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Rusted relics

Started by selectedgrub, December 04, 2012, 06:15:53 AM

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chironex

#50
I dug up a few old negatives I had and had them scanned...
They seem to have degraded a bit since the mid-'90s, so it's good that I got them done now before they get unrecognisable.
Viewing them at a large size is not recommended.



I cannot be sure it's there any more, but it was in Roma.
No gel ball ban in WA! http://chng.it/pcKk9qKcVN

QUEENSLAND RAIL NOT FOR SALE!!!!!!

selectedgrub

Nice restore, Negatives.
Thanks for sharing.
My old man fired and drove Steam, Last of the Circus train.
I gotta dig up some photos of the photos, reminds me to sharpen them up.














selectedgrub


Drew P

All the way from my home town Chicago to New Zealand, wow, what a trip!
Never ask 'Why?'
Always ask 'Why not!?'

frances

Oh wonderful.  That tree on a trailer is so ... MMmmm.

Hurricane Annie

Quote from: frances on January 01, 2014, 10:15:15 PM
Oh wonderful.  That tree on a trailer is so ... MMmmm.


Dear Frances

such sights in the Antipodes are  the daily norm  .  these days it is more likely to be introduced  pinus radiata than the mighty kauri


Bush Felling a.k. a.  widow making

Postcards from the Edge [ of civilisation]

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**NFS

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Bush clearance of areas like this from the 1800s and early 1900s are still visible on the landscape,  as are the abandoned logging camps

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selectedgrub

Raping the land at it's best Annie.

My gripe they cut the "renewable resource" pine right up to the roadside.
They should leave a blanket, for a season it is a real eyesore for our country until the new growth comes through.

Love riding down tree lined roads, highways and through canopies.
Better for the tourists.





Sorry for the off topic.

frances

Yes, selectedgrub, there are roads like that in England too.  Sometimes the canopies meet in the middle of the road and it is like driving down a tunnel.  Magnificent.

Did someone really make a postcard out of denuded forest?

Hurricane Annie

#58
Quote from: selectedgrub on January 02, 2014, 09:40:26 PM
Raping the land at it's best Annie.

My gripe they cut the "renewable resource" pine right up to the roadside.
They should leave a blanket, for a season it is a real eyesore for our country until the new growth comes through.

Love riding down tree lined roads, highways and through canopies.
Better for the tourists.





Sorry for the off topic.




Quote from: frances on January 02, 2014, 09:56:58 PM
Yes, selectedgrub, there are roads like that in England too.  Sometimes the canopies meet in the middle of the road and it is like driving down a tunnel.  Magnificent.

Did someone really make a postcard out of denuded forest?

Yes  , the the [ Rotten Scoundrels]  in the timber monopolies that squeeze every inch of NZ for their own selfish ends of  their pinus  have a lot to answer for .  

Thank you  Master Grub for  a meandering reminisce

Dear  Frances,  we have a few roads  in NZ like your own classic country lanes , though not nearly enough.  [ I may be had up for treason but I am deeply ashamed to say NZ history is plastered with  postcards of  tree stumps and cleared country side ( one day these pictures of paddocks of sheep may be  labeled as Kiwiana Victoriana erotica)  :-[ )]

Here is  the abandoned Bridge to Nowhere - built but never used.

I have only seen it in the distance as a child. Mr Grub may have  had a closer encounter. If we ask him  prettily he may have some  photos to prove it happened

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge_to_Nowhere_%28New_Zealand%29

we shall have to suffice in the meant time with these stolen tourist shots







Near the Bridge to Nowhere







Most of the townships along the river side have been abandoned





Hurricane Annie


  Couldn't resist


on down the river








Jerusalem today


frances

Oh my!

For many years I wanted to visit New Zealand.  When I was at school I did a project on it for some reason that I now do not remember.

Hurricane Annie

Quote from: frances on January 03, 2014, 09:22:37 PM
Oh my!

For many years I wanted to visit New Zealand.  When I was at school I did a project on it for some reason that I now do not remember.

Dear Frances , you would be more than welcome  in our fine country

Here are some of our finest accommodations  for  conviviality and hospitality in our many great centres of  metropolis

Waikino


Taranaki



houses like these with gables, verandah and lattice fret work would have originally been more expensive homes with add ons and decoration as the owner became more affluent.  Now they lie falling and fallow , many having been used as hay barns and sheep pens by later  owners often descendents of  farmers homes were built for.


Happy Valley , Island Bay wellington




Manawatu??    fully furnished  http://urbexcentral.com/2013/05/12/pioneer-cottage/








selectedgrub

Oooooh. Love abandoned/derelict places.

I got a photo of that "school of mines"
Bit more overgrown now.
There is a photo in thread in the "Geographical". http://brassgoggles.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,37426.0.html

Quote from: Hurricane Annie on January 03, 2014, 03:37:02 AM

I have only seen it in the distance as a child. Mr Grub may have  had a closer encounter. If we ask him  prettily he may have some  photos to prove it happened

+1.
I would have to hunt through the family albums.
Nothing through my camera.

Thanks for sharing Annie.


Ceir

Great to see this thread come back up - excellent photos, both locations and relics.
In all fairness, some of those who wander are definitely lost.

selectedgrub

Haven't been taking much of the rusted relics lately Ceir.
I'll try to get out more.














frances


selectedgrub

Here tree stump was his only friend.



frances

Spring has sprung here when you see all the little lambs in the fields.  Aww.

selectedgrub

One good one to share today.





selectedgrub


Hurricane Annie

Quote from: selectedgrub on March 09, 2014, 07:04:10 AM
One good one to share today.






What is this mystery object??

selectedgrub

Hi Annie it is the lid of an old barrel/vat

von Corax

While we're on the subject, what are these?
By the power of caffeine do I set my mind in motion
By the Beans of Life do my thoughts acquire speed
My hands acquire a shaking
The shaking becomes a warning
By the power of caffeine do I set my mind in motion
The Leverkusen Institute of Paleocybernetics is 5842 km from Reading

Wormster

Quote from: von Corax on April 06, 2014, 08:35:29 PM
While we're on the subject, what are these?


They look like iron balls from a ball mill as used in separating minerals from crushed ore!
Tread softly and carry a GBFO stick!

Prof. Convict Archfiend

@selectedgrub
BEAUTIFUL photos!!!!
REALLY makes me want to jump the pond for a visit even more!!!!!!

Makes me a little sad that I've been touring all the little mining towns here, since I was knee high to a grass hopper, and never taken a photo of some of the amazing places/people/things :'(
Just call me "Greenie"....
(much quicker to type)