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Showing posts with label Arizona landscapes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arizona landscapes. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

The Lighthouse on Cape Canaveral


The current Cape Canaveral Light is not the first lighthouse on Cape Canaveral

A 60-foot (18 m) tall brick structure was built on the Cape in 1848. The light consisted of 15 lamps each with a 21-inch (530 mm) reflector. The first lighthouse keeper left the lighthouse during a Seminole War scare, and refused to return to his post. Sailors heavily criticized the lighthouse, with complaints that the light was too weak and too low to be seen before ships were on the reefs near the Cape. the government contracted for construction of a new lighthouse in 1860, but the start of the American Civil War stopped work. The lamps and mechanism for the light were removed from the lighthouse and buried in the lighthouse keeper's orange grove to protect them from Federal raids.

At the end of the war construction resumed on the lighthouse. It was completed in 1868, receiving a first-order Fresnel lens. Erosion of the shoreline threatened the lighthouse, and the United States Congress appropriated funds to move the lighthouse inland. The old (1848) was blown up and the rubble used to prepare a foundation of the lighthouse. The cast-iron tower was disassembled, moved and reassembled at the new location. The move took 18 months, and the lighthouse was re-lit at its new location in 1894.


The Lighthouse today

When rockets began launching from the Cape in the early 1950s, all residents except the lighthouse keeper were relocated to other areas. In 1954, the need for a keeper to live nearby was eliminated by automating the light. Soon after, the keeper's homes were demolished. After it was discovered that strong vibrations that accompany launches were damaging the first-order Fresnel lens, it was removed in 1993 and placed on display in a museum at the Ponce de Leon Inlet Light. Since toxic lead paint was used to paint the lighthouse, in 1995, a restoration project began to sand blast the harmful paint off.

Ownership of the lighthouse was transferred to the United States Air Force in 2000 (the lighthouse is located inside the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station). 
It is the only fully operational lighthouse owned by the United States Air Force.

In 2003, the oil house was restored to its original (1890s) state (strong winds had damaged the roof in the 1970s and a window was added in the early 1900s). In 2006, another project restored the lantern room and the structure was repainted using modern materials. Ground sample tests, however, still show a very high level of lead in the soil around the tower. As a result, visitors are not allowed within fifty yards of the base until it is cleaned up.
 
The Cape Canaveral Lighthouse Foundation and volunteers are instrumental in restoration projects and in interpreting the lighthouse history. The Foundation has a website at http://www.CanaveralLight.org
 
 
 
 
Hi my friends,
I hope you find this interesting. The picture above of the lighthouse I made some days ago, the text is from Wikipedia. If interested to read more go to their site.

Thanks also for all your wonderful comments and compliments to my last post.
Next Thursday is "Photo-swap-Thursday" again, keep it in mind :))
Have a wonderful Tuesday!
~Susanne




A little bit of self promotion now:

Buy my photography printed, framed or stretched on Canvas here:

My European Fans buy my photography and CALENDARS 2011 here:

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Sitting peacefully - doing nothing...


Sitting peacefully doing nothing Spring comes and the grass grows all by itself.
~ZEN proverb~

Hi my friends,
Thank you for the comments to my post yesterday. Glad you liked it :))
Have a wonderful Wednesday, enjoy the view above to Cocoa Beach, Florida.
Susanne



Buy my photography printed, framed or stretched on Canvas here:

My European Fans buy my photography here:

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Recently SOLD

Last sunbeams over the lake
Captured at Lake Washington in Florida



Hi my friends,

This is my most recent sold picture from my website
I have there many more photographs set up in themed galleries - go, have a look and if you like something, buy it.... pep up your walls at your home or in the office or make someone happy today and show her/him how much you care.
Many thanks in advance - you will make my day :))

Susanne


For my European Fans: you can buy my photography here - check it out.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Rising Moon at Sunset



When I admire the wonders of a sunset or the beauty of the moon, my soul expands in the worship of the creator.



Mohandas Gandhi





Hi my friends,



thank you for coming back to my blog today and for the kind comments from yesterday!

Tomorrow it will be my "photo with no words" again, come back again :)



Enjoy your weekend!

Susanne



My NEW CALENDARS 2010 are NOW available to buy here



Thursday, April 9, 2009

Leaving Tucson,AZ to Las Cruces in New Mexico

We've enjoyed our stay in Tucson (for two days) very much - but we had to go on and we were on the road traveling back on I-10 to East


I made many, many photos again, of course, how can I not do that...LOL... :)
The landscapes are just to beautiful!
(btw, all the photos are made out of my window, while driving)


The trees, the colors, the mountains - everything is in harmony!


The pistachio trees in the warm valley are growing fast


Crossing back the State line from Arizona to New Mexico


In this part of New Mexico we had no dust storms, but I will show you in my next post some pictures with stormy conditions close to Albuquerque.
It was not nice to drive trough!


Have you ever seen snake eggs, a snake head or a real Rattelsnake...? yuck, I don't want to see that "snake stuff" at all... :))


Pretty landscape again...


Pastoral scene...


The way to Palomas, Mexico - the Border Patrol was very active again in this region


Wild horses...


Arriving in a warm evening sun light in Las Cruces, NM and we had a nice RV place to stay


Las Cruces NM
Nestled in the fertile Mesilla Valley between the majestic Organ Mountains and the meandering Rio Grande, Las Cruces, New Mexico is quickly becoming a popular southwestern destination



Hi my friends,

Thank you all for all your nice comments! Since we are on the road again it's hard to get good connections again...the same old song, right??? :))

Just now we are already back in Texas, up in the panhandle. We plan to stay here 2 nights and tomorrow I will have more time to post about the last two days - stay tuned and see you there! :)

Susanne and David

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