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Three Goblin Art
taylor price
Misplaced Lens Cap
Show & Tell
One Nice Bug Per Day
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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blake kathryn
hello vonnie
Claire Keane

Love Begins
h
wallacepolsom
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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

roma★
ojovivo
trying on a metaphor
Monterey Bay Aquarium
seen from United States
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seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from France
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@henrir6
Showy day at Tadami river bridge.
Fukushima, Japan.
"The best way out is always through.”
— Robert Frost
Not so far away-but a gentle people
Help is only a phone call away. You can also just dial 988
Black Crag - Lake District Photographer Glenn
GMT
Trivia: What is the "Stairway to Heaven" in Hawaii and what's the History?!
HINT: It has a Navy connection. :)
ANSWER: They call it the Stairway to Heaven and standing on the stairs, it’s easy to see why.
Each step along this razor-thin ridge carries the weight of history, challenge, and awe.
From the lush peaks of the Koʻolau Mountains to the glowing city far below, this path reminds us...some journeys are steep, but the view from the top is worth every breath.
This isn’t just a staircase, it’s a rite of passage.
The Haiku Stairs test your stamina, your lungs, and your sense of wonder. Steel rails slick with mist, clouds rolling past, and the descent into the lights of the city waiting beneath you.
If you’re fortunate enough to stand the stairs, remember, the best views come after the hardest climbs.
Where the mountains kiss the stars and the island sleeps below, the Stairway to Heaven winds like a silver thread through time.
Each step echoes with stories of daring, of silence, of reverence. And when night falls, the lights below remind us that even in darkness, there’s always a path that leads you home.
The “Stairway to Heaven" has a Navy connection. Well, actually the Navy built it.
Long before it became a bucket-list climb or an Instagram legend, these stairs were a classified US Navy project.
In 1942, during World War II, the Navy needed a secure communication link across the Pacific.
So they constructed a top-secret radio station high atop the Koʻolau range and carved a steep steel staircase into the mountain to reach it.
The Haiku Radio Transmitter used VLF (Very Low Frequency) signals to communicate with submarines deep in the Pacific.
Sailors and contractors climbed these 3,922 steps daily, in wind, rain, and cloud cover, hauling equipment, checking antennas, and maintaining the line.
No elevators. No shortcuts. Just courage, altitude, and purpose.
Today, the Stairway to Heaven stands not only as a monument to breathtaking beauty, but to wartime ingenuity and the quiet endurance of those who served behind the scenes.
From classified missions to legendary sunsets, the Navy didn’t just build a staircase.
They built a legacy. :)
In 1992, American radio broadcaster Paul Harvey gave a prescient speech warning about the catastrophic consequences of the climate agenda:
"We could spend a trillion dollars over the next decade destroying what's left of the American economy, in an utterly unnecessary attempt to repeal the Industrial Revolution." 🤔
Correct!
Sussex Oak. Oliver Pyle.
Royal Albert Hall
Love to see it again! (But not likely!)