View allAll Photos Tagged sfs

Berkeley’s Main Library. Students are mostly gone. It’s time to catch up with maintenance on campus! Can you find the man with the wand? Hint: Look for the yellow!

Rustic steps along the trail. . . . Tilden Regional Park, enroute to Jewel Lake.

HSfS!

Mehr als ein halbes Jahr lang, seit dem 10. April 2020, war die 1991 eröffnete Schnellfahrstrecke Stuttgart - Mannheim aufgrund deren Generalsanierung gesperrt, seit dem heutigen 1.11. rollen die Züge wieder regulär über die Hochgeschwindigkeitsstrecke. In diesem Zeitraum der Sperrung bot sich logischerweise auch die Gelegenheit, einige Motive umzusetzen, wo man im Normalfall keinen Fernzug zu Gesicht bekommt. Eines hiervon ist der Viadukt über das Enztal in Bietigheim-Bissingen, das die glänzende 101 083 am schon herbstlich anmutenden 04.10.2020 überquerte. Am Haken hatte sie den IC 1115 (Dortmund Hbf - Stuttgart Hbf).

I especially love these low-riser steps! Such a pleasure to ascend or descend! Happy Saturday for Stairs!! 👍

( a Flickr effect called Legacy)

Die Schriftstellerin Henriette Herz war Namespatronin des IC 541, welcher hier bei Derwitz am 26.04.97 durch die Mark Brandenburg Richtung Hauptstadt fegt. Intercity-Züge, Interregios...die Magistrale von Magdeburg nach Berlin trug bis zur Eröffnung der SFS die Hauptlast des hochwertigen Fernverkehrs nach Berlin. Im Rücken des Fotografen befindet sich einer der Hügel, auf welchem der Flugpionier Otto Lilienthal mit seinem Flugapparat seine Gleitflüge durchführte. Ein Denkmal erinnert an den Luftfahrtpionier.

HSfS! This plant is called Krantz Aloe, I think. It’s their time to bloom!

Saturday for stairs

When built in the 1930s it was the biggest college building in the West.

Artist: Lucas Stock, Doug Brunner & MLK Community Mural Projects

inocente&sexy!

she's my female-non-lesbian-crush!! (L) lol!

  

Santa Fe Southern GP7u #07 sits with some other forlorn equipment near the BNSF interchange in Lamy, NM. The railroad has since been purchased by a new group of investors, and the #07 is now the first-ever Furry Heritage Unit, being repainted to look like a sexy dragon.

 

Interested in purchasing a high-quality digital download of this photo, suitable for printing and framing? Let me know and I will add it to my Etsy Shop, MittenRailandMarine! Follow this link to see what images are currently listed for sale: www.etsy.com/shop/MittenRailandMarine

 

If you are interested in specific locomotives, trains, or freighters, please contact me. I have been photographing trains and ships for over 15 years and have accumulated an extensive library!

Preserved First PMT L94 Floline 825 at Quorn & Woodhouse Station

 

Vehicle Details

Operator: First PMT, preserved

Fleet Details: 825

Registration: T825 SFS

Vehicle Type: Scania L94UB, Wright Axcess Floline

Old Market Square, Nottingham

Sardinia: SFS No.5 with an LCGB special on the Sassari - Palau line. May 1994

Staff Sgt. Timothy Driver, 5th Security Forces Squadron military working dog handler, adjusts safety equipment for Deny, 5th SFS MWD, during flight familiarization training at Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota, Aug. 23, 2018. This was the first time the K-9 unit has flown with the 54th Helicopter Squadron. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Jonathan McElderry)

Pete Samu scores a try in the 79th minute. The Australian supporters are cheering but you can see it's a bit restrained. That's because the result is a foregone conclusion with South Africa's Damian de Allende, Canan Moodie and Makazole Mapimpi already having put points on the board. South Africa duly won, 24-8.

LZ-SFS Antonov AN-12B (6344308) Air Sofia - Departing as the SFB316 from London Stansted Airport 25-03-1995

A standard Sienar Fleet Systems TIE starfighter: a commodity which is, after hydrogen a stupidity, the most common in universe.

    

Saturday for Stairs

Sardinia: SFS No.5 with an LCGB special on the Sassari - Palau line. May 1994.

Fiestas de las Americas 2022 in OKC

Saturday for Stairs

Wardour Castle is located at Wardour, near Tisbury, in the English county of Wiltshire, about 15 miles (24 km) west of Salisbury. The original castle was partially destroyed during the Civil War. It is managed by English Heritage who have designated it as a grade I listed building, and is open to the public.

 

The Grotto of Old Wardour Castle was the last addition to the landscape. It was built in 1792 by Josiah Lane of Tisbury, who at the time was a well-known builder of garden ornaments and other grottos in the area. He was commissioned to build the artificial cave, complete with dripping water, fossils and ferns from brick, plaster and stone from the ruins of the castle.[

 

The castle was built on land previously owned by the St Martin family, but when Sir Lawrence de St Martin died in 1385 it was handed over to John, the fifth Baron Lovell for reasons unknown. It was built using locally quarried Tisbury greensand, with William Wynford as the master mason, after Baron Lovell had been granted permission by Richard II in 1392. It was inspired by the hexagonal castles then in fashion in parts of the Continent, particularly in France; but its own six-sided design is unique in Britain, as is its inclusion of several self-contained guest suites.

 

After the fall of the Lovell family following Francis Lovell's support of Richard III, the castle was confiscated in 1461 and passed through several owners until bought by Sir Thomas Arundell of Lanherne in 1544. The Arundells were of an ancient Cornish family, with wide estates in Wiltshire. The castle was confiscated when Sir Thomas — a staunch Roman Catholic — was executed for treason in 1552, but in 1570 was bought back by his son, Sir Matthew Arundell, later a Sheriff and Custos Rotulorum of Dorset. The Arundells, led by Thomas Arundell, 1st Baron Arundell of Wardour, subsequently became known as some of the most active of the Catholic landowners in England at the time of the Reformation; thus they were naturally Royalists in the English Civil War. During that conflict, Thomas Arundell, 2nd Baron Arundell of Wardour, was away from home on the King’s business and had asked his wife, Lady Blanche Arundell, aged 61, to defend the castle with a garrison of 25 trained fighting men. On 2 May 1643 Sir Edward Hungerford, with 1,300 men of the Parliamentarian Army, demanded admittance to search for Royalists. He was refused and laid siege, setting about the walls with guns and mines. After five days the castle was threatened with complete destruction. Lady Arundell agreed to surrender, and the castle was placed under the command of Colonel Edmund Ludlow. Lord Arundell had died of his wounds after the Battle of Lansdowne, and his son, Henry 3rd Lord Arundell, next laid siege to his own castle, blew up much of it and obliged the Parliamentary garrison to surrender in March 1644.

  

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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