Rusting Ribs form a repeating pattern on a Quonset structure awaiting bankruptcy real estate auction scheduled for the summer of 2017 at Cline Grain in Fountain County, Indiana.
focal length: 120mm | exposure: f/11 – 1/1000th second – ISO 500
Rusting Ribs form a repeating pattern on a Quonset structure awaiting bankruptcy real estate auction scheduled for the summer of 2017 at Cline Grain in Fountain County, Indiana.
A headhouse at Cline Grain in Kingman, Indiana, sits quietly above rusting metal grain bin roofs awaiting a bankruptcy real estate auction scheduled for the summer of 2017.
Great Blue Heron Ardea herodias are the largest of the North American herons. They inhabit shorelines, river banks, and the edges of marshes, estuaries, and ponds across most of North America. "Because Great Blue Herons depend on wetlands for feeding and on relatively undisturbed sites for breeding, they are vulnerable to habitat loss and to impacts such as traffic, logging, motorboats, and other human intrusions that can disrupt nesting colonies. Other threats include chemical pollutants or other causes of reduced water quality."1