Overhang 

77 creative works found

  • Beutiful colours protected by a sandstone overhang

  • Enjoy!

  • We go thru life’s journeys with many uncertainties. Life has its ups and downs and we must be willing to accept them both. Sometimes when everything is closing in on us we must be willing to keep going even though we dont know what lays out there.

  • The Darling River at Bourke, New South Wales, Australia. The poet Henry Lawson wrote: “If you know Bourke, you know Australia”.

  • The Darling River at Bourke, New South Wales, Australia. The poet Henry Lawson wrote: “If you know Bourke, you know Australia”.

  • The Murray River near Lake Hume at Albury, New South Wales, Australia.

  • taken at caerphilly castle, wales

  • Icicles forming in summer under the melt ledge of a large grounded ‘berg in Prydz Bay. Available for purchase as a Limited Edition print from my website / / © Doug Thost 2002

  • Leaves overhanging a spotlight in a church yard at night.

  • The Enloe-Floyd Barn is located at The Mountain Farm Museum on U.S. 441 adjacent to the National Park’s Oconaluftee Visitor Center, two miles north of Cherokee. The site is open year-round The barn is the only museum building original to the site. It was part of the Joseph Enloe farm. The Enloe house, built in the 1880s, stood on the site now occupied by the Oconaluftee Visitor Center. In 1917 the Enloes sold their farm to the Floyds, a neighboring family. When the museum opened, the barn was initially left on its original site, about 30 yards from the present-day Visitor Center. It was moved to its current location within the museum complex in 1960. Fifty feet wide and 60 feet long with a “shotgun” opening down the middle, the structure has several stalls and storage areas on each side of the long “hallway.” Upstairs there is a vast hayloft large enough to store a 2,500 square foot suburban home. Thought to be a “Drover’s barn” it is similar to the cantilevered barn in having a large, overhanging, frame loft for hay storage In this case, the loft is supported by log piers. This structure is much bigger than most barns, for it served as a “cattle hotel”, a place where farmers could stable their herds for a night as they drove them off the mountains to market

  • This is an example of a Double Pen Drive Through Barn, they were a little more prevalent than the cantilever barn in East Tennessee. This design provided an out of the weather area to fork hay into the loft, stalls for the livestock, and a dry place for equipment. Two men could work each side from a wagon in the middle when putting up hay, cutting the time used in dealing with the hay. This barn is located in the Cable Mill Visitor Center Area of Cades Cove, Great Smoky Mountain National Park

  • A sepia version of a previous image The Enloe-Floyd Barn is located at The Mountain Farm Museum on U.S. 441 adjacent to the national park’s Oconaluftee Visitor Center, two miles north of Cherokee. The site is open year-round The barn is the only museum building original to the site. It was part of the Joseph Enloe farm. The Enloe house, built in the 1880s, stood on the site now occupied by the Oconaluftee Visitor Center. In 1917 the Enloes sold their farm to the Floyds, a neighboring family. When the museum opened, the barn was initially left on its original site, about 30 yards from the present-day Visitor Center. It was moved to its current location within the museum complex in 1960. Fifty feet wide and 60 feet long with a “shotgun” opening down the middle, the structure has several stalls and storage areas on each side of the long “hallway.” Upstairs there is a vast hayloft large enough to store a 2,500 square foot suburban home. Thought to be a “Drover’s barn” it is similar to the cantilevered barn in having a large, overhanging, frame loft for hay storage In this case, the loft is supported by log piers. This structure is much bigger than most barns, for it served as a “cattle hotel”, a place where farmers could stable their herds for a night as they drove them off the mountains to market

  • One of the more modern structures in Cades Cove. A lot of the barns that were there, have gradually fallen in and nature reclaimed them. I can remember back to when a few people still lived in the Cove. They were allowed to live there by an arrangement with the park service when the land was sold. They are all gone now including those that stayed in the cabins in the Elkmont area. This barn sits beside the Cades Cove Loop Road. It still is in great shape and will probably out live me. I wish I had thought and taken the time 30 years ago and shoot a lot of the structures that are forever gone. Hind site is always better than foresight. Never pass up a chance for a shot, what you pass up today may be gone tomorrow…a block and tackle was often hung from the overhang of the roof to pull hay up and into the window up top.. image taken as mornings 1st light tops over the ridge to warm the already beautiful colors,and intensify parts of the field back of the barn…Cades Cove is located in the Great Smoky Mountains and one of the more heavily visited areas.

  • An impressive cliff overhanging / the Mediterranean Sea near / Menton on the French Riviera. / Cou can see a house perched on a rock / in the background.

  • Council Overhang is a cave-like formation created by the Illinois River millions of years ago. It is located in Starved Rock State Park in Utica, Illinois. It is huge as you can tell by the size of my daughter in the blue shirt in back.

  • A lovely garden with autumn tones.

  • A lovely autumn sceen with water, trees and bats hanging in the trees.

  • It’s always with hope that I explore places like this. They would have been perfect for shelter, and there’s always the chance to see ancient Aboriginal Art, though I’ve never been fortunate enough to find such a place, and I don’t get around much any more. I did visit Gippsland’s Den of Nargun thirty odd years ago, but even then it had been degraded by time and tourists. This work is on 60cm x 70 cm 300gsm pale yellow Canson paper, with a good tooth. I worked in oil pastel and acrylic.

  • Hawkshead lies half way between Coniston Water and Windermere, near the northern edge of Esthwaite Water. There has been a village here since Viking times – Haukr was the Viking who founded the village. The narrow streets, squares, and courtyards, set off by whitewashed cottages, are almost free of traffic. Overhanging eaves, grey slate roofs, leaded windows, and flights of stone steps parading up the walls are a true delight to the eye. A stream, subsequently covered over, used to flow down Flag Street and provided water for the villagers. Today it must be that the owners of the cottages that stand either side of it coordinate their efforts to produce this wonderful show of summer colour. It all adds to the visual charm that draws so many visitors each year.

  • Another of the, I think, beautiful large rock formations, along the hiking trails in Tishomingo State Park, Tishomingo, Mississippi

  • This is Glacier Point’s Overhanging Rock. Back in the 30’s and 40’s, people use to dare gravity by walking out on it. Some have even done hand stands on it. It is 3,200+ feet down to the Valley floor…Lynn

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