Ceropegia's photos with the keyword: rainy

Under the Pittman Marquee

13 Feb 2013 139
On Broad Street one rainy evening in Gadsden, Alabama (IMG_3994)

Rain Splashing

24 Nov 2012 190
On my deck (IMG_0002)

Splashing Rain

24 Nov 2012 190
On my deck (IMG_0005)

Hooked

26 Jan 2013 192
At my birdfeeders, Etowah County, Alabama (IMG_2526)

Wet

24 Feb 2013 162
On my deck (IMG_4370)

Raining

20 Mar 2013 150
My garden and driveway, Etowah county, Alabama (IMG_5465)

Raining

20 Mar 2013 150
My garden and driveway, Etowah County, Alabama (IMG_5476)

Wet

20 Mar 2013 148
Bars of my bird feeder in the rain, Etowah County, Alabama (IMG_5468)

Umbrellas

13 Feb 2013 192
In the Pittman Theater lobby the night of the Coosa Valley YMCA 5th Annual Father Daugher Sweetheart Dance, Gadsden, Alabama (IMG_3980)

Rain on the Deck

14 Mar 2013 143
Etowah County, Alabama. (IMG_4805)

A Rainy Day

17 Feb 2013 229
View of Big Ridge from my deck, Etowah County, Alabama (IMG_4165)

Big Ridge on a Rainy Day

17 Feb 2013 219
View from my deck, Etowah County, Alabama (IMG_4163)

A Dreary Day

09 Feb 2013 222
From my deck, Etowah County, Alabama (IMG_3672)

A Misty Day

09 Feb 2013 251
From my deck, Etowah County, Alabama (IMG_3675)

Under the Pittman Marquee

16 Feb 2013 1 4 344
On Broad Street one rainy evening in Gadsden, Alabama - cropped version of photo posted earlier (IMG_3994)

Eads Bridge in the Rain

16 Jun 2010 305
St. Louis, Missouri, taken in the rain from a parking garage at the Gateway Arch. This historic two level bridge was the first large bridge to span the Mississippi River. It was also the first bridge to have railroad tracks crossing the river. It connects St. Louis, Missouri with East St. Louis, Illinois. Designed by James Buchanan Eads, it was completed in 1874. At 6224 feet long, it was, at the time, the longest arch bridge in the world. In addition, it was first alloy steel bridge; the first to use tubular cord members; and the first to depend entirely on the use of the cantilever in the building of the superstructure. The piers, which were sunk 96 ft. below the water level, an unprecedented depth at the time, were constructed using pneumatic cassions - their first use for such a purpose in the United States. To keep work on the piers going without interuption, Eads even invented a pump to pump sand out of the caissons. (DSC09396)

A Rainy Evening on Broad Street

09 Jan 2014 1 1 333
Gadsden, Alabama (IMG_3992)

Deck View

09 Jan 2014 322
From my house, Etowah County, Alabama (IMG_4162)