Vincent motorcycles were produced in England from 1928 to 1955. I had never seen one before. This 1953 model is in a small museum in Madoc, Ontario, Canada.
The red motorcycle in the front is a 1940 Indian. The yellow one in the background is a 1941 Indian. Indian motorcycles were produced from 1901 to 1953. These two are at a small museum in Madoc, Ontario, Canada.
They also have a 1914 Indian motorcycle, but I'm still working on that photo.
We live near a Mohawk reservation here in Ontario. They usually sell gas for about 10 cents a litre less than off the reserve. I don't know what taxes they have to pay to the government on each litre- maybe nothing. I suspect they could sell gas for a LOT less and still make a LOT more money than a dealer off the reserve.
The dozens of marijuana shops are another story....
Canadian- the price is currently around $1.29 per litre. I don't know why it is so high. About six months ago it was around 99 cents a litre. The highest I've seen in Ontario was about $1.50 a litre. One U.S. gallon is about 3.8 litres. One Imperial gallon is about 4.5 litres.
I always carry a set of several wrenches that fit various parts of my tripod. Now and then it needs to be adjusted. I assume it is the legs that are slowly slipping. If it is the ball head that is sagging, you may need a larger ball head.
Most of the HDR images I see are "over the top", surrealist, "on LSD" type images. I prefer more realistic looking images. I use HDR primarily to solve the problem of high contrast that makes it impossible to capture a satisfactory image in just one shot. Part of the "problem" is that our eyes are capable of seeing details in lighting that is way more contrasty than what our cameras can handle. HDR helps to solve that problem.