Harbour south 

411 creative works found

  • Sydney Harbour Bridge can be seen from all sorts of places.

  • A small slice of america!!!!

  • The Harbour in South Queensferry, Scotland. The boat is the Reaper and you can see the Forth Rail Bridge behind it. Reaper is a Fifie sailing herring drifter, the most popular design of fishing boat on the East Coast of Scotland for the greater part of the 19th and early 20th centuries. She is shown here moored in the little harbour at South Queensferry, Scotland, where the public were invited aboard to view the boat and the museum display in the fish hold. The Forth Rail Bridge is a unique steel Cantilever Bridge with three diamond-shaped towers crossing the river Forth at South Queensferry, Scotland. The bridge was designed by Sir John Fowler and Benjamin Baker and built by Sir William Arrol. Constructed started in 1883 and it was opened in 1890 at a cost of £2.5m and 57 fatalities among the construction crew (it is now believed that the actual death toll is likely to have been closer to 80). The bridge is still in use today, carrying the railways to the north from Edinburgh. Related shots can be found at: South Queensferry, Bridges and Boats Best viewed Larger.

  • FOR BETTER VIEWING GO LARGER This shot taken from North Head at the entrance to Sydney Harbour looking up harbour. North Head is part of Sydney Harbour National Park. It can be accessed via road from Manly. The shot features a view of South Head and shows how the HDR process has great effect on rock in this case Sydney Sandstone

  • Overlooking the little harbour at Isle of Whithorn below Wigtown on one of the most southerly points of Scotland. From Burrow Head a couple of miles from here you can see the Isle of Man on the horizon!

  • COASTAL VIEWS OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA / Some of the images I have taken along the coast of South Australia in the past six months. OTHER CALENDERS AVALIBLE IN MY COLLECTION / / PLEASE VIEW MY GALLERY @ Glenn Alderson Photography Abstract Sunrise & Sunset Ruins & Derelict Buildings Farms & Countryside All Seascapes Botany – Flora Childhood Black & White Birds & Creatures of Flight / © Copyright 2008 Glenn Alderson, All Rights Reserved. / Please note: The watermark shown above will not appear on purchased products.

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery The Sydney Harbour Scissors New South Wales State Parliament House, Sydney, Australia. 1932 was a troubled year in Sydney, with the social and economic hardship of the worldwide economic depression, and political turmoil with the State Government defying the Commonwealth Government., refusing to make interest payments on overseas debts. Amidst these bleak days, the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge on March 19, 1932 – the constant talk and wonder of Sydney since construction began in 1924, would begin a few shining days exuberance, national pride and celebration. / The celebrations were paid for by public fundraising. Even the scissors for the ribbon-cutting ceremony – made by craftsman Les Denham and Norm Neal at the Sydney jewellers Angus and Coote – were donated by British engineering firm, Dorman and Long, builders of the arch. The ribbon would be cut by Labour Premier Jack Lang, opening the way to a huge display of floats, bands, community groups, citizens and the million onlookers who would pour across this new wonder that day. / Moments before Premier Lang advanced to cut the ribbon, a uniformed horseman dashed from the Governor’s escort and cut the ribbon with his sword. The horseman was Francis De Groot, furniture maker and former Captain of the Light Horse, who was a member of the right-wing paramilitary organisation to Lang’s left-wing policies. De Groot was dragged from his horse and taken to a mental institution but released soon afterwards with a modest fine. The ribbon was quickly re-attached and Premier Lang used the scissors to perform the opening as originally intended. / Within two months of the opening, Premier Lang was dismissed from office by the State Governor, Sir Philip Game, who decided that Lang had been acting illegally in refusing to co-operate with Commonwealth. But despite all the controversy, the Bridge instantly became the most enduring and recognisable symbol of Sydney and of a hope for the better future that was to come. / These same scissors have been used by Premiers of New South Wales to open the Sydney Harbour Tunnel in 1992, the Glebe Island Bridge (later renamed the Anzac Bridge) in 1996. They were also used to open the Cross-City Tunnel in 2005.

  • Sydney is situated on Australia’s south-east coast. The city is built around Port Jackson, which includes Sydney Harbour, leading to the city’s nickname, “the Harbour City”. It is noted for the Sydney Opera House and the Harbour Bridge, and its beaches. The metropolitan area is surrounded by national parks, and contains many bays, rivers and inlets. It is listed as a beta world city by the Loughborough University group’s 1999 inventory.[4] The city has hosted international sporting, political and cultural events, including the 1938 British Empire Games, 2000 Summer Olympics and the 2003 Rugby World Cup. In September 2007, the city hosted the leaders of the 21 APEC economies for APEC Australia 2007, and in July 2008 hosted World Youth Day 2008. The main airport serving Sydney is Sydney Airport. Sydney is one of the most multicultural cities in the world, which reflects its role as a major destination for immigrants to Australia.[5] According to the Mercer cost of living survey, Sydney is Australia’s most expensive city, and the 15th most expensive in the world. Photo taken by Canon IXUS

  • A diffErent view of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, New South Wales Australia late afternoon on a cloudy day the sun finally decided to break through the clouds. Photo taken by Canon IXUS

  • Hout Bay Harbour, Cape Town, South Africa

  • The catch of the day being transported to the refrigeration building at the Bermagui Boat Harbour, Bermagui, New South Wales, Australia.

  • ... west coast, Tasmania

  • The harbour at Bermagui, New South Wales, Australia.

  • I was at Fremantle for a function and had my camera with me, and was lucky to be able to capture this rainbow, Which span across the entire boat harbour. It was the most intense rainbow I have ever captured. EOS 40D.

  • The boat harbour at Ulladulla, New South Wales, Australia. Local professional and amateur fishermen depart from this harbour which is also popular amongst tourists and locals. Located on the south coast of NSW in the Shoalhaven region.

  • The boat harbour at Ulladulla, New South Wales, Australia. Local professional and amateur fishermen depart from this harbour which is also popular amongst tourists and locals. Located on the south coast of NSW in the Shoalhaven region.

  • South Queensferry Harbour and the south tower of the Forth Road Bridge as seen from the elevated position of the Back Braes over the rooftops of South Queensferry, Scotland. The Forth Road Bridge spans the Firth of Forth between North Queensferry and South Queensferry. When it was opened by HM Queen Elizabeth II on the 4th September, 1964, the bridge was the longest in the world outside the USA. The bridge is nearly 1828m (2000 yards) long while its main span, of 1006m (3300 feet), is the tenth longest in the world; its towers are over 150m (500 feet) high. The deck, which carries four lanes of traffic with two walkways, is suspended from cables which are 5.9cm (2.3 inches) in diameter and composed of 11,618 high-tensile steel wires, giving a total length of wire of 49,280 km (30,621 miles). Along with the Forth Rail Bridge (about half a mile to the east) these two bridges form the main traffic arteries north and south. Shot taken during the redbubble day out in South Queensferry on Sunday 31 May 09. Camera: Canon EOS 450D (Digital Rebel XSi in the USA) BEST VIEWED LARGER Three bracketed JPGs converted to HDR in Photomatix. Related shots can be found at: / South Queensferry and Lowland Scotland Click here for a random page of photographs

  • A Panorama of two large and bright rainbows during a stormy sunrise at Fremantle, Western Australia. EOS 40D.

  • The Luna Park ferris wheel, overlooking Sydney Harbour Bridge.

  • This is the view from the wall of Tynemouth harbour looking back towards Sandhaven Beach in South Shields. The speed of the off shore wind created these fast moving patterns of light across the stonework and beach as well as the sea and clouds. Converted into a pinhole style black and white Best viewed large, especially if you want to see the Great Dane lying down on it’s side in the clouds :)

  • This was taken somewhere on the Fleurieu Peninsula, on the way to Victor Harbour, South Australia. Canon 50D / Sigma 10-20mm f/4.0-5.6 / CP filter / Raw File Converted

  • Second Valley, South Australia, Australia / / (ref fotoWERNER 3H0911.2666) / Nikon D300 | Nikon 18-200VR / 1/100s f/25 ISO500 / Featured in Beach, River and Lake Treasures group (4 December 2009) /

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