Chiang Mai was our starting point in Thailand. Choosing this city in the north allowed us to generally head south for the remainder of the trip…
Click below for more pictures…
Chiang Mai was our starting point in Thailand. Choosing this city in the north allowed us to generally head south for the remainder of the trip…
Click below for more pictures…
In order to make it easier for you to keep up to date with what’s happening on the blog, I’ve created a little visual introduction on how to follow it using your email address.
This will enable you to receive a short heads up by email on any new blog post published here.
First of all, and for some unknown reason, subscribing is only possible from within a particular post. Thus, you won’t see an obvious “subscribe” button on this main page.
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It seems like we got back only yesterday, but it’s been almost 6 weeks since we returned from Thailand.
More below the fold…
This post has been sitting in my “drafts” folder for some while now, but I still had bits and bobs to add to it and so it’s only now that I can finally show you the result.
More below the fold…
Water is an important part of mining. Even in old disused mines, pumps often need to keep the ground water at a manageable level in case the water makes the galleries and shafts unstable.
And just when you thought you’d seen it all, when you thought you knew all there was to know about idyllic winter landscapes, when it appeared all the visual iconography of snow had already been projected upon your retinae, someone comes along and performs a series of minor photographic miracles.
Witness Scott Rinckenberger’s work:
Majestic Mountain Photos Taken by a Backcountry Skier.
Also on 500px:
Having decided that crouching next to a freezing river in the twilight had given me all the decent pictures I could get, I headed home and turned around mid-way to discover the rather unusual colour the sky had taken on.
See more below the fold…
A wonderful idea – the juxtaposition of old photos with newer ones taken from the same angle, with the same perspective; all inside a school now deserted.
Amazing…
Detroiturbex.com – Cass Technical High School: Now and Then.
Do check it out: it’s like having your own time machine!
One of my forays into the snow led me just down the slope to our local river, the Nidda. Setting up a tripod around twilight gave me the possibility to set the exposure to thirty seconds to smooth out the water flowing past.
More below the fold…
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