Previously submerged town[views:2388][posts:6]___________________________________________ [May 10,2013 10:10pm - largefreakatzero ""] http://m.newser.com/story/167714/once-submerged-town-resurfaces.html Click through the photos, last one is the best. |
__________________________________ [May 11,2013 8:56am - ShadowSD ""] There's some album photo material right there, good find. Things always look cooler after they've been underwater. [img] |
_______________________________________ [May 11,2013 10:58pm - the_reverend ""] that is amazing. |
_____________________________________ [May 12,2013 10:58am - arilliusbm ""] ShadowSD said:There's some album photo material right there, good find. Things always look cooler after they've been underwater. [img] how dare you ruin this cool thread with such Dethklok faggotry. |
__________________________________ [May 12,2013 4:40pm - ShadowSD ""] Taking "things look cooler underwater" to a ridiculous extreme in the name of art and destruction was the premise of that whole episode, so it seemed an appropriate joke here given the art and destruction in these photos. |
__________________________________________ [May 12,2013 6:58pm - largefreakatzero ""] Boy was I drunk when I posted this. Well on my way now. Anyway, we have a series of flood control areas in NH managed by the Army Corp of Engineers -- several of them are managed very well for wildlife (food plots, cuts, fields trimmed/untrimmed) and a several are pheasant stocking sites, hence I frequent them in season for both stocked and wild upland birds. One of them is Old Hill Village which is a town they actually moved (I think in the 50s when the dam projects started) and there's a ton of old foundations, stone walls, etc. that the Army Corp id'd with sign posts (library, town hall, etc). It's a nice walk and right along the Pemi Rirver if you're ever in the Bristol/Hill area. Wear blaze orange in the fall. |
______________________________________ [May 12,2013 8:45pm - the_reverend ""] Hill still scares me. |