#suspension bridge

LIVE
Queens’s Park Suspension BridgeChester, Cheshire, England   September 2015Nikon D300 17-55 f2.8G   S

Queens’s Park Suspension Bridge

Chester, Cheshire, England   September 2015

Nikon D300 17-55 f2.8G   Shot at 38mm f16 1/160th sec


Post link
Very Early Morning - Just Before The Rain Pours.Queen’s Park Pedestrian Suspension Bridge (1923) Acr

Very Early Morning - Just Before The Rain Pours.

Queen’s Park Pedestrian Suspension Bridge (1923) Across The River Dee.

Chester, Cheshire, England   September 2015

Nikon D300 17-55 f2.8G   Shot at 18mm f16 1/160th sec


Post link
Spotted at 34°58’46.6”S, 116°53’38.9”E (Valley of the Giants, Walpole, Western Australia). And my ob

Spotted at 34°58’46.6”S, 116°53’38.9”E (Valley of the Giants, Walpole, Western Australia).

And my obsession with suspension bridges continues.


Post link
Lynn Canyon Suspension BridgeVancouver, British Columbia

Lynn Canyon Suspension Bridge

Vancouver, British Columbia


Post link
Day 1136 - an acorn near a bridgeThe acorn is the symbol of all National trails and every time you s

Day 1136 - an acorn near a bridge

The acorn is the symbol of all National trails and every time you see one, you know you are still on the right route. This rather splendid acorn would really be a more fitting start of the Yorkshire Wolds Way but, it is actually the second acorn on the trail and not the start.


Post link
Day 1136 - The Humber Bridge and Humber mud.I didn’t know at the time but I was shortly to get very

Day 1136 - The Humber Bridge and Humber mud.

I didn’t know at the time but I was shortly to get very close-up and acquainted with this mud!


Post link

Success is walking from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.

Picnicing by the Niagara Railroad Bridge, Niagara Falls, New York.Built by engineer John Roebling ofPicnicing by the Niagara Railroad Bridge, Niagara Falls, New York.Built by engineer John Roebling of

Picnicing by the Niagara Railroad Bridge, Niagara Falls, New York.

Built by engineer John Roebling of Brooklyn Bridge Fame in 1855, The International Suspension Bridge, Its official name,  brought rail traffic across the Niagara River and the border of the United States and Canada until 1897. The bridge was considered an engineering marvel and attracted tourists who also came to view the Falls, which can be seen in the distance in the second photo.

It had finally become too small for the amount of traffic from the New York Central, the New York and Erie Railroad and Canada’s Great Western Railway, and was replaced by an arch bridge.


Post link
Waco Suspension Bridge

Waco Suspension Bridge


Post link
loading