 Top rated - PLANES, TRAINS, CRITTERS AND ODD THINGS
|

Lombard Street2217 viewsLombard Street, San Francisco, California, is supposed to be the most crooked street on earth.
Lot to be said for drinking while surveying.     (1 votes)
|
|

Second Bucket From The Left2257 viewsSan Francisco Helo seems about to land in the bucket.     (1 votes)
|
|

Yesterday's Train2295 viewsWheel from an old narrow gauge logging train now resting in Paint Creek Park, near Greeneville, TN.     (1 votes)
|
|

Hedge Apple?2211 viewsWe found this, one of natures little oddities, along the Great Allegheny Passage, one of our many bike trips.
I have no idea of it's usefulness but, if the Major Leagues decide to go green, I'll be on the leading edge of the national pastime.     (1 votes)
|
|

Arch2154 viewsSee Tennessee Landforms on our link.
Again, I never saw one of these at Sea so, it must be odd stuff.
     (1 votes)
|
|

Singing The Blues2118 viewsLook through the "door" of the Blue Bird House.
Can't quiet tell if that is Choir Practice or a Blues singer.     (1 votes)
|
|

CG 1275 Remembered2222 viewsAfter all these years, still not finished. The aircraft resides at David-Montham Air Force Base,(boneyard) giving up parts.     (1 votes)
|
|

Tram Wheel2108 viewsCame across this when RAT and I were Introducing ourselves to a laurel thicket on California Creek, Erwin TN. Used in the logging industry in a long gone era.
A friends Father broke the chunk out of it trying to collect scrap many years ago.      (1 votes)
|
|

Quarry Falls & St. John's Mill2144 viewsSt. John's Mill built around 1770~ ceased operation in May 2011, sadly.
Met the nicest guy one has the privilege to meet, Ron Dawson, who did magic for my Granddaughters and permitted us on his property to take this photo.      (1 votes)
|
|

CG 12752152 viewsI flew on Coast Guard 1275, depicted here making a water landing.
It now resides, sadly, in the BONE YARD in Arizona .
     (1 votes)
|
|

Tree Rock2078 viewsCheck out the rock in the tree above Lou. Only explanation I could think of is the tree grew up under the rock, which is now firmly embedded in the fork of the tree.
Got a better explanation send it to us.     (1 votes)
|
|
|
|
|