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Csak hogy el ne felejtsem: megvan a 100.000 egyedi kattintás!! :) Köszi nektek!
Thx to all!!!
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I visited the lovely seaside town of Nazaré, pronounced Naz-er-rey, on my travels. It is one of the most popular seaside resorts on the Silver Coast/Costa de Prata, Portugal. It is very touristy and full of gift shops, selling mostly tat but if you're in the area it's well worth a visit. You can also take a ride on the Funicular (cable railway) up to the old town of Sítio, where you will be greeted with spectacular views across the Atlantic ocean.
According to the Legend of Nazaré, the town derives its name from a small wooden statue of the Virgin Mary, a Black Madonna, brought by a monk in the 4th century from Nazareth, Holy Land, to a monastery near the city of Mérida, Spain. Needless to say, there were loads of coaches full of people visiting the church to see the statue.
Having a busy day today due to being on Explore. Passed 8 million views. Thanks so much to everyone who visits, comments, faves and shares my photos. I appreciate it.
Another view of the bikini showing the back of the bottoms just before I returned it to the drawer where I had found it.
There was a time when we used this camera to shoot commercial work here at We Shoot. There was nothing automatic, the media was 4" X 5" transparencies and negatives, and the image viewed at the back of the camera was upside down and backward. The image quality from equipment like this was very high. The workflow and equipment has changed, but high quality is still our standard. Seattle Commercial Photography by weshoot.com .
An early morning view of Xijiang, Guizhou (China). Xijiang is the largest Miao (Hmong) settlement in the area and is quickly becoming a big tourist attraction for both domestic and international travelers - a la Lijiang or Yangshou.
Latrigg is one of the lowest fells in the Lake District, but is a popular climb due to its convenient location overlooking the town of Keswick and the beautiful views down the valley of Borrowdale from the summit. It is the least mountainous of the Skiddaw fells, the summit being almost entirely devoid of rock. The slopes of Latrigg are partially wooded, and logging work is currently being undertaken. One lone tree just south of the summit is prominently viewed in silhouette when approaching Keswick from the west along the A66.
Latrigg is the most southerly top of the Skiddaw massif and of the Northern Fells as a whole. It takes the form of a rounded hump at the terminus of a long descending ridge, and would be unremarkable if not for its location. To the north of Latrigg summit is an unnamed depression at about 970 ft and rising beyond is a grassy rigg, climbing up to Jenkin Hill and the top of Skiddaw Little Man. Latrigg itself sends out a narrow ridge to the east, about a mile long and ending at Brundholm.
The fell is bordered by the two streams falling from the northern col. Gale Gill runs west to join the River Derwent between Derwentwater and Bassenthwaite Lake. The unnamed eastern stream joins Whit Beck and then flows into the River Greta, bound again for the Derwent via Keswick.
The steep southern slopes are cloaked in the mixed woodland of Brundholme Wood and Whinny Brow, Latriggs only crags being hidden in the trees. A public road from Keswick contours across this slope at around 600 ft, giving access to the farms of Lonscale and Brundholm. Further mixed woodland has been planted on the north eastern slopes above Whit Beck. To the north west, on either bank of Gale Gill, are the conifer plantations of Birkett Wood and Mallen Dodd. A single track road climbs up the slope beside the wood, giving access to a car park on the depression to the north of the fell.
View from top of Khandoba Temple at Jejuri, Near Pune, Maharashtra State, India. ....
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Looking at the Caribbean Sea right next to El Morro. (Panorama has been stitched with Hugin.)
Canon EOS 40D
1/320s
ISO 125
f/14.1
Santiago,
Cuba
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A previously hidden view of Sintra has been exposed, through a tunnel of open windows of an abandoned building, to all who pass by and are ready to enjoy.
Looking inside, the cigarette butts laying on the internal window sill also indicate the view is still being appreciated from within...
The building has been abandoned but the view has not.
Photography by © George Lyra. Shot taken on 11 Oct 2014 during the 7th Annual Scott Kelby Worlwide Photowalk held in Sintra, Portugal.
Drivers eye view from number 2 cab of 66160 showing the driver information gauges from far left to right we have:
Main Res and Train Pipe gauge (unlit, bulb failure)
Duplex brake gauge cylinder pressures - one for each bogie.
Air flow meter
Train brake pipe pressure gauge
Speedometer
Ammeter
To the far right is the GSMR digital cab communication radio above the now redundant NRN radio.
The view is looking West along loading line 8 at Gasgoine Wood sidings towards Milford.
Commentary.
Ever since I first visited this area, over fifty-five years ago,
it has never ceased to amaze me.
Although it is less than thirty miles from the centre of London,
when here, the landscape, flora, fauna and rural ambience
make me feel as if I could be a million miles away from any metropolis.
The transformation is so complete.
The tranquillity and culture is so utterly different, that urbanity and crowded streets are totally forgotten and removed from my psyche.
I have often gone to rural Devon, Cornwall, Wales, Ireland
Kent, Essex, Suffolk, Derbyshire, Cumbria, Yorkshire or Scotland to seek environmental solace and spiritual peace.
But Surrey is where I grew up for half of my life.
As a six to eighteen-year old I spent many happy days and nights walking and camping in these cosy, leafy, familiar hills and valleys and so a bond grew that runs deep in my soul.
My heart adopted this beautiful area as my surrogate, spiritual home.
The country around Box Hill and Leith Hill became mine and my love for it can never die.
I often return and my reward is peace in mind, body, spirit and soul.
Long may it be so.
This is the view from Greenwich observatory. That laser beam separates the Eastern and Western hemispheres.