Friday, November 4, 2011

Blowing in the wind - downtown Ocala

16 comments:

Birdman said...

Ok, now that I know the answer(blowing in the wind), WHAT was the question. hahahaha

cieldequimper said...

You mean dancing langoureusement in ze wind? Meet you at Starbucks! :-)

Stefan Jansson said...

What type of palm tree is that?

PETRO50 said...

Ooh, if there were such beautiful weather here. Very nice shot. Many greetings to the south, to Florida. / Peter

Sharon said...

Wonderful clouds in the sky.

Chattahoochee Valley Daily said...

We had fluffy, white clouds like that today.

Also, I like the b/w version of you shot from yesterday. I am thinking about a month of monochrome for CV.

Randy said...

Beautiful sky. Love that yellow building too.

Halcyon said...

Now that's a sky!

Pat said...

And I was going to write what Birdman did...but what IS the answer to Bob Dylan's many questions?

Cezar and Léia said...

Dear Jacob,
Thanks a lot for the adorable poem in Luna's blog! And wow I'm enchanted by so charming street there, your picture is excellent and those palm trees are huge and beautiful.
Have a great Sunday,
Léia

magiceye said...

this is a wow capture!!

Unknown said...

Love the palm trees against that great sky!

Re. your comment on the Lisbon Earthquake, check this page, Lowell, I guess you might find it interesting and I believe it will answer all your questions: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1755_Lisbon_earthquake
As to the wires on my photo, it's tram cables, they still work in that area.

EG CameraGirl said...

Lollypop palm trees? Looks like lovely weather but I bet you are jealous that we had a heavy frost last night, right?

EG CameraGirl said...

I prefer the B&W here. The colour is a bit distracting and in the monochrome version I notice so many details.

nopham said...

Love these Washington palms!

DIGITAL WORLD PAGES ARCHIVE said...

Beautiful city photo!

"Photographers deal in things which are continually vanishing and when they have vanished there is no contrivance on earth which can make them come back again." — Henri Cartier-Bresson