Shake shaking 

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  • Carter Shields Cabin,Cades Cove,Great Smoky Mountain National Park

  • Col. Hamp Tipton had this house built after the Civil War. He lived across the mountain but 2 of his daughters lived here for a time. They taught school there in the cove. Later a blacksmith James McCaulley rented it till he could get his own place. It is located on the Cades Cove Loop Rd., in the Great Smoky Mountains NP. It is an example of the late 1800’s Appalachian home place.Also in the shot is the smokehouse and picket fence

  • The cabin at Jim Bales Place is an example of a single pen cabin. It was a one room with a fireplace. The cabin itself is The Alex Cole Cabin from the Sugarlands area.It was decided by the park service it better matched the corn crib an barn of Jim Bales.This would be more representive of the early Appalachian days here.The house that was there when the park service obtained it, was one that was built as the farm was handed down through the years.It was a modern frame house known as the “Fancy House” / This is located on the Roaring Fork Nature Trail in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park

  • A Sepia Version of a previous image Most of the structures were built in the late 19th century and were moved here in the 1950s. The Davis-Queen House offers a rare chance to view a log house built from chestnut wood before the chestnut blight decimated the American Chestnut in our forests during the 1930s and early 1940s. The museum is adjacent to the Oconaluftee Visitor Center,On the NC side of Hwy.441 in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park. The Davis/Queen house was originally located on Thomas Divide north of Bryson City along Indian Creek. Beginning about 1900, it was built by John E. Davis over a period of a couple years. The house was constructed from American chestnut trees. About 1917 the Davis’ sold their farm to a neighboring family, Joe Thad Queens, who owned the house at the time the land was purchased for inclusion in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. It has been described as “the finest example of the large log house in the park.” Davis was a master craftsman who built the house with the aid of his two boys. He “matched” the log walls by splitting a tree in half and using the resulting timbers on opposite sides of the structure. In addition to other duties, his sons, ages 8 and 4, respectively, collected stones for the chimney using a sled and oxen. It is the only log house in the Smokies with a decorative shingle / pattern underneath the eaves.

  • a sepia toned of a previous shot 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

  • Chantelle shakes it!! :)

  • Matilda Shields Gregory’s husband walked out on her and a small son. Her brothers threw together the resemblance of a cabin that sits in the back. This is where she was living when she met Henry Whitehead. It wasn’t long till romance was in the air. It was handed down thru the families Henry promised to build her the best cabin in Cades Cove, and well he did. This is thought to be one of two sawn log homes in the Smokies. It is the only one standing today….located in Cades Cove, Great Smoky Mountain N.P…..shot a couple weeks ago while shooting with Sherri and Ronnie Hamilton

  • This is Henry Whitehead’s smokehouse. Being constructed well, like his cabin, it has stood the test of time. During a tornado that ripped thru Cades Cove in the latter part of 1970s, a pine tree was uprooted and thrown on top of the smokehouse. It crushed the roof but the sturdy walls held their ground.

  • Best Viewed Large All Rights Reserved / @ Julia Wright

  • 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 a picture of my Christmas tree experimenting with slow shutter speed and camera shake Canon EOS 50D / Focal length : 60 / f/4 / exp : 0.8

  • This is another shot I took of a different shake, not sure which is the better one….

  • Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings in Hyde Park Sydney for the opening night of the Sydney Festival 9th January 09, taken with the Canon 40d + 70-200m f2.8 lens

  • I was shooting this 2-year-old boy at my friends’ house today. I took a look at what I had caught, and this appeared! I have never seen such a close-up of a rat shaking himself. They do do it but it just goes so fast your eye cannot separate the movements let alone see how the ears move. I could not believe my eyes. This is one of my master moments-caught-on-film. Just take a look at the whiskers and see the whirly move. Crazy, huh? Taken with Canon PowerShot G10 / Auto Macro

  • Mule deer buck shaking off heavy rain… you can almost feel the water flying. Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, Canon 40D, Canon 100-400 IS lens.

  • NIKON D80 (Micro Nikkor AFS 105mm 2.8) / 1/250 : F2.8 : ISO 200 : 105mm

  • My little robin friend was not amused by the rain this morning. He had to keep fluffing up his feathers to stay dry. :-)

  • A slightly cliched shot of the spectacular Edinburgh Festival fireworks from Carlton Hill looking over the Balmoral Hotel.

  • Jasper the water loving Viszla. / If there’s water around then there’s fun to be had as far as Jasper’s concerned! Jasper is a Hungarian Viszla. They are part of the (water) gun dog group, and are the smallest of the gun dog group. They are known as ‘above average’ dogs to train and are exceptionally smart and will pick up training in literally a matter of minutes! Jasper is now 12months old and since he was a pup he has loved the water and has a fascination with sticks and branches; which is great, as I never run out of ‘toys’ for him! This particular time, Jasper spotted a branch in the water and was determined to get it out and clear the water of debris! / Unfortuanatly he didn’t realise the ‘branch’ was probably an old root which was well rooted into the thick mud of the river bed. Mulwala, New South Wales, Australia. July 2009.

  • Max shaking it down Featured in “Sisterhood” Nov 09 / Featured in “PhoDOGraphy” Dec 09 Top 10 in “Good News Group” / Top 10 in “PhoDOGraphy” – Hot Dog / 102 Views 3/12/09

  • Sal, our eight year old springer/swamp monster is diving for rocks again today, everytime she shakes herself like this half of the town gets wet. / Top ten in Radial Blur Challenge, Mood and Ambience group. / Albaida River, Xativa, Spain / Fugifilm Finepix S1000fd f/5 E1/200 ISO-100

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