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We took this small side pipe to get away from the poo smell from the sewage leaking into the Finders Keeps Storm Drain. It turned out to be a beautifuly worn and stained old pipe
A shot from our last expedition , this is Ian stood on the summit of Slight Side , i am on the subsiduary summit taking the shot . There is a cleft in the rock between the two which is the regular path up ....not that we used the regular path up that is !
'The Udder Side', The Upside Down Cow – Irene Village Mall, Centurion (2007) - by Angus Taylor
The Udder Side, which Taylor conceptualised and produced in collaboration with fellow artists Francois Visser and Steven Delport. As can be surmised from the title, the piece is an affectionate send-up of the dairy cow – the unofficial symbol of the Village of Irene.
This is the best example of the ANTI-MONUMENT that Angus or the studio has made. Taking a monumental size of a sculpture but literary turned on its back. The work was casted pragmatically, the bigger bits of the sculpture were cast in a solid concrete which extends below the surface to a foundation which joins up. The focus points of the sculpture, like the hooves and teets are cast in bronze and anchored to the concrete cast.
Budapest is seperate by Danube River to two sides, Buda and pest. Here we go, it is Buda Night shot.... Those on top are the old town and castle.
Danube River is awesome.
Budapest, Hungary
Canon 5D
17-40
22mm
f/16
25s
Both the 50s carried the identities of long lost classmates on one side only. 50049 'Defiance' assumes the identity of long scrapped 50011 'Centurion'
Photo taken on my behalf by a member of traincrew who kindly took a number of pictures trackside for people
Oh! We ain't got a barrel of money
Maybe we're ragged and funny
But we'll travel along
Singing a song
Side by Side
I don't know what's a-comin' tomorrow
Maybe it's trouble and sorrow
But we'll travel along
Sharing our load
Side by Side
Thru all kinds of weather
What if the sky should fall
Just as long as we're together
It really doesn't matter at all
When they've all had their quarrels
and parted
We'll be the same as we started
Just traveling along
Singing a song
Side by Side
~lyrics written by: Harry Woods
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Have a "sweet" day, My Friends!
~Mary Lou
The SD Starbringer is a large fighter with an ample storage area for precious cargo. This makes safe transport easy. With four large lasers, and built in shield generators, most oppressors stand little chance of stopping this formidable foe.
Side view of the Venetian Gothic mansion of the Ringling family estate, called Ca D'Zan, now a museum, Sarasota, FL. Completed in 1926, architect Dwight James Baum.
In 1969 the North Riding brigade bought two Dennis F106 pump escapes (LDN 256/7H). One had the pump controls mounted at the side and the other at the rear as a comparative trial to determine which was the more suitable location. Another difference is apparent above the windscreen: 256 has a peaked dome but 257 has a curved roof with a recessed bell. These are of course the first two releases of the Oxford Diecast model, both originally in London livery.
Side Ancient City
Side (Greek: Σίδη) is an ancient Greek city on the southern Mediterranean coast of Turkey, a resort town and one of the best-known classical sites in the country. It lies near Manavgat and the village of Selimiye, 78 km from Antalya in the province of Antalya.
It is located on the eastern part of the Pamphylian coast, which lies about 20 km east of the mouth of the Eurymedon River. Today, as in antiquity, the ancient city is situated on a small north-south peninsula about 1 km long and 400 m across
History[edit]
Strabo and Arrian both record that Side was founded by Greek settlers from Cyme in Aeolis, a region of western Anatolia. This most likely occurred in the 7th century BC. Its tutelary deity was Athena, whose head adorned its coinage.
Dating from the tenth century B.C., its coinage bore the head of Athena (Minerva), the patroness of the city, with a legend. Its people, a piratical horde, quickly forgot their own language to adopt that of the aborigines.
Possessing a good harbour for small-craft boats, Side's natural geography made it one of the most important places in Pamphylia and one of the most important trade centres in the region. According to Arrian, when settlers from Cyme came to Side, they could not understand the dialect. After a short while, the influence of this indigenous tongue was so great that the newcomers forgot their native Greek and started using the language of Side. Excavations have revealed several inscriptions written in this language. The inscriptions, dating from the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC, remain undeciphered, but testify that the local language was still in use several centuries after colonisation. Another object found in the excavations at Side, a basalt column base from the 7th century BC and attributable to the Neo-Hittites, provides further evidence of the site's early history. The name Side may be Anatolian in origin, meaning pomegranate.
Next to no information exists concerning Side under Lydian and Persian sovereignty.
Alexander the Great
Vespasian Gate
Temple of Apollo
Alexander the Great occupied Side without a struggle in 333 BC. Alexander left only a single garrison behind to occupy the city. This occupation, in turn, introduced the people of Side to Hellenistic culture, which flourished from the 4th to the 1st century BC. After Alexander's death, Side fell under the control of one of Alexander's generals, Ptolemy I Soter, who declared himself king of Egypt in 305 BC. The Ptolemaic dynasty controlled Side until it was captured by the Seleucid Empire in the 2nd century BC. Yet, despite these occupations, Side managed to preserve some autonomy, grew prosperous, and became an important cultural centre.
Walls of the ancient theatre of Side
In 190 BC a fleet from the Greek island city-state of Rhodes, supported by Rome and Pergamum, defeated the Seleucid King Antiochus the Great's fleet, which was under the command of the fugitive Carthaginian general Hannibal. The defeat of Hannibal and Antiochus the Great meant that Side freed itself from the overlord-ship of the Seleucid Empire. The Treaty of Apamea (188 BC) forced Antiochus to abandon all European territories and to cede all of Asia Minor north of the Taurus Mountains to Pergamum. However, the dominion of Pergamum only reached de facto as far as Perga, leaving Eastern Pamphylia in a state of uncertain freedom. This led Attalus II Philadelphus to construct a new harbour in the city of Attalia (the present Antalya), although Side already possessed an important harbour of its own. Between 188 and 36 BC Side minted its own money, tetradrachms showing Nike and a laurel wreath (the sign of victory).
In the 1st century BC, Side reached a peak when the Cilician pirates established their chief naval base and a centre for their slave-trade.
Romans
The consul Servilius Vatia defeated these brigands in 78 BC and later the Roman general Pompey in 67 BC, bringing Side under the control of Rome and beginning its second period of ascendancy, when it established and maintained a good working relationship with the Roman Empire.
Emperor Augustus reformed the state administration and placed Pamphylia and Side in the Roman province of Galatia in 25 BC, after the short reign of Amyntas of Galatia between 36 and 25 BC. Side began another prosperous period as a commercial centre in Asia Minor through its trade in olive oil. Its population grew to 60,000 inhabitants. This period would last well into the 3rd century AD. Side also established itself as a slave-trading centre in the Mediterranean. Its large commercial fleet engaged in acts of piracy, while wealthy merchants paid for such tributes as public works, monuments, and competitions as well as the games and gladiator fights. Most of the extant ruins at Side date from this period of prosperity.
One of the maps (portolani) of Piri Reis, taken from the Kitab-i Bahriye, which Piri produced in several editions, supplementing in 1520, but integrating it into subsequent editions.
Side was the home of Eustathius of Antioch, of the philosopher Troilus, of the fifth-century ecclesiastical writer Philip; of the famous lawyer Tribonian