yssirk123 wrote:
Beautiful images Blaster!
Thank you Bill, very much appreciated.
PixelStan77 wrote:
Your images of the Wat Leu Buddhist Temple are outstanding detail in DDL. Thanks for sharing the beauty you captured on your trip
Thank you Stan, much appreciated, really glad you liked them and yes they are beautiful...Cheers
Ourspolair wrote:
Beautiful architecture. Thanks for sharing.
You're more than welcome Ourspolair....Cheers
Most appreciated NMGal...Cheers
Thank you Mike, I'm not sure what those are, maybe some representation of a crane.
frankraney wrote:
Absolutely beautiful. Wats are always beautiful and go intricate.
I lived in hainmail Thailand for a year, years ago, and that was one of favorite subjects. Unfortunately most of the stuff I shipped home good not make it back. My tools and photos was in the lost. I had LOTS of photos, over 100 rolls of 24. I was only able to shoot on weekends mostly.
Thanks for posting and taking me back.
Absolutely beautiful. Wats are always beautiful an... (
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Thanks Frank and glad they brought back good memories....
Before Covid stopped the world, we had an extremely delightful cruise in SE Asia. One of the many stops was Sihanoukville, Cambodia. Here are a couple of photos of the Wat Leu Temple on the top of Sihanoukville Mountain just outside the city central. Famous? Not really. Beautiful, absolutely. Beautiful architecture and beautiful views of the city. The temple was built to dedicate to the local deity Yeah Mao. Best viewed in download or DDL to see the intricacy of the Wat (Temple).....Cheers
FrumCA wrote:
https://www.nationalreview.com/news/john-kerry-suggest-oil-workers-laid-off-due-to-biden-policies-should-make-solar-panels/
What a jerk. Haven't seen any reports of the the biden administration paying for the retraining of these laid off workers.
That's a long commute to China everyday....t***sportation costs will eat up all those Chinese wages...
merrytexan wrote:
I enjoyed these, blaster! Good job and fun subjects!
Thanks MT, we had a good time watching these young kids having some good clean fun....dang they must have lots of bucks invested in all this; horses, tack, trailers, clothes, etc...
CWGordon wrote:
Blaster: There were deaths. Cold-blooded. What networks failed to cover that?
Premediated, cold blooded....were those who died pre-planned, how were the deaths carried out; snipers, walked up and shout in the back, names selected before hand? Sorry, but thanks for playing.
thom w wrote:
And oil fields and refineries are good looking?
Refineries are localized and not pretty but necessary for chemicals other than oil. Once an oil well is developed, not much to see except a grasshopper...not hundreds of 240’ of eyesores or obstructions as far as you can see.
CWGordon wrote:
Blaster: Were you watching what took place on the 6th? No comparison, is there?
You’re right, no comparison. I didn’t see anyone on the 6th trying to just plain murder the opposition in cold blood like the Democrat did at the ball field....Cheers
joecichjr wrote:
B&W/IR: Looking out my sister's kitchen window. These things cover a good part of the county. I think they're awesome and beautiful! I figured out they are a couple hundred feet tall and spin about 75mph. About 500 in the area.
Great photo Joe, how about the tradeoffs? When compared to natural gas generation, there's no comparison. Most wind farms are remote and require large tracts of land. T***smission lines from a remote wind farm will need to be longer and a wind farm needs to be larger to provide the same amount of power as the a natural gas plant....ex: assume a 10-percent electricity loss per 100 miles, a wind farm 500 miles away needs to be double in size of a similar, closer located, gas generating station. As a matter of fact for a 500 unit wind farm, they could build a nuclear generating station for that price...However there are resources for localized requirements such as solar and hydroelectric to support the grid and local needs. Granted, everything changes somewhat as technology changes....Cheers.