View allAll Photos Tagged tractor

Peterbilt 6x4 tractor unit L900 CST

 

Seen at the 2022 Great Yarmouth, Wheels Festival

 

Truck belonging to Clive Shaw Trucking

Ploughing with Allis and Begg plough

Manchester Steam Tractor, Norm E Box

grandpas tractor

Just an old rusty tractor

Tricked up with a Commer "knocker" motor

Disk harrow with John Deere tractor, Hampshire, England

I have seen this one running

Un tractor casi nuevo del fabricante New Holland en el Estado de Morelos.

Long exposure using my cell phone flashlight to shine light on the tractor.

grandpas tractor

Amberley Museum - 14th May 2017

Local farmer finished for the afternoon. This is one of my favourite places to be, walking the dogs (see Dalmatian set to view the monsters) with a bottle of Aspall's and a free summer's afternoon. Simple pleasures!

Tims tractor

With the leaf busting season just a couple of months away, word has it that that the East Yorkshire coast route from Hull to Scarborough ( and Malton to Scarborough ) will benefit from a daytime RHTT working. One such working did run for one day early last season.

 

To this end, DRS 37402 is on a MTuWFO diagram from York to York, out via Scarborough and the Anlaby Road Curve to Hessle East Jnc and return for route learning / refresher.

 

Arram. 21 July 2021

6-photo stitched panorama

manual focus legacy lens: H.Zuiko 42mm 1:1.2

Fordson Super Major

Hov - Suðuroy - Faroe Islands

July 10th

You are reading right now the edited version. This is why I like Flickr. It makes me think. Yes. Closed that open jaw. I know it comes as a shock - me thinking. But to the point. The original version included a short piece about an advice I received, about how caption was unnecessary, how an image should tell a story on its own, so I left the title blank.

The guy was right, of course. An image should tell the story on its own, but that shouldn't stop me from adding a title and elevating the image to a new height. Cuz that's what the caption does. Description does. It forces you at times to stop and reflect further on whatever. And that, in my humble opinion, is the purpose of any art. To stop, in the middle of your daily race, from the moment you step out of your comfy bed, until you drop dead back into it. And in between, while you're running through and fro, you must stop and smell the coffee and look at roses. Reflect on whatever. We must. If not, we become a robot without any sense of empathy, without any appreciation for the beauty that surrounds us.

And I would like to take this opportunity and thank two of my followers: Margie, cuz she's the best artist I encounter on this side of the hemisphere, and one of the few of my female followers. I noticed lately that most of my followers are men. I have a style that can be crude and vulgar at times. I won't apologize for being me. If you don't like it, don't bang the door on your way out.

But Margie, she is special. I invite you to check her site. If I had a normal life, I would love to a have a print, a piece of art, hanging in my living room, from each and every one of my follower. With Margie, it will be a major problem. Which one?!

So check Margie gallery at www.flickr.com/photos/32658783@N03/ you'll be blown away.

All my followers are such a talented group of individuals.

And William. The credits of the title go to William Yipp. Once again. Cuz William always helps me move the gears inside my head. And William's paintings? They are so pure. And he has such loyal group of supporting followers, who appreciate his art, as it should be. And I of the opinion that more people should be exposed to his wonderful creations, and this is the reason I include the link below.

www.flickr.com/photos/williamyipp/

If you see beauty, you must share.

 

The other day, I saw a deer, smack in the middle of the city, around 8 am. With no fear of people whatsoever, taking her sweet time, eating from communal gardens - the way she sees it, people plant tomatoes for her benefit. And the fence? Nothing to it, one elegant jump. And before I stepped to snap some photos, I approached those two construction guys: "You want to see something beautiful?" And I'm telling you, not too many women do that, but I wanted to share the moment, open people eyes. Some can be oblivious to what goes on around them.

 

And that's all folks. Thanks for reading so far. Have an awesome day/night. It's all blur together anyway.

© Copyright Eric Johnson 2019 Unauthorized use Prohibited

                

1918 Fordson tractor - first year sold in Canada

Took us up the muddy hill to Rara Avis.

LEGO tractor and tools

An Icelandic tractor in Húsafell

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