View allAll Photos Tagged slog
Once back in camp after that marathon slog back down, I took off the wet socks to let them dry out and then actually followed the example of some of the other people in the group and ... went for a dip in the Firth! Yep, we were 200 miles (320 km) above the Arctic Circle ... but at the same time it was about 80ºF (27ºC or so), the warmest it ever got on the whole trip, so what better time to go in over your head in the river you've been traveling down, drinking from and urinating in for the last couple of days? Especially when you're dirty and sweaty from all the hiking you've just done.
I'm glad I did. Despite the warm weather it was still very cold water. But I felt like I'd bonded with the river in some way that I had to.
After taking a nice little afternoon nap, I then got myself dressed again, in a nice cotton T-shirt, shorts (the only time I wore shorts the whole trip), sandals (ditto), but of course not neglecting the DEET, sunglasses and Tilley hat as not only were the last two advisable due to the light they were as necessary as the DEET as defensive measures against the mosquitoes that still insisted on living up to their reputation for Arctic ferocity at that point. This is not too different from the way the guides dressed; I joked with Mike that I had gone native.
I can't remember whether it was either before that or after that I thought to take a picture of this rock outcrop on the bank since it gives a look at the Firth's geology.
Cross-uploaded to Commons at commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Rock_outcrop_on_bank_of_F...
Come slogarsi un dito per scattare a più non posso durante un viaggio di lavoro nelle città di Shenzen e Guangzhou nel sud della Cina
Sony A7SII
Nikkor 20mm 2.8 Ais
After a grinding slog through the forest, we finally see good fishing ahead. Next time we’ll know to stick to the main trail!
This High Dynamic Range 360° panorama was stitched from 48 bracketed photographs with PTGUI Pro, tone-mapped with Photomatix, and touched up in Aperture.
Original size: 18205 × 9103 (165.7 MP; 185 MB).
Location; Rawson Lake, Peter Lougheed Provincial Park, Alberta, Canada
A bulldozer slogs through the wet conditions in Aberdeen. In the background are a few of the some 900 piles that will eventually become the foundation for the pontoon casting basin.
Come slogarsi un dito per scattare a più non posso durante un viaggio di lavoro nelle città di Shenzen e Guangzhou nel sud della Cina
Sony A7SII
Nikkor 20mm 2.8 Ais
A long slog to get back to this point in the clean up after storm Ciara back on Feburary 9th 2020. A promise of better times.
After its long slog travelling down the busy A1 south from the likes of Highgate and Archway carrying our private Reading Transport Enthusiasts Group passengers as well as a few other 'normal' passengers along the way, RM 2208 is seen here looking a most fine sight just after its arrival at the time-honoured southern terminus of route 43 at London Bridge bus station with the abbreviated 'LONDON BRIDGE STN' destination blind as would have been the case on RM 2208 back in the 1970s.
More from our little but lovely 4.5 mile walk the other day..
Crook Hill, never busy on there, such great views too..
Now I only took four others with me - Daniel, Memeht, Ilker and Ali.. But I can see five people here.. I'm not in the picture and there were no other people about!!
LMS Jubilee class No. 45690 "Leander" ascends Battlefield bank near Shrewsbury with the returning Salopian express special. The tour began at Bishop Auckland under diesel haulage. The Jubilee was attached at Preston and would run to Shrewsbury and return the train to Preston where two Class 47s would take the train back up to Bishop Auckland. I did have a spot of bother at this location the wind blew my tripod over with my SLR camera on top and bang on the floor. I thought it was smashed but i got very lucky and wasn't badly damaged. This is the first time i have seen Leander since returning to steam and it's great to see the Jubilee back on the mainline.
Slogging its way out of the concrete paradise that is Brighton Marina is 640 working Route 23 to the University.
YN54AOR is a Scania Omnidekka new to Brighton in September 2004.
www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-06-01/second-omicro...
California’s new coronavirus wave is disrupting lives, even with less severe illness
A new surge of coronavirus cases is taking shape, as California slogs into a third pandemic summer with far fewer hospitalizations and deaths but still significant disruptions.
There are fewer cases of serious illness than occurred during other waves, underscoring the protection imparted by vaccinations, therapeutic drugs and, for some, partial natural immunity stemming from a previous infection.
Still, officials are deciding how best to respond now that cases are rapidly rising after plunging in the spring.
The extent of infection has prompted some schools, including UCLA, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and Berkeley’s K-12 public schools, to reinstitute indoor mask mandates and has reignited concerns that hospitals may soon be asked to care for larger numbers of coronavirus-positive patients.
“If we continue on the current trajectory, we could find that cases and hospitalizations end up exerting stress on our healthcare system within just a few weeks,” Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said during a recent briefing.
Some observers say there’s no sign that California is nearing a peak, as the latest variant’s exceptional contagiousness is thought to be approaching that of measles. State modeling suggests that the spread of COVID-19 is likely still increasing in Southern California, and could be ticking up in the San Joaquin Valley and Greater Sacramento, as well.
Even if hospitals don’t become burdened, there’s concern that climbing rates of transmission could keep people at home for a week or more, ruining plans for graduations, weddings and vacations and making it difficult for businesses to maintain adequate staffing.
Other worry that unlike in previous waves, people tired of the pandemic will be less willing to wear masks or take other measures to reduce coronavirus spread, potentially threatening the health of vulnerable people at higher risk of severe complications and increasing the chance of people suffering from long COVID.
In the San Francisco Bay Area, some businesses and institutions are taking care to avoid greater spread, including the Golden State Warriors, whose coach, Steve Kerr, was briefly out with a coronavirus infection as the team marched through the NBA playoffs, and Apple, which reportedly postponed a three-day-a-week return-to-work plan.
Statewide, officials are reporting nearly 15,000 new coronavirus cases a day, a rate nearly as high as during last summer’s Delta surge. The latest wave was spawned by the highly infectious Omicron strains.
San Francisco has one of the state’s highest coronavirus case rates, reporting more than 400 a week for every 100,000 residents as of Thursday. Los Angeles County was reporting 308 cases a week for every 100,000 residents as of Tuesday. A rate of 100 or more is considered high.
“It’s now a big-time surge,” Dr. Robert Wachter, chair of UC San Francisco’s Department of Medicine, tweeted Monday. “No longer just cases … also major uptick in hospitalizations. … If you’re trying to stay well, time to up your game.”
While the daily census of coronavirus-positive patients in hospitals has risen lately, it has done so at a much slower pace than in previous surges. On the whole, the patient count remains far lower than in the past.
Statewide, 2,281 coronavirus-positive patients were hospitalized as of Tuesday — up 41% from two weeks ago. By comparison, daily hospitalizations surpassed 8,300 during the height of the Delta wave and topped 15,400 at the peak of the first Omicron surge.
Additionally, some hospital officials in recent weeks have noted that most of the coronavirus-positive patients are not being treated for COVID-19; they may have been admitted for other reasons and tested positive while in the hospital.
“We are not seeing COVID pneumonia. We’re seeing flu-like illnesses,” tweeted Dr. Brad Spellburg, chief medical officer of L.A. County-USC Medical Center, noting that patients are going home after being seen in the emergency room.
Of about 10 coronavirus-positive patients at his public hospital, only one was admitted primarily for COVID-19, Spellburg said.
However, Ferrer noted that coronavirus-positive patients take up hospital resources, in part to keep them isolated.
“The more cases you have — even if it’s just a small fraction of people who get infected and need to be hospitalized — the greater the strain will be on the healthcare system,” she said.
In L.A. County, there were 502 coronavirus-positive patients in public and private hospitals as of Tuesday. That’s up 38% from two weeks before. In San Francisco, there were 96 patients, up 26% over the same period.
“The rate of increase in hospital admissions are of concern,” said Ferrer, who characterized the increase as occurring at a “modest pace.”
Computer models posted to the state’s COVID-19 forecasting website indicate increasing hospitalizations in the weeks to come — with coronavirus-positive intensive care patients projected to almost quadruple from 242 to close to 950 by the end of June. That’s not as high as the winter Omicron peak of about 2,600 but would represent a significant increase from the post-winter low of 112.
State modeling also projects that the overall daily number of hospitalized coronavirus-positive patients could approach 5,000 by the end of June.
Nationwide, COVID-19 deaths have started to increase. The U.S. was reporting an average of 301 COVID-19 deaths a day for the seven days ending Monday, up 5% from the previous week. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is now forecasting that daily COVID-19 deaths will increase through at least mid-June, possibly doubling to more than 750 a day.
California is averaging 33 COVID-19 deaths a day, a level that has remained stable.
Some medical experts have recently pushed back against what they consider an overly optimistic sentiment that increases in coronavirus cases don’t really matter, because immunization rates have lowered the risk of hospitalization and death.
“There is no way to get around the reality that surges of COVID-19 are problematic — they result in people being sick enough to be out of work; others sick enough to be in the hospital; others sick enough to have longer term issues,” tweeted Dr. Abraar Karan, an infectious-diseases expert at Stanford University. “Normalizing surges is bad public health.”
A coronavirus infection brings with it the risk of developing long COVID, in which symptoms like fatigue, difficulty breathing and brain fog can persist for years.
A report published last week in the journal Nature Medicine analyzed health records of veterans and found that vaccinated people who were infected with the coronavirus have some risk of experiencing long COVID. The study reviewed records prior to Dec. 1, before the Omicron wave accelerated in the U.S.
“The findings suggest that vaccination before infection confers only partial protection in the post-acute phase of the disease,” the study said. Reliance on vaccines alone and not using other strategies to reduce risk “may not optimally reduce long-term health consequences” from a coronavirus infection, the report said.
A separate report, published last week by the CDC, said roughly 1 in 5 adults who survived COVID-19 have a health condition that might be related to their infection, such as problems affecting the heart or lungs.
It’s “wishful thinking” to imagine that recurrent COVID-19 illnesses “aren’t a big deal,” Wachter tweeted. The truth, he said, is that risks of getting long COVID from “recurrent cases of COVID aren’t yet clear.”
www.sfchronicle.com/health/article/Bay-Area-s-spring-COVI...
As Bay Area cases swell again, it’s ‘very hard right now to avoid getting COVID’
Coronavirus cases blew up across the Bay Area in May, as the region became entrenched in a sixth surge that is likely many times larger than what reported infections show and may even be approaching the magnitude of this past winter’s massive omicron wave, health experts say.
COVID hospitalizations are climbing in the Bay Area too — they’ve nearly doubled since the start of the month — though they remain at a relatively low and manageable level compared to prior surges, experts said. The number of patients with COVID needing intensive care in the region has more than doubled over the past month, but ICU capacity is not tapped out.
Deaths also remain far below the levels seen in earlier waves; the Bay Area has reported on average three deaths a day for almost all of May.
The mix of variants fueling this surge makes it tough to speculate when cases will level off, experts said — cases could have already peaked and will soon start dropping, or they may keep climbing for longer. Plus, subvariants that have yet to get a foothold in the region could further prolong this wave or a drive a new one later in the summer.
Regardless of where this current surge is headed, health experts said people who want to avoid becoming infected should be resuming aggressive COVID precautions by now, if they haven’t already, including wearing masks indoors and avoiding crowded spaces — from busy restaurants and movie theaters to graduation parties.
“My sense is that it’s very hard right now to avoid getting COVID. It is so prevalent,” said Dr. John Swartzberg, an infectious disease expert with UC Berkeley.
“That’s the bad news. But we really dodged the bullet with this surge in terms of the variants causing it,” he said. “It’s apparent they don’t cause as severe disease in people. It’s mostly upper respiratory stuff.”
As of the end of last week, the Bay Area was reporting between 4,000 and 4,500 new coronavirus cases a day — roughly double the daily reports from the start of the month. Health officials have said for many weeks that reported cases are lower than the actual number of infections, in large part due to increased reliance on home testing and a significant number of asymptomatic cases.
But some experts now believe infections are likely many times higher than the reported cases — one preprint study estimated as much as thirtyfold higher in New York City. At the peak of the omicron surge, the Bay Area was reporting roughly 20,000 cases a day — also an undercount, though probably not as much as now, since home tests were harder to find in the winter. It’s possible, some experts say, that cases now are much closer to the omicron peak than the official counts would seem to show.
“I think those numbers are probably not that far off from each other,” said Dr. Robert Wachter, chief of medicine at UCSF. “Certainly I know more people with it now than in January.”
Wachter said he believes many people who were cautious earlier in the pandemic have been caught by this latest surge because they were lulled into complacency by the relatively slow-building case counts. And they may simply be tired, too — even, or perhaps especially, in the Bay Area, where residents generally adopted more protective measures than in other parts of the country.
“Because people seem to have psychologically moved on, it seems like they’re not treating the level of cases with the same respect that we might have previously,” said Wachter, noting that his wife became infected for the first time in this surge, after attending an in-person conference.
Wachter added that hospitalizations, though increasing in recent weeks, remain well below the height of the winter omicron surge. Nearly 600 people are currently hospitalized with COVID in the Bay Area, including 67 in intensive care as of Monday. At the omicron peak in late January, more than 2,000 people were hospitalized, with 366 in the ICU.
Wachter said the lower hospitalization numbers likely are “a reflection of vaccination, boosting and prior infection” providing protection, as well as improved access to Paxlovid, an antiviral given to prevent severe illness.
He said UCSF — as with other Bay Area hospitals — is not yet strained by the number of patients with COVID, but there’s some stress on capacity due to large numbers of health care providers being out sick. “It’s more about having enough doctors or nurses than having 40 or 45 patients in the hospital,” Wachter said.
Predicting where this surge is headed, and whether the Bay Area may be hit by yet another wave later this summer, is complicated for now because more than one variant is circulating, experts said. As of the end of last week, two omicron subvariants — known as BA.2 and BA.2.12.1 — were making up the bulk of cases in the southwestern part of the United States, including California, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
BA.2.12.1 was notable for driving a recent Northeast surge; it now makes up roughly half of cases in the Southwest, according to the CDC. It’s believed to be 20% to 30% more infectious than the original omicron.
Adding further complexity could be the arrival of the subvariants BA.4 and BA.5, which have been detected in the Bay Area but are not yet widely circulating. Those subvariants drove recent surges in South Africa and parts of Europe, and Bay Area experts said there is some concern they could cause a new swell of illness here.
Early reports suggest those subvariants may be more infectious and better able to evade immunity than the currently circulating strains, but experts don’t anticipate they’ll cause much more damage.
“My guess is if BA.4 and BA.5 do come here, and start to take over, it’s just going to cause a prolonged problem of what we’re experiencing now, as opposed to something catastrophic,” Swartzberg said.
Dr. Lee Riley, also an infectious disease expert at UC Berkeley, agreed that emerging subvariants could extend this surge or trigger a new one. He’s more concerned about what this fall or winter will bring, though.
“At some point, we’re going to start seeing variants that are really not as susceptible to our immunity,” Riley said. “These surges could get even worse, maybe by this fall.”
Pasión y paciencia, fue el slogan elegido por ¡Valencia!, la agencia de publicidad y comunicación integral de Basilea, Suiza, para su reunión de teambulding que tuvo como actividad principal un entrenamiento intensivo de surf en nuestra escuela.
Una formidable experiencia, sin duda.
Txoko Surf Club Schola |+34 662 138 480
Rúa Tomás Mirambell, 90 Bajo.
36340 Panxón, Nigrán
UP2587, UP5447, UP8227 & UP4624 slog up the Cajon pass heading north at Sullivan's Curve on the BNSF line, while a UP empty coal train can be seen slowly overtaking in the background on the UP line. More photos at: cogloadjunctionphotography.weebly.com/
[09/21/2011] Work slogged by this morning, but classes moved quickly. In German, we drew illustrations for surrealist German poems. With crayons. I should've majored in German, clearly.
I applied for a job with the Portland Police Bureau today- a temporary job doing analytical background research. I need the money, and I actually have enjoyed working with the traffic division cops before, so it could be interesting. It certainly felt weird, however. It inspired this incredibly out-of-the-ordinary shot for me (I think this is my first-ever booty shot for the 365 project.)
I need to take and upload more photos other than my 365. Starting next week, I am requiring myself to upload 7 non-selfies each week onto my flickr stream. The hope is that this will allow me to get through my backlog of waiting-to-be-uploaded photos.
Our Daily Challenge: Exotic
Mood: 9
Health: 9
Hours of Sleep: 6.5
# of Drinks of Caffeine: 0
# of Drinks of Alcohol: 2
Miles Biked: 20
Weather: Hot
I slogged at top speed to get in position to photograph what looked to be a good sunset. Avoiding footprints is a known issue.
This shot is a right angles to my intended shot. I have found I don't get good results shooting directly into a sunset, but try for more of an angle.
This shot was taken as I was waiting for what I planned. What I planned was a total dud,
Go figure.
Cheers.
Near max load for 1336 up the Pukerua Bay bank, consisting of a dead DJ, UC tanker, and 5 AO carriages.
-
Tui Express with Jb 1236 and DJ 1229 - 25th Feb 2018
66131 slogs up the ECML at Burn with the 14.45 Humber to Drax loaded coal working - something of a rarity these days!
Frontiers in Development 2014 - Debate: Will the last mile be a sprint or a slog? Michael Faye, Chairman, Give Directly, Sarah Cliffe, Special Adviser and Assistant Secretary-General of Civilian Capacities, United Nations, Vera Songwe, Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Brookings, and World Bank Country Director for Senegal, Cape Verde, Mauritania, Guinea Bissau and The Gambia
Frontiers in Development 2014 - Debate: Will the last mile be a sprint or a slog? Manish Bapna, Executive VP and Managing Director, World Resources Institute. Sharon Morris, Senior Advisor to the Acting President, U.S. Institute of Peace, John Page,Senior Fellow, Brookings, Michael Faye, Chairman, Give Directly Sarah Cliffe, Special Adviser and Assistant Secretary-General of Civilian Capacities, United Nations, Vera Songwe, Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Brookings, and World Bank Country Director for Senegal, Cape Verde, Mauritania, Guinea Bissau and The Gambia
SLOGAN: ¿GAY? SI…NO...¡ARTE!
EXPLICACIÓN: ¿Podemos clasificar el arte? ¿Hasta que punto, la mirada del espectador puede manipularse para que vea lo que no quiere ver, y viceversa? ¿Es real o imaginaria dicha experiencia? 22 artistas plásticos procedentes de España, Argentina, México, Reino Unido, Portugal, y Rumanía, aportarán una visión polimórfica, pluricultural, y multidisciplinar, en torno al binomio ARTE-GAY.
21 obras +1 videoproyección: Diego Simancas, Magdalena Lungu, Antoni Conejo, Israel Alvarado, Alicia Rosafioreti, Zandre Salgueiro, Vicente Herrero Heca, Sol Sánchez, Joaquín Balsa, Manuela Carrión, Mª Xesús Díaz, Liliana Esperanza, Pepa Herrera, Montse Cantí, Cristina Alzualde, Marcial Rincón, Emilia Calderón, Yin Wam, Charlie Pujol, Didí Escobart, Sabela Baña, Ausin Sáinz.
OBJETIVO: Máxima exhibición/difusión en 2010 para crear un referente para futuras ediciones.
Países participantes: España, Argentina, México, Portugal, Reino Unido,Rumanía.
CSX C786 slogs east past I135 at Shenandoah Junction on a roasting hot early-July afternoon in 2024. Leading the way to the docks at Curtis Bay in Baltimore was CSXT 3463, a GE ET44AH sporting two different number boards above the cab.
Danmark slog Sverige for første gang i 14 år i denne kamp, blandt andet på Ole Madsens berømte mål med hælen.
Min fhv. svoger Svend A. Lund havde vundet biletter til kampen i en konkurrence i Ekstra-Bladet og tog billederne i denne serie. Mest bemærkelsesværdigt er, at tilskuerne invaderede banen i glæde, da kampen var slut. Det var vist ikke gået i dag!
Holdopstillinger og målscorere:
Danmark - Sverige 2-1
1-0 Ole Madsen (18) 2-0 Örjan Persson (30) 2-1 Ole Sørensen (34)
Tilskuere: 50.000
Danmark: Leif Nielsen - Leif Hartwig, Jens Jørgen Hansen, Bent Hansen, Karl Hansen, Preben Arentoft, Knud Pedersen, Ole Sørensen, Ole Madsen, Egon Hansen, Henning Enoksen
Sverige: Arne Arvidsson - Jan Karlsson, Lennart Wing, Orvar Bergmark (Lennart Hemming), Björn Nordqvist, Hans Mild, Örjan Persson, Bengt Lindskog, Leif Eriksson, Bo Larsson, Gert Christiansson
Danmark slog Sverige for første gang i 14 år i denne kamp, blandt andet på Ole Madsens berømte mål med hælen.
Min fhv. svoger Svend A. Lund havde vundet biletter til kampen i en konkurrence i Ekstra-Bladet og tog billederne i denne serie. Mest bemærkelsesværdigt er, at tilskuerne invaderede banen i glæde, da kampen var slut. Det var vist ikke gået i dag!
Holdopstillinger og målscorere:
Danmark - Sverige 2-1
1-0 Ole Madsen (18) 2-0 Örjan Persson (30) 2-1 Ole Sørensen (34)
Tilskuere: 50.000
Danmark: Leif Nielsen - Leif Hartwig, Jens Jørgen Hansen, Bent Hansen, Karl Hansen, Preben Arentoft, Knud Pedersen, Ole Sørensen, Ole Madsen, Egon Hansen, Henning Enoksen
Sverige: Arne Arvidsson - Jan Karlsson, Lennart Wing, Orvar Bergmark (Lennart Hemming), Björn Nordqvist, Hans Mild, Örjan Persson, Bengt Lindskog, Leif Eriksson, Bo Larsson, Gert Christiansson
www.messersmith.name/wordpress/2010/04/17/saturday-at-last/
What a week! It was a long slog through the muddy wasteland of servers oozing error messages and tangles of wires tugging at my feet like "wait a minute" vines. We did, however triumph. I can't think of a single thing in the IT Dungeon that is not humming along in harmony with the organisation and my happy boss. We've even got a new web site up for my employer, Pioneer Bible Translators - Papua New Guinea Branch. I would never have gotten it done if not for the help (okay, he did it - I just made a few adjustments) of our former Director, Kyle Harris. He volunteered to do the job and I owe him big. Thanks, Kyle.
I'll start this off quickly, because it's 08:30 and I have to picky my divers up at 10:00, with this morning's sunrise: Amusing, but hardly spectacular.
The panoramic view is similarly uninspiring:
Who am I to complain? I'm lucky to still be seeing sunrises here in Paradise. I've been nearly fired so many times that I've lost count, mostly for being a jerk. It's happening less and less these days, so they are either getting used to me or I'm improving. I tend to accept the former explanation.
Might as well throw in yesterday's sunrise: I'm ready for the rainy season to be over. During the dry there's a good sky almost every morning. I can get back to rising a 05:30, grabbing camera and tripod and sitting down for a half hour of introspection while the big dude upstairs puts on a spectacular show just for me. Sometimes I pretend that I'm the only person on earth seeing it. Maybe I'm right . . . sometimes. Anyway, I certainly enjoy sharing them with you.
And, often when I return to the house, this is what I see: A hungry Sheba, our mutt, with that expression that says, "Okay already. You're going to feed me now. Right?" The tail tattoos on the floor for emphasis.
My goal is to crank out six works of fake art each week to develop my so-called skills. This week I managed only one. It is an outrageously coloured faux watercolour rendition of the Yellowmargin Triggerfish which we teased a few days ago: Pseudobalistes flavimarginatus if you care.
Okay, I have to rush now, since there's always the chance that there will be a problem with Faced Glory, since she's probably nearly as old as me . . . in boat years. In an hour and a half I'll be looking at something very similar to this: Not a bad life for an old man, eh?
Oh, and there's a big costume party tonight with the theme being the letter "B".
I'm going as a beach bum. I don't even have to dress up.
Frontiers in Development 2014 - Debate: Will the last mile be a sprint or a slog? Michael Faye, Chairman, Give Directly, Sarah Cliffe, Special Adviser and Assistant Secretary-General of Civilian Capacities, United Nations, Vera Songwe, Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Brookings, and World Bank Country Director for Senegal, Cape Verde, Mauritania, Guinea Bissau and The Gambia
The Kimberley to De Aar line was known as the Steel Kyalami in steam days after the racing circuit near Joburg due to the speeds attained by the 25 class 4-8-4 that worked the section.
This train is the opposite, 25NC no 3467 really struggling up the grade south from Poupan approaching the small pass between the hills at Fonteineseberg with a very heavy train from Kimberley. At 23 wagons it's 17 short of the maximum that was allowed on a vacuum braked train. Whatever was under those tarps must have weighed a ton.
20 February 1997, Northern Cape, RSA.
Anh in front of the Aiguille du Midi, as we started on the slopes of Mont-Blanc du Tacul (4248m) in our training day. All three of us summited a few hours later, despite 60 to 70km/h winds on the summit ridge!Original image on Aperture First.
JS no 8081 struggling to gain momentum as she pulls away from Xikeng towards Ba'erzhan junction.
14 January 2011, Sandaoling coal mine, China.
Weeks of slogging through as much documentation and examples as I could find and I've managed to make a bare-bones build environment for this chip as well as the toolchain needed to compile and program it. A short while later, I've got USART1 working successfully to send info to this OLED screen (at 300 baud, shh). No luck getting USART3 to work with it, I'll try that next.
Still, success!
Danmark slog Sverige for første gang i 14 år i denne kamp, blandt andet på Ole Madsens berømte mål med hælen.
Min fhv. svoger Svend A. Lund havde vundet biletter til kampen i en konkurrence i Ekstra-Bladet og tog billederne i denne serie. Mest bemærkelsesværdigt er, at tilskuerne invaderede banen i glæde, da kampen var slut. Det var vist ikke gået i dag!
Holdopstillinger og målscorere:
Danmark - Sverige 2-1
1-0 Ole Madsen (18) 2-0 Örjan Persson (30) 2-1 Ole Sørensen (34)
Tilskuere: 50.000
Danmark: Leif Nielsen - Leif Hartwig, Jens Jørgen Hansen, Bent Hansen, Karl Hansen, Preben Arentoft, Knud Pedersen, Ole Sørensen, Ole Madsen, Egon Hansen, Henning Enoksen
Sverige: Arne Arvidsson - Jan Karlsson, Lennart Wing, Orvar Bergmark (Lennart Hemming), Björn Nordqvist, Hans Mild, Örjan Persson, Bengt Lindskog, Leif Eriksson, Bo Larsson, Gert Christiansson
Muskeg is a term used in Canada and Alaska to describe a bog consisting of a mixture of water and partly dead vegetation, frequently covered by a layer of sphagnum or other mosses. Somewhere off Stephens Passge (Inside Passage) near Port Houghton, Alaska
Loco cab of Furka number 1, slogging away from Oberwald, bound for Realp, Switzerland. The driver fancied a bit of firing so his fireman sat up on the shelf, that's his left boot!
Copyright Geoff Dowling: All rights reserved
Slogged through a bog (trespassing no doubt) on my lunch break to get this shot. The craziest thing is that I was so focused on trying to capture the yellow mustard grass that I never even noticed the crazy clouds until I was stitching the panorama back home on my computer later that night.
Pasión y paciencia, fue el slogan elegido por ¡Valencia!, la agencia de publicidad y comunicación integral de Basilea, Suiza, para su reunión de teambulding que tuvo como actividad principal un entrenamiento intensivo de surf en nuestra escuela.
Una formidable experiencia, sin duda.
Txoko Surf Club Schola |+34 662 138 480
Rúa Tomás Mirambell, 90 Bajo.
36340 Panxón, Nigrán
65 slogs up the 1 in 100 through Draughton with the 14:10 Bolton Abbey-Embsay on 18th November 2012.
Danmark slog Sverige for første gang i 14 år i denne kamp, blandt andet på Ole Madsens berømte mål med hælen.
Min fhv. svoger Svend A. Lund havde vundet biletter til kampen i en konkurrence i Ekstra-Bladet og tog billederne i denne serie. Mest bemærkelsesværdigt er, at tilskuerne invaderede banen i glæde, da kampen var slut. Det var vist ikke gået i dag!
Holdopstillinger og målscorere:
Danmark - Sverige 2-1
1-0 Ole Madsen (18) 2-0 Örjan Persson (30) 2-1 Ole Sørensen (34)
Tilskuere: 50.000
Danmark: Leif Nielsen - Leif Hartwig, Jens Jørgen Hansen, Bent Hansen, Karl Hansen, Preben Arentoft, Knud Pedersen, Ole Sørensen, Ole Madsen, Egon Hansen, Henning Enoksen
Sverige: Arne Arvidsson - Jan Karlsson, Lennart Wing, Orvar Bergmark (Lennart Hemming), Björn Nordqvist, Hans Mild, Örjan Persson, Bengt Lindskog, Leif Eriksson, Bo Larsson, Gert Christiansson