View allAll Photos Tagged pullout
This double pull out trash is conveniently located to the left of the sink cabinet. Designed and built by Brendan Donovan Furniture & Cabinet Co.
Looking south from a pullout along Highway 224 just south of Estacada. I took a similar shot earlier from the car as we were driving, but I wanted to stop and get out to properly admire the view on our way back from Bagby. You can see the light patch of highway down in the valley.
Approach:
Turn off Highway 179 onto Chapel Road heading east. Before reaching the gate and Chapel of the Holy Cross parking area, park in a pullout on the north side of the road. Walk through the chapel parking area and pick up a climbers trail on the eastern edge of the parking area.
Follow the climbers trail about 1/4 mile until it intersects with a wide, well maintained mountain bike trail. Follow the bike trail for another 50 to 100 yards until you are below the large roof that marks Castles in the Sand. At this point look for a wash to your left that cuts straight up towards the cliff. At the top of this wash there is a short 4th class cliff to scramble up. Once on top of this cliff walk to the right end and pick-up the trail again. From this point the trail heads more or less straight up to the cliff base.
The Religion Wall is to the right of the Watchtower and the Church Wall is to the left. To get to East Twin Butte, follow directions for the Religion wall past the watchtower. Stick close to the wall and you will encounter some fixed approach lines. Climb up to the limestone band and follow it around to the east between Minister and the Pulpit and the main wall. Once through the notch stick to the main wall and look for faint trail. A hairy move on the limestone band and some scrambling will put you at the base. Approach time- 45 min..
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.
Israeli soldiers pass as settlers take refuge on top of the roofs in the Gaza Strip settlement of Kfar Darom near the Palestinian town of Deir Al-Balah, 18 August 2005. Israeli General Dan Harel, the army commander in charge of the historic dismantling of Israel's 38-year occupation of the Gaza Strip, said he hoped Kfar Darom would be fully evacuated by nightfall. AFP PHOTO/MAHMUD HAMS (Photo by MAHMUD HAMS / AFP)
Mount Moran - From a pullout on the.John D Rockefeller Pkwy and just before the turn for Teton Park Rd and the Jackson Lake dam.
This shot was taken along the Oregon coast, on Highway 101 at a viewpoint along the way. After some major Google Maps work, I finally found exactly where I took the shot. The viewpoint was inside of Humbug Mountain State Park, just south of Port Orford and a good deal north of Gold Beach. The exact location can be found on Google Maps here.
Canon 40D | 17-40mm f/4L | 1/80 sec | f/11
One of my photography work for the 50th Merdeka Flickr Group Photo Exercise made it in the newspaper today. I would like to thanks Han for helping me out, and Prakash, for the article post-up.
Detail photograph:
Taken from the back page of a special 'Britain's most common surnames' pullout from last Sunday's Observer newspaper, a map showing the highest concentration points of Britain's most common surnames.
View in large size (http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=462842639&size=l) to compare that key against the map, and find out things about Britain you never knew.
Like the fact that Dundee is simultaneously in North London AND just north of Manchester, having clearly decided not to be in Scotland At ALL!
Watch in wonder as Llandudno multiplies itself ALL OVER north Wales, and The small Scottish Island of Harris redeploys itself to the south coast of Cornwall!
Jesus, this is terrible. And I thought my geography was bad.
Dianne Byington: “Dr. Seuss Said” is based on a "Flap Pullout" from Jenn Manson's Pockets, Pullouts, and Hiding Places, 2005. Made with Strathmore 140 lb. cold press watercolor paper, copy paper, Sakura Pigma pens, Dewert watercolor pencils, StazOn solvent inks, glue, tape and ribbons. All quotes are from various books by Dr. Seuss (Theodor S. Geisel).
Grand Teton - From a pullout on the.John D Rockefeller Pkwy, just before the turn for Teton Park Rd and the Jackson Lake dam. Friday, September 6, 2013; around 4:23 PM
© Sam Feinsilver 2013
Palestinian security men man a position in front of the abandoned synagogue of the former Israeli settlement of Neve Dekalim, 13 September 2005. Palestinian prime minister Ahmed Qorei was touring the former Gush Katif settlement bloc in the Gaza Strip today, the day after the last Israeli troops left the territory after 38 years of occupation. AFP PHOTO/MAHMUD HAMS (Photo by MAHMUD HAMS / AFP)
Roadside pullout in Zion NP UT. Checkerboard mesa gets its name from a checkerboard pattern of horizontal (sandstone layers and cross-bedding) and vertical (expansion joints) lineations on the rock surface.
Very brief stop to take a few photos here, as well for a bathroom break (two shitters seen on the right of this photo). March 16, 2014.
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.
This is for those hitching up hill. If you are hitching down off the mountain, stay at the trailhead parking lot entrance.
From a pullout on Teton Park Rd. looking west at the changing weather. (Somewhere near Spaulding Bay.) Friday, September 6, 2013; around 6:03 PM
© Sam Feinsilver 2013
Article related to Fear Factor Malaysia's female winners.
I was in the first (and only!) season of the Malaysian version. The show died a quick death due to (what I heard) lack of sponsors and low ratings.
Here is an update of our kitchen remodel. I still have a few things to do, like pullouts under the sink and trim around the tops but it's almost done. It's a very small kitchen but with the improvements and better use of the space it feels bigger and is a whole lot better.
Looking down on the Calf Creek Falls trail that we had hiked the day before from a pullout on scenic byway 12 east of Escalante, UT.
April 21st: Day 5 of our Utah vacation. We had been blessed with perfect weather... that is until this day. The forecast was for severe weather in SE Utah with gusting winds, rain at lower elevations, and snow at higher elevation. We were determined to have fun anyway.
Our plan for the morning was to drive from Escalante to Hanksville via the highly scenic (but dirt) Burr Trail and Notom-Bullfrog Roads through Capitol Reef National Park. Our friends Mr. & Mrs. OldManTravels were familiar with these roads, so they took the lead.
The weather held for our trip up the Burr Trail Road where we enjoyed multiple stops for photos and enjoying the spectacular scenery. As we dropped down over the Waterpocket Fold of Capitol Reef National Park, a severe wind and blowing dust storm rolled in- ending all photo ops for me with my digital SLR for fear of dust damage to my camera. But there was one other problem... we were on the dirt roads of SE Utah. Not a place you want to be if it decides to rain hard as the roads quickly become impassable.
With approximately 20 miles of dirt road to go, the rains came. OMT hit the gas on his truck and I did the same in our Pilot. Despite our both having 4WD, we knew this could be bad. So we both high tailed it out of there, driving as intense and fast as we safely could while the rain poured down over us. We managed to barely out run the worst of the storm which was continually visible over our left shoulders. When we hit the pavement, OMT pulled over and we all had a nervous laugh and sigh of relief.
Showing movable pullout breadboard and leaf storage compartment with brass bullet catch. Breadboard is extended to accept leaves