All About Buildings

Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge: All about buildings:

From my travels-which aren’t exactly the stuff of the Travel Channel but I’ve seen some cool buildings and here they are

Fox Lake, Wisconsin-

Photo A.M. Moscoso

Photo A.M. Moscoso

Photo A.M. Moscoso

 

Amish Farm, Wisconsin

Photo A.M. Moscoso

Photo A.M. Moscoso

Washington State

Photo A.M. Moscoso

Photo A.M. Moscoso

Victoria BC Canada

Photo A.M. Moscoso

New Orleans, Louisana

Photo A.M. Moscoso

Photo A.M. Moscoso

 

CFFC Photo Challenge – Trains and Railroads

CFFC Photo Challenge: Anything to do with trains and railroads

Here is a little collection of pictures I’ve taken from a train- or at a Train Station.

I’ve noticed that on most of these challenges people list what kind of equipment they used, so I guess I should too.

I use my phone and in a few cases my point and click camera impressive right? LOL.

I keep meaning to take photography more seriously, but to be honest I know I don’t have the eye for it and that my composition blows.

But I enjoy the process so much I just keep snapping- or wait, clicking (?) away.

amm

 

Photo A.M. Moscoso

Taken from a train- Luis and I were somewhere along the Mississippi when I snapped this. May 2019

 

Photo A.M. Moscoso

This shirt has been hanging on the fence along the tracks that run by my warehouse since February 2020. I guess it’s here to stay. Also, I think it looks like a ghost.

Photo A.M. Moscoso

Anubis at the King Street Train Station, Seattle WA 2012. The statue was 26 feet tall!

Photo A.M. Moscoso

Fox Lake, Wisconsin 2018

Photo A.M. Moscoso

You know I’ve heard it said that snow makes everthing look pretty.

This picture proves that it does not.

Railroad tracks, Seattle WA 2010

Photo A.M. Moscoso

Pioneer Square, Seattle Washington Railroad Quotes and Symbols in Granite (?).

Last Photo Challenge

Bushboys Photo Challenge: Last Photo ( June 2020 )

Photo A.M. Moscoso

The last picture I took was from a train I was riding on that had struck a person and that person died.

As we sat waiting for the various agencies involved to finish their work and clear us to go, people who lived in that area got as close as they could to us and started to take pictures of the person’s remains.

They ran around with their cameras, they looked through the bushes and you could see them wave their arms around in excitement when they saw something.

This picture is of one of the lookie loos who stood on a log with his food in one hand and directed people to body parts with the other.

I’m kind of surprised this is the last picture I have taken for awhile but maybe that’s because I’m really not in humans right now.

amm