Nalle, ca 45 cm lång, tar det med ro i utdragbar säng av trä.

 

Foto: Mats Fallqvist, Länsmuseet Gävleborg

 

An impressive pullout of low level.

Suffolk, VA, August 2011: A helicopter flight over the Lateral West Fire burning on Great Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge after Hurrican Irene passed reveals that the fire grew by about 2 acres after firefighters evacuated the fireline for safety purposes in advance of the storm. The foot of rain the area received was still not enough to fully extinguish the fire, which burned over 6,300 acres. Credit: Mark Jamieson/USFWS.

Disclaimer: The photo albums in this Flickr account are not intended to be collections of my best hand-picked images. Such images are included but the vast majority of images, 9670 and counting, commingled among the few gallery-worthy images, are snapshots, bad shots and missed shots (the bad shots containing some element of the composition that strikes my fancy despite its flaws thus saving it from the Recycle Bin and the missed shots being those photos where the exposure and/or DoF were not completely appropriate). There is trip documentation and there are pure experiments (including multiple treatments of the same scene such as different angles, different post processing, different times of day, sunrise/sunset progressions, zoom progressions, etc.). This account is basically a secondary backup location with convenient captioning, titling & EXIF capabilities.

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission. © Moelyn Photos. All rights reserved

Wondrous Skyline /Drive follows the crest of the Blue Ridge Mountains for 107 miles - truly a highway in the sky

1 2 ••• 34 35 37 39 40 ••• 79 80