Just for pedantry sake, that's a crib, not a barn...An old barn from a couple of angles
JAK_8184 by Jack Silver, on Flickr
JAK_8173 by Jack Silver, on Flickr
That's very nice.Tacoma's Commencement Bay. Mount Rainier in the background. The river with all the silt is the Puyallup river.
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Ron Wanttaja
No, along the Platte river in NE. I suppose they are taking some of the locomotives back. I think the coal comes from the Powder River basin.Five locomotives in front!
Was this in mountains?
I didn't see any rappers thereJust for pedantry sake, that's a crib, not a barn...
I like photographing trains and track from the air ...
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Correct. Barns are for animals, cribs are for grain, more specifically eared (as in not shelled) corn. Sheds store machinery, loose grain goes in bins or 'flat storage'.I didn't see any rappers there
What's the difference? One stores grain, and the other doesn't?
Thanks for the explanation!
In the 2nd pic you got the train and the trainspotter. A college buddy of mine at the FAA is a huge trainspotter.
Thanks for the explanation. Too bad it is falling apart.Correct. Barns are for animals, cribs are for grain, more specifically eared (as in not shelled) corn. Sheds store machinery, loose grain goes in bins or 'flat storage'.
Cribs are fast disappearing because they are basically useless any more, but were pretty ingenious. The sides were filled with eared corn, and the side walls are are ventilated. Air flows freely through the side walls and the center alley. Then there are storage bins above the driveway where loose grain like wheat, or later soybeans, can be stored. That is probably the biggest one I've ever seen. It's a beautiful photo of a neat building...I just had to give you some **** lol.
Those look nice, the first one looks a bit like a model set.I like photographing trains and track from the air ...
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I think the river is a little low this year.Earlier this summer I flew along part of the Platte, in the middle of Nebraska. It seemed like it was 90% sandbars braided by 10% passages of shallow water. I thought there’s no way that it could be navigable with even a canoe.
But airboats make sense. I hadn’t thought of that.
Nice shotsMore water photos from the air ...
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Earlier this summer I flew along part of the Platte, in the middle of Nebraska. It seemed like it was 90% sandbars braided by 10% passages of shallow water. I thought there’s no way that it could be navigable with even a canoe.
But airboats make sense. I hadn’t thought of that.
Nice imagesYep.
Correct. Barns are for animals, cribs are for grain, more specifically eared (as in not shelled) corn. Sheds store machinery, loose grain goes in bins or 'flat storage'.
Cribs are fast disappearing because they are basically useless any more, but were pretty ingenious. The sides were filled with eared corn, and the side walls are are ventilated. Air flows freely through the side walls and the center alley. Then there are storage bins above the driveway where loose grain like wheat, or later soybeans, can be stored. That is probably the biggest one I've ever seen. It's a beautiful photo of a neat building...I just had to give you some **** lol.
Good question. Not much hay around here, but I have heard both of those. Usually barn in reference to a wood structure and shed to a metal pole building.Interesting.
I have frequently heard “hay barn” and “hay shed.” Incorrect?
One of my favorite tunes from the big band era, "Take A Train"....
Nice images
Cool images!Here's a Trident submarine and one of its escort vessels coming back to the Bangor submarine base on Hood Canal