View allAll Photos Tagged snowdrift
Once again Beamish Museum's faithful old bus prepares to set out on a journey around the museum site. On this occasion there's a lack of passengers (and driver too, because I was out taking this photograph), which is not really surprising given that the snow is starting to fall enthusiastically - again!
The bus is a 1980's-built replica London General 'B' Type bus (B1349). The vehicle is built on a 1966 Bedford TK chassis (formerly a Rotherham-registered Bedford VAM14 Duple coach, registered DET 720D, new to Riley's of Rotherham) with a Leyland 400 series engine and a "crash" gearbox. In common with most buses of the era it is festooned with vitreous enamel advertising signs of the period.
Copyright © 2010 Terry Pinnegar Photography. All Rights Reserved. THIS IMAGE IS NOT TO BE USED WITHOUT MY EXPRESS PERMISSION!
View of a small but very interesting snow drift near my home in Olathe, taken the morning after a major blizzard dumped at least a foot of snow on nearly half of the Kansas City metro area.
Tuesday 2 February 2011
One of my favouriite places to shoot in the Winter is Lake Superior's shoreline out at Gros Cap. Nothing is ever the same, and it's always interesting. This is from the top of the Bluff, where there was a huge snow drift that looked just like a wave.
I am disappointed with myself, as I made a bone-head mistake. I failed to check my ISO settings, and left it on 400 from the day before. The shots turned out alright, but the quality could have been much better.
From Grasdalen in Stryn, Sogn og Fjordane. Nikon D300, AF-Nikkor 85mm f/1.4D. B&W conversion in Lightroom 4
The digging began in our east side Milwaukee, Wisconsin neighborhood just as the storm began blowing away, northeastward.
Just west of Moville on a gravel county road, I saw this drift with the red barn peeking over the hill. I thought it made a great shot.
Snowdrifts amongst the trees as seen from the upstairs window of my friend's house (spot the car roof at the bottom!) - Hakuba, Nagano prefecture, Japan
(2013/29)
The digging began in our east side Milwaukee, Wisconsin neighborhood just as the storm began blowing away, northeastward.
A rescan of a previous upload. I've rescanned this and uploaded it as a comparison with the snow we currently have (March 2013). Me, twenty years old, I was digging the A640 Buckstones pass out for five days, the snow had been lying for a week, twenty feet deep in places, drifted to the top of the Buckstone rocks, straight over the road. The snow, as you can see, had set solid, even with a tracked machine it took some digging.
The digging began in our east side Milwaukee, Wisconsin neighborhood just as the storm began blowing away, northeastward.
Around the flat fields the snow drifts around her pretty good. We only got about an inch or two, but it blew and drifted here.
The digging began in our east side Milwaukee, Wisconsin neighborhood just as the storm began blowing away, northeastward.
View of the 5-6 meter tall snowdrifts along the road up to Svalbard Satellite Station in March 2015, from inside our mini bus.
Deep in the northern evergreen forests a frigid winter has settled in. A blanketing blizzard is trailed by howling winds whipping the fresh snow around in an unrelenting vortex of chilling energy. A lonely cabin provides the only hint of warm shelter while the snowdrift gets deeper... and deeper... and deeper...
My entry into the BrickLink MOC Shop MOC-Off: Holiday Edition 2014
Titled "Snowdrift Cabin"
By user: speshy
The digging began in our east side Milwaukee, Wisconsin neighborhood just as the storm began blowing away, northeastward.