I'm not exactly sure Glen, but I think they may be construction cranes with red warning lights for local air traffic.
was trying to put these in my gallery tonight. forgot that the images are too big to upload the standard way. ugh! so, maybe later. but here ya go! just a few. ? ?? ?
they appear rather visibly attached to rather visible self erecting tower cranes used in the construction of tall buildings. your monitor screen may be somewhat darker then they appear clearly on mine.
The park is officially flooded now. They have areas blocked off. The water birds don't seem to mind at all. They're all swimming in the new "lake". I usually blank out the people in the pics since I don't have their permission to post them so I pixelated the face out. This little girl was having a ball riding through the accumulated water.
i like to name places i find this one will be called criss cross rock...just a small outcrop of rock...there was a higher one i didnt go up...and there was a lower one where i piled up some rock so the next person can wonder why someone piled rocks there
We must be in the same USDA Plant hardiness zone because all those bulbs and flowering trees are currently in the same stage of development. Love the grape hyacinths Hotwater
Poor plants are drowning with the high water level. Parks are still flooded but luckily the nearby houses are still safe. For now. It's supposed to rain for the next 3 days. A couple of ducks relaxing on a downed tree.
this first is from a few weeks earlier. I've seen a lot of other photos here with this similar color palette. just love it! ? and he's certainly got the spring fever. He just loves this window! And we love hangin' out there together.
No, I'm in Quebec. Montreal, the West Island. Water levels are still high. It's been raining so much, with cold temperatures, not a typical May at all. I hope June warms up!
Same here we had one of the coldest months of May on record, but the long term forecast by the national predictions center is for a hotter than normal summer. Hotwater