View allAll Photos Tagged wrong
THE WRONG DOOR
Picture shows: Myanna Buring as Melanie out for dinner with her new boyfriend, Philip The Dinosaur.
The Wrong Door is set in a parallel universe; a fantastic world governed by the laws of comedy where the special effects you see in the movies are part of everyday life. Sounds like our kinda world...
©BBC
Use of this copyright image is subject to the terms of use of BBC Pictures’ BBC Digital Picture Service.
PCW 959, another ex-Burnley Colne & Nelson East-Lancs bodied Tiger Cub in the ownership of OK Bishop Auckland, ventures into a street normally denied to motor vehicles.
These Nevada state cups were on sale at Walmart for 98 cents. However, this is California. No California cups were available for purchase.
Nevada is the Silver State and California is the Golden State.
vader:"Palpa,remember the escort service we used last weekend? They are having a 2+1 promotion tonight..."
Stormie:"Wrong Number!"
"Elton Wrong" performing in person in St James Square Grimsby. Funniest street performer I've ever come across. Even when his hat blew off in the wind he stayed in character calling for "security".
Watch him on Youtube at
I got a very interesting surprise about an hour after 24Z passed. Which was NS 14Q running on track one at Millbury, Ohio.
Normally NS runs trains that are going west on track one and eastbounds on track two.
Somehow 24Z had to stop and let 14Q go by. Which is very low IQ because 24Z is one of the higher priority trains on the chicagoline, but hey, I'm not the Toledo Eats dispatcher.
A couple of things here, firstly I suspected this Clio driver hadn't looked before pulling out of the space at the start of the video clip. It looked closer in real life than on the video, but wasn't near enough to bother getting too excited about. As I was pondering this thought we approached the roundabout and he pulled off this little stunt! Not sure whether it was intentional to avoid the queue or if it was a genuine mistake. I rather suspect the latter. At least he didn't take out the tourist train anyway.
Looking back at the footage it's interesting to note the two guys stood at the roadside where the Clio pulls out. Something about the car clealy catches their attention, perhaps they noticed he'd not looked too.
Published by the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders, this flyer is from the Union of Australian Women archival collection.
See page 1
The State Library has endeavoured to identify and contact copyright holders of material digitised for this website. Where the copyright owner has not been able to be traced, or where the permission is still being sought, the Library has decided in good faith to proceed with digitisation and publication. The State Library invites persons who believe they are copyright owners to contact Library staff to discuss usage of this item.
Making pesto for my pizza sauce, I started looking at the wrong recipe, which called for lemon juice. I was low, but do have this bag of key limes AND this cool squeezer from Mexico.
Oh well, I have lime juice for later in the week.
One of my two entries in to last night's set subject competition on the theme "Delicate & Brash", which was judged by Ken Scott aka Touching the Light. As always, Ken's appraisal was as informative, insightful and entertaining. I was going for the combination of "day after the night before" and "inappropriate footwear for the beach" with these sandals, which I had bought from a local charity shop. Happily, this image was awarded a 2nd place.
My other entry was this one, taken from the archives www.flickr.com/photos/22310427@N08/6797790479/, which also did pretty well
First West of England
YP67 XDF 36835.
Being cleared away from Protests, via the easiest way possible, meant taking the buses the wrong way, down some small stretches of road.
The problem is that I love to eat and I love to eat all the wrong things in all the wrong quantities - so here I am after the Thanksgiving feast getting ready to work off at least a few of the extra calories consumed.
While waiting for a 252 at Shaffton, Iowa, a 260 that was unknowingly still nearby showed up first. Leading was a relatively clean Kcs gevo, something that seems to be a rarity these days.
In Markelo three bombers crashed in WWII, a Halifax, a Stirling and a Lancaster. On the 4th of may 2014 there was a memorial service at the Fallen Airmen Memorial Markelo to honour the fallen airmen. Especially for this occasion a Lancaster made three passes over the little town.
I had all the settings wrong, but just seeing her again after 4 years was so cool. Last time was in 2010 at the Air Force days in The Netherlands. The pics are halfway decent i think. :-)
Camera: Nikon D300 with Tamron SP70-300 F/4-5.6 Di VC USD
More info on the memorial:
It is indeed a Winnebago headed the wrong way on this freeway off-ramp in San Francisco. No need to panic...this is a filming of Nash Bridges in the mid-1990s in San Francisco. His yellow Barracuda on the right.
Took some test shots with the new Sigma 8-16 and at 16mm tele end , the subj is just two-three inches from the lens. It takes some ridiculously funny wide shots at 8mm :).
Cricket action on The Green at Southwick between Southwick and Crawley Eagles.
Here Paul Grennan of Southwick does the impossible by bowling the ball with both feet off the ground, known as bowling off the wrong foot.
Olu Jacobs, Jackie Appiah, Stephanie Okereke
Best friends through circumstances you wouldn't ever imagine... Now best friends bewcome enemies but how? All because of wrong Passion!
7.5/10
For Nollywood/ Ghanaian movie reviews go to Nollywood Forever
From time to time it happens that the colors don't correspond with my expectations. As soon as I opened the envelope, I knew the colors won't work with the other prints I already pulled for the next baby quilt. BUT I love the the bears, caravans, tents .... maybe they are perfect for fussy cutting.
We were looking for a place to eat and ended driving up a dead end street. This was at that end which we just had to photograph!
DAW Books No.61 - 1st paperback edition July 1973. "Very nicely rendered cover by Mr. Foss. Reminds me of Mel Hunter and Chestly Bonestell". CR
Burke and Wills Menindee Camp Pamamaroo Creek 26/10/1860 to 26/01/1861.
The story of Burke and Wills has become an integral part of the Australian consciousness. Burke and Wills and their fate seem to encapsulate and justify the fear that many urban Australians have of the vast, lonely, dry wilderness which occupies over two-thirds of the continent. Of course the truth about the ignominious demise of Burke and wills is more pedestrian. What went wrong with their expedition can best be summed up by those well-known human failings - incompetence, arrogance, inflexibility and racial bigotry. The expedition was ill-conceived from the outset. It is now generally agreed that the raison d'etre of the whole undertaking was overwhelming pride. This pride was a result of the newly found wealth of Melbourne (a direct result of the gold rushes) and the newly created colonial independence of Victoria. Public enthusiasm for the expedition was high. Public subscriptions exceeded £3000 and the government contributed £6000. Under ordinary circumstances this would have been adequate funding but over half of the funds were spent on purchasing and importing twenty-four camels from Afghanistan. The committee then advertised for a man to lead the expedition. They had thirteen applicants out of whom they chose Irish-born police inspector Robert O'Hara Burke. Burke had no experience and no apparent knowledge of the Australian bush. Why he was chosen to lead an expedition which was going to travel across thousands of miles of rugged and unknown terrain remains a mystery. It was not so much an expedition as a public display. The camels and packhorses were carrying twenty-one tons of equipment including 120 mirrors as presents for Aborigines, sixty gallons of rum, four gallons of brandy, supplies of rockets, arms and vast qualities of dried food.
On 6 September when the expedition reached Swan Hill Burke sold off a large quantity of stores and hired two new men. In Balranald the foreman, Ferguson, quit; Burke dismissed Creber, Cowen, Fletcher, the cook Drakeford, and Langan; and some stores including the expedition's entire supply of lime juice were sold. At the Darling River camp at Pamamaroo Creek Burke insisted that all items weighing over thirty pounds be abandoned. This decision meant that neither Dr Beckler nor the naturalist Ludwig Becker could carry their instruments. Becker left the expedition at Menindee. Prior to Becker's departure the second-in-command, Landells, realised that he would never be able to work with Burke and resigned. At Menindee news arrived from Melbourne that another continental crossing was about to commence. All pretence about the desire to 'enquire into the report upon the exploration of the Australian interior' was abandoned. Burke could not tolerate the thought that he might be beaten. On 19 October Burke, Wills, Brabe, King, Gray, McDonough, Patton and an Afgan cameleer Dost Mohammed left Menindee. Wright was left behind with instructions to bring stores and provisions and to follow the main party in a week to Cooper’s Creek. The main party reached Cooper Creek on 11 November and on 27 November the famous Camp 65 was established under a coolibah tree on the banks of the river. On 16 December 1860 with six camels, one pony, and Wills, Gray and King, Burke began the final push north to the Gulf of Carpentaria. Disaster now followed disaster on the trip north and back to Cooper Creek. On 17 April on the way back Charley Gray died. Four days later Burke, Wills and King reached the Cooper Creek depot. They were exhausted and in desperate need of fresh supplies. To their horror the depot had been abandoned only hours earlier. On a tree William Brahe, the depot foreman, had carved DIG. Confronted with an empty depot, a small cache of supplies and the prospect of starvation, Burke had to decide whether he was going to go back to Menindee or attempt a 320 kilometre walk across the desert to a cattle station at Mount Hopeless. Once again Burke made the wrong decision. He decided to head for Mount Hopeless. It is perhaps the most telling comment about the character of Burke he ignored his only chance saving himself, Wills and King. It is almost certain that the local Aborigines could have saved the trio. But Burke saw himself as the conqueror, as a member of a superior civilisation. The idea that he could be saved from death by a group of 'savages' was unthinkable. The base camp in Menindee was thus occupied by part of the group from 19 Oct 1860 to 26 Jan 1861 before they headed back to Melbourne. Only John King made it back alive from Cooper Creek because he had accepted the hospitality of the Aboriginal people there. Dost Mahomet returned and lived in Menindee and worked for Ah Chung the Chinese baker. He died in 1880 and was buried just outside the town. The base camp at Pamamaroo Creek near Menindee was occupied from 19 October 1860 to 26 January 1861. Before setting off north Burke stayed in the hotel in Menindee and not with his men at Pamamaroo Creek depot. The main weir on the River Darling diverts water into Lake Pamamaroo which becomes the water supply of Broken Hill and the source of irrigation water for the fruit and vines around Menindee.
A NS SD60E trails a boring UP GE on a westbound manifest passing the ongoing construction along the Chicago Line. If only the consist was reversed.
The Sunday empty steel working, working to Scunthorpe on this day, is seen running wrong line at Prestonpans with 56032 in charge. 26/2/95 at 0942