Looks like a flowering crabapple
I recognize that tree; saw it a couple of years during a hike of the canyon and I think I have a picture or 3 of it. It's truly interesting to see in person.
Totally agree with traderjohn. Display it correctly or not at all.
Glad I read this today. I had set my D7200 for raw and jpg, but wasn't aware that I had to set image quality for both. Lesson learned, thanks to the folks on UHH.
I think the tree is a silver maple; it often has several large trunks from the main trunk, with shaggy bark.
People who believe in fairy tales and mythology as fact amaze me. Science exists, whether you believe in it or not.
It's amazing, the amount of ignorance the wearers of tin foil hats spout off with seeming authority, while actually knowing nothing of which they speak. Sad.
1. They originally paid $30, but the clerk refunds $5, so the total paid is $25. The bellhop gives each one $1, which totals $3, and keeps $2 for himself. $25+$3+$2=$30.
2. A circular cover can't fall through it's own hole(thanks google!). There are other reasons, too.
3. Fill the 5 gallon bucket, then pour it into the 3 gallon bucket, leaving 2 gallons. Pour that into the 8 gallon bucket, which now contains 2 gallons. Repeat, and you have 4 gallons in the 8 gallon bucket.
Fill the 5 gallon bucket again, fill the 3 gallon bucket from that, and pour the remaining 2 gallons into the 8 gallon bucket. Then fill the 5 gallon bucket and pour into the 8 gallon bucket, giving you 7 gallons.
My son has shot both the M240 and the M249. He much prefers the 249. And as for using M16 mags in the SAW, he says, good luck with that. That's a last resort measure, just before you start throwing rocks.
An excellent video, Barry! (From a fellow Air Force veteran.)
B52s dropped 500 lb bombs(Mk 82s) from their internal bomb bays. Anything else was from wing stations, which were usually 750 lb bombs(M117s). I was an ammo troop who assembled the bombs.
USAF, 1968-1972, 2 1/2 years in Vietnam(Tuy Hoa AB, and Da Nang AB), munitions specialist. Thanks for the post.
I've visited it twice in the last few years and have enjoyed it. I was stationed at Lowry for tech school(munitions specialist) in the summer of '68. Hard to recognize anything now.
Is the fence still there? That helps to keep the rabble away, but I saw signs of graffiti, too.