View allAll Photos Tagged trough
at Kew Gardens
These look so good to me even now very out of season and with no flowers. Mostly saxifrages and sedums, I have done small things like this in shallow pots but I really fancy having a go at something a bit bigger in a trough this year. maybe on top of the patio wall. ...I'll probably come across this text in 3 years, not having done it and wonder why I ever thought I would
OMD - The New Stone Age (live)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=-2bNV35UD_k
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PENTAX K-1 • FF Mode • 100 ISO • Soligor C/D Wide-Auto 20mm f:2.8
Lens flare added
Colorado Provençal
Rustrel • Lubéron • Vaucluse • Provence • France
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This bathtub was a drinking trough for Ranger (pony who died December 2022). I was surprised to see frogspawn in it as it is well off the ground. There is grass growing up the side so that will have provided access for the frog. I am not sure if it is fertilised or not as it seems to be a single clump so may just have been a female that couldnt find the places nearby where there has been lots of spawning activity. Will keep an eye on it to see do tadpoles start to develop.
I use this trough to fill watering cans for handiness if I just need a bit of water for something in the polytunnel and cant be bothered sorting the hose. Maybe need to not do that or maybe I will relocate the spawn if it proves fertile to my garden pond about 50 metres away
Sunny sixteen was definitely having an off day. I do tend to underexpose Tri-X is is never 400 for me. Quite like this though.
01Sep2010
It's great to find a water trough in the country with clean clear water when you're hiking. Feels like such a gift.
camera info: 40D | 50mm(ƒ/1.4) | ƒ/4.0 | ISO 100 | 1/750s
During half term had a trip out the Trough od Bowland in Lancashire. Here are a few of my favourite shots
With three of the four constituents of British Railways represented, Brighton-built SR N15X class 4.6.0 32327 'Trevethick' races over Goring water troughs (between Oxford and Reading) with LNER stock forming a southbound inter-regional working. With 'British Railways' writ large on the tender, this view probably dates from around 1950. 32327 lasted 42 years in traffic, withdrawn following a collision at Woking in December 1955.
Scanned from an acquired 6x9cm negative in my collection, photographer unknown.
the two rosemary's and the lavender are getting away well in the raised bed also added some marigolds
We always put tulips in the stone trough.its close to the back door and we can see them so well from our living room window.Once we get a day of sun (we hope!) and its a bit warmer.the petal will open wide and its so beautiful.
The Trough of Bowland is a valley and a high pass that links Lancaster, Dunsop Bridge and Clitheroe. This is capture at the head of the valley which is 968 feet above sea level.
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Pu’uhonua o Honaunau National Historical Park preserves several ancient Polynesian sites on the Island of Hawai’i These include a village site, the royal grounds, two temple sites; and the Pu’uhonua or place of refuge.
Adjacent to temple of Hale o Keawe, ancient Hawaiians erected a massive stonewall made up of unmodified chunks of lava (basalt). Built in 1550 the wall marks the boundary line between the Honaunau (royal grounds) and Pu’uhonua or refuge area. The wall is over 1000 feet long, 12 feet high and 18 feet wide and only part of it is visible in the photo. On the oceanside of the wall are the barren lava fields of the Pu’uhonua, or place of refuge. Here, the remains of the chiefs at Hale o Keawe protected women, children, and elders who, in times of war, left the royal grounds and traveled to Pu’uhonua to wait in safety until battles or disputes among chiefs were over and resolved.
The Pu’uhonua was also a safe haven for noncombatants, vanquished and defeated warriors, and defiant villagers who had broken the kapu. Individuals charged with violating the kapu were usually commoners who had looked at the chief, approached him without being a member of the royal court or an attendee, walked in his footsteps, or touched the chief’s possessions. A commoner was also guilty of violating the kapu if his shadow fell on the royal grounds. For women, the laws were stricter. According to the kapu, a woman could not eat the food offered to the gods, prepare meals for male villagers, or eat in the presence of men.
This video is shot in TEAMLAB Planets in Odaiba. They call it an art experience museum. You have to make a reservation.
You have to take off your shoes and socks and roll up the sleaves of your pants or you can borrow some shorts. You can store your stuff in a locker. You can take your camera and phone but don't drop it in the water! Then you enter a hall trough streaming water and go through different rooms with different effects. This one is called drawing on the water surface.
It is a room with cloudy white water till your knees. Then they have projectors that can project different things on the water. Again, the effect you want can be controlled through the app. I think the projection is from the bottom. Then there are sensors that know where each person is so the things are projected around each individual person. Here you can see koi swimming around you.
In Tokyo there is TEAMLAB Planets and TEAMLAB Borderless. I've seen both. I liked Planets better because it was way less crowded and didn't have to wait in line for some rooms. Both are good. It is expensive but its different and I would say it's worth it.
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Strobist Info: 2 YN560II at full power trough white umbrella to light the background.
Subject in a light painted room with wide window and sun light