It seems pretty to me, tooFlying west past Canyon Lake last night. I don’t usually take photos, but this just seemed pretty to me.
It seems pretty to me, tooFlying west past Canyon Lake last night. I don’t usually take photos, but this just seemed pretty to me.
HoView attachment 92645 me Sweet Home
Sweet Grass Hills of MontanaView attachment 92644
That's an interesting photo. Cribs usually have bins above the driveway, which are filled through doors on the cupola (the sticky-uppy part in the middle). There will be 3 or 4 hatches in there to fill, and a chute to direct the grain to them.From earlier in the fall
It seems the barn (crib?) is still used to store harvest based on that pipe leading to one of the windows.
JAK_8550 by Jack Silver, on Flickr
Thanks for the information, and for telling me what I'm looking at! I've no idea about the property, I just fly by and take pictures if it look interesting.That's an interesting photo. Cribs usually have bins above the driveway, which are filled through doors on the cupola (the sticky-uppy part in the middle). There will be 3 or 4 hatches in there to fill, and a chute to direct the grain to them.
BTW the "pipe" is an auger, there is a screw inside, driven by the the PTO on the tractor, that pumps the grain to the top. Anyway, I've never seen anyone stick an auger through a window like that. Those things get floppy out there at the end; I imagine it's lots of fun trying to hit that little hole.
I think we were the last people in this area to fill a crib; it's just not worth the effort for the small amount of storage. We tore it down 8 years ago, but it hadn't been used in probably 5 years before that.
Pretty house. Is that cousin Eddie's RV?
Thank you, too.Grew up on my uncles farm. We would have called that a "granary" as around here, cribs had openings for air circulation around the corn still on the cob.
Elevation at farm 3300', the rim beyound on horizon varies from 4000 to 4600' . Sand rock formations run from Canada south along "The Rim".HoView attachment 92645 me Sweet Home
Very nice. I was hoping to have a Jan 1 image for today, but weather.Flying home yesterday over the Rockies. Very pretty scenery.
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My place of employment socked in
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Very nice. I was hoping to have a Jan 1 image for today, but weather.
Go down to Tucson and take pics of the newer proving grounds.Here's an old (July 1987) photo of the proving ground of the Caterpillar Tractor Co., then located about 25 miles west of Phoenix AZ. Old sectional charts marked this pattern as a visual landmark with the label "Cat Tracks".
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There's a little more to the story of this photo.
The photo was taken on my very first visit to Phoenix. I was living in Southern California, and rented a C-172P at Van Nuys to fly to PHX on a business trip. Around the time I started the descent for the ILS to runway 8, I noticed the words "Caterpillar Tractor Co." carved in the sand below. I thought that was kinda cool, so I snapped a quick photo.
The Caterpillar proving ground is gone now. The area has been annexed by the City of Buckeye, and developed into a master-planned community called Verrado.
Last week we moved into our newly-built home in Verrado, located in the middle of the photo I took by chance on that hot July day 33 years ago. Who'da thunk it?
Is that snow or ice on what appears to be a lake?Thanks! I got a pretty nice video of landing in Provo too. The ending is cool with the mountains in the background.
Cool story. Looks like some of the roads were made for the city. Funny how fate works.Here's an old (July 1987) photo of the proving ground of the Caterpillar Tractor Co., then located about 25 miles west of Phoenix AZ. Old sectional charts marked this pattern as a visual landmark with the label "Cat Tracks".
View attachment 92915
View attachment 92916
There's a little more to the story of this photo.
The photo was taken on my very first visit to Phoenix. I was living in Southern California, and rented a C-172P at Van Nuys to fly to PHX on a business trip. Around the time I started the descent for the ILS to runway 8, I noticed the words "Caterpillar Tractor Co." carved in the sand below. I thought that was kinda cool, so I snapped a quick photo.
The Caterpillar proving ground is gone now. The area has been annexed by the City of Buckeye, and developed into a master-planned community called Verrado.
Last week we moved into our newly-built home in Verrado, located in the middle of the photo I took by chance on that hot July day 33 years ago. Who'da thunk it?
This is the closest I could come to duplicating the OP image in Google Earth. I'd take the present-day comparison photo myself, but the airspace has changed too. It's busy Class B now.Cool story. Looks like some of the roads were made for the city. Funny how fate works.
Cool image
Thanks for the "after" image. Interesting there is a Heritage District there. I'd hope there are some old Caterpiller products there.This is the closest I could come to duplicating the OP image in Google Earth. I'd take the present-day comparison photo myself, but the airspace has changed too. It's busy Class B now.
The one major street that seems to follow the old Cat tracks is Indian School Road, the east-west street with the gentle S-curve in the upper third of the photo.
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Here is some more history if anyone is interested:This is the closest I could come to duplicating the OP image in Google Earth. I'd take the present-day comparison photo myself, but the airspace has changed too. It's busy Class B now.
The one major street that seems to follow the old Cat tracks is Indian School Road, the east-west street with the gentle S-curve in the upper third of the photo.
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Go down to Tucson and take pics of the newer proving grounds.
West of Green Valley back by the mines. They have a customer demonstration center back there and then they use the mines to prove out equipment.Where are they? I've never seen them.
More farm storage
It seems barns are photogenic after being neglected, but it is too late to save them.
JAK_8291 by Jack Silver, on Flickr
True, it makes it look interesting. I think the barn is still in use, perhaps for animals. It looks like the farmer is cleaning the decayed parts.It's interesting how nature is taking back what was once its own.
Fascinating stages of decay not only in the barn, but also the fences, windmill, and machinery.
I'm sorry I missed this question last year.what type of camera are you using and at what hieght AGL?
puctures look great