#der 13.
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Freitag, den 13.
Meine WordPress-Startseite fragt mich heute: “Welchen Monat des Jahres magst du am liebsten? Warum?” Ich mag den Monat Mai am liebsten!Ich wurde Freitag, den 13. Mai geboren. Ein Frühlingsmonat ist einfach wunderbar! Alles beginnt von Neuem. Der Sommer ist zu ahnen. Ein hoffnungsvoller Monat!Freitag, der 13. ist Schicksal.Ich liebe es! Mein Leben ist sehr ereignisreich, spannend, voller…
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#Altistin#Überraschungen#Berlin#der 13.#Erlebnisse#Freitag#Freude#Herausforderungen#Leben#Musik#Spannung
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Hehe
Happy Friday 13th!
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#comic#Freitag der 13.#Friday 13#Friday 13th#funny#haha#Hehe#humor#lol#Slutty Witch#war and peas#webcomic#witch#witches#Witchy
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art + hair pieces
#orientatalin by edouard frederic wilhelm richter#cant find this one#this one either its tougher than you think to reverse search them#portrait of josephine de beauharnais by francois gerard#the marquise de seignelay and two of her sons by pierre mignard#infantin isabella clara eugenia at age 13 by alonso sanchez coello#grand duchess alexandra pavlovna romanova of russia but i cant find the artist#marie frederike amalie queen of greece by joseph karl stieler#empress josephine by jean louis viger#queen anna of hungary and bohemia by hans maler#elisabeth of austria by jooris van der straaten#anne wortley by paul van somer#manuela gonzalez velazquez tocando el piano by zacarias gonzalez velazquez#adelingen by heinrich friederich fuger#the unequal marriage by vasili pukirev#idealised portrait of a young women as flora by bartolomeo veneto#a portrait of a noble lady by jan adam kruseman#changing the letter by joseph edward southall#lorelei by james c christensen#the crucifixion by jacob cornelisz van oostsanen#saint dorothy i think this is the title its kinda confusing by i cant find the artist#saint barbara by ambrosius benson#virgin mary by hubert van eyck and jan van eyck#princess maria alexandrovna by ivan makarov#ladies in the blazon room of the winter palace by adolphe ladurner#queen marie therese and her son by charles beaubrun#boyar's wife by konstantin yegorovich#dont know the title but its by barthel bruyn the elder#queen isabella ii of spain by unknown artist#portrait of maria therese charlotte of france by antoine-jean gros
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Es ist schon nicht unamusing wenn AfDler "schockierende" Bilder posten von "bösen Gegendemonstranten😢" oder "dieser Politiker hat uns Nazis genannt!😟" als wären das schockierende Enthüllungen und käme aus dem nix. Bro, ihr seid die "wir werden sie jagen!!"-Partei
#AfDler sind das Äquivalent von einem rotzigen 13-jährigen Jungen der gerne auf Wespennester haut und Tiere ärgert#und dann weinend zu Mama rennt wenn er gestochen wird und sagt das Tier sei böse#german stuff#BundesTag
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The living room of the Edith Farnsworth House, designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe - 1951
video: David Castenson
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☀️☀️☀️
#i was going to make a joke about transposing him to 2008 electro indie sleaze and then i rmrd he was actually real then#and like 13. so#a little too young for the teen romp im imagining but anyway he and wout should kiss at a school dance or something idk#mathieu van der poel#these tags escaped me
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instagram
I'm sorry I couldn’t not share this how cute is that omg???!!!
#he wants to finish *her*#don’t you worry I'll be back to your regular scheduled viva content#but Tanz der Vampire has been in my life since I was 13#it comes and goes don’t worry#tanz der vampire#simon loughton#kristin backes#graf von krolock#sarah#frozen#Instagram
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One thing I like about Tatort Saarbrücken is that, except for Das Herz der Schlange when Adam gets rightfully innocented, solving the case usually brings no joy at all.
Both in Das Fleißige Lieschen and Die Kälte der Erde, the culprits were only driven to do what they did because of an abusive system that failed them.
Lida's brother got publicly beaten to death in a fucking working camp for a crime he didn't commit, and then she had to watch for years as the company claimed to never have employed exploited workers.
Alina's ex could despite her wishes, stop the adoption process of Alina's daughter, and stalk and harass her with no consequence. No wonder she took matters in her own hands, driven by desperation and her wishes for her daughter's future.
The tennis player woman in episode one reported Eric Hofer who literally threatened to break her arms, and nothing happened.
Adam tried to report his abusive father as a child and, you guessed it, nothing happened.
This is a cop show who repeatedly demonstrates the failure of the law to protect those who actually needed protection.
#even in der herr des waldes#what solving the case did not bring the young innocent girl back#nor did it manage to catch the psycho before he comitted another crime#also Lida's brother I mean#and if he had committed it#well#stealing food when you're on one bread a day while working 13 hours is at the very least understandable#tatort saarbrücken#i have to say idk how the other Tatorts are lol#spatort#das fleißige lieschen#die kälte der Erde#tatort saarbrücken spoilers
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Rudolf Sieber-Lonati - 13 von der schwarzen magie
#13 von der schwarzen magie#silber grusel krimi#cover art#skulls#skeletons#painting#rudolf sieber lonati#horror art#german horror pulp#pulp art#art
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an ordinary miracle, mark zakharov 1979
#Nov. 13 2024#обыкновенное чудо#an ordinary miracle#mark zakharov#1979#yevgeniya simonova#musical#twenty six days in the life of dostoevsky#die insel der seligen#anna karenina#west side story#hugo#about photography#material#buw#obst & gemüse oder der kunde ist könig
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aah peter hammill and his horny teenager music. I'm so grateful to have discovered these goofy jerks
#already 13 months of being a fan#oh myyy#I love this band with all my heart#Van der Graaf Generator#Peter Hammill#seriously#they are my favourite band no. 1#❣️#(because today I dreamed I met Peter in our town's library- and so I kinda came back to their music)#mini rant
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READING LIST 2024
Jonathan Kellerman: Bad Love. An Alex Delaware Novel. (reread)
James Oswald: The Hangman’s Song. An Inspector McLean Novel.
Dirk Oschmann: Der Osten: eine westdeutsche Erfindung
Arthur Schnitzler: Traumnovelle
André Minninger: Die Drei ??? Der Ruf der Krähen
André Marx: Die Drei ??? Spur ins Nichts
Franz Kafka: Brief an den Vater
Candas Jane Dorsey: Drag Cop [org. title: The Adventures of Isabel. A Postmodern Mystery, by the Numbers.]
G.H. Stone: Die Drei ??? Angriff der Computerviren [org. title: The Three Investigators – Fatal Error]
Ray Bradbury: Fahrenheit 451
Chuck Palahnuik: Fight Club
Kari Erlhoff: Rocky Beach Crimes #4. Der blutrote Kondor.
Evelyn Boyd: Rocky Beach Crimes #2. Mord unter Palmen. (reread)
Robert Arthur: Die drei ??? und der seltsame Wecker [org. title: Afred Hitchcock and The Three Investigators in The Mystery of the Screaming Clock] (reread)
Jo Nesbø: Macbeth. Blut wird mit Blut bezahlt. [org. title: Macbeth]
William Shakespeare: Macbeth (reread)
Hendrik Buchna: Die Drei ??? und der dreiTag. Der Fluch der Sheldon Street.
Kurt Vonnegut: Slaughterhouse-Five or the Children's Crusade. A Duty Dance with Death.
Maurice Leblanc: Arsène Lupin gegen Herlock Sholmes [org. title: Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmès]
M.V. Carey: Die Drei ??? Savage Statue – Grausame Göttin [org. title: The Case of the Savage Statue]
William McCay: Die Drei ??? Shoot the Works – Im Visier [org. title: Shoot the Works]
Tim Wenderoth: Die Drei ??? und der dreiTag. Im Zeichen der Ritter.
Ivan Leon Menger, John Beckmann: Die Drei ??? und der dreiTag. Fremder Freund.
Ilko-Sascha Kowalczuk: Die Übernahme. Wie Ostdeutschland Teil der Bundesrepublik wurde.
M.V. Carey: Die Drei ??? und die flammende Spur [org. title: Alfred Hitchcock and The Three Investigators in The Mystery of The Flaming Footprints]
Lemony Snicket: A Series of Unfortunate Events #1. The Bad Beginning.
William Arden: Die Drei ??? und der Automarder [org. title: The Three Investigators and the Mystery of the Smashing Glass]
Marco Sonnleitner: Die Drei ??? Schrecken aus der Tiefe
George Orwell: 1984
Guillaume Apollinaire: Liebesgedichte [herausgegeben von Ulla Hahn/Auswahl von Marc Föcking]
Jonathan Kellerman: The Ghost Orchid. An Alex Delaware Novel.
Michael Kühlen: Die Drei ??? Die weiße Anakonda
Christa Wolf: Nachdenken über Christa T.
Steffen Mau: Lütten Klein. Leben in der ostdeutschen Transformationsgesellschaft.
André Minninger: Die Drei ??? Die Spur der Toten
Kōtarō Isaka: Bullet Train [org. title: マリアビートル]
G.H. Stone: Die Drei ??? und die gefährlichen Fässer [org. title: Rough Stuff]
Ernst Jandl: lechts und rinks. gedichte statements peppermints.
Ben Nevis: Die Drei ??? Der dreiäugige Schakal
Kari Erlhoff: Die Drei ??? Im Schatten des Giganten
Bertolt Brecht: „Als ich nachher von dir ging“. Erotische Gedichte. [ausgewählt von Raimund Fellinger und Matthias Reiner]
James Oswald: Dead Men’s Bones. An Inspector McLean Novel.
André Marx: Die Drei ??? Meuterei auf hoher See
Lemony Snicket: A Series of Unfortunate Events #2. The Reptile Room.
G.H. Stone: Die Drei ??? und die Musikpiraten [org title: Reel Trouble]
Karel Čapek: Der Krieg mit den Molchen [org. title: Válka s mloky]
Ingeborg Bachmann: Die gestundete Zeit. Gedichte.
Ellen Kushner: Riverside #1. Swordspoint. (reread)
Countee Cullen: Color
Konstantin Wecker: Sage nein! Politische Lieder 1977-1992.
Philippe Besson: Venice Beach [org. title: Un Homme Accidentel]
Jonathan Kellerman: Obsession. An Alex Delaware Novel. (reread)
Cornelia Funke: Tintenwelt #2. Tintenblut. (reread)
Sara Berger: Experten der Vernichtung. Das T4-Reinhardt-Netzwerk in den Lagern Belzec, Sobibor und Treblinka.
Neil Gaiman: Coraline
Stephen King: Carrie
Astrid Vollenbruch: Die Drei ??? Geisterbucht
Plinio Bachmann, Rita Czapka, Knut Neumayer (Hrsg.): Kakanien. Neue Republik der Dichter.
Erich Fried: und Vietnam und. Einundvierzig Gedichte.
Georg Büchner: Woyzeck
Lemony Snicket: A Series of Unfortunate Events #3. The Wide Window.
Maurice Leblanc: Arsène Lupin. 813. Das Doppelleben des Arsène Lupin. [org. title: 813]
Lemony Snicket: A Series of Unfortunate Events #4. The Miserable Mill.
Georg Büchner: Leonce und Lena
Christoph Dittert, Kari Erlhoff, Hendrik Buchna: Die Drei ??? Schattenwelt
Juli Zeh: Nullzeit
Evelyn Boyd: Rocky Beach Crimes #3. Eiskalter Rausch. (reread)
André Marx: Die Drei ??? Die Spur des Raben
Jostein Gaarder: Sofies Welt [org. title: Sofies verden]
Paul Verlaine: Gedichte [herausgegeben von Stephan Hermlin]
Philippe Besson: Hör auf zu lügen [org. title: Arrête avec tes mensonges]
Cornelia Funke: Tintenwelt #3. Tintentod. (reread)
Wolf Schneider: Deutsch für junge Profis
Klaus Mann: Mephisto. Roman einer Karriere.
Suzanne Collins: The Hunger Games #1. The Hunger Games. (reread)
Lemony Snicket: A Series of Unfortunate Events #5. The Austere Academy.
Jonathan Kellerman: Todesfeuer. Ein Alex-Delaware-Roman. [org. title: Evidence. An Alex Delaware Novel.] (reread)
Peer Meter, Isabel Kreitz: Haarmann
Maurice Leblanc: Arsène Lupin. The Crystal Stopper. [org. title: Le bouchon de cristal]
James Wood: Die Kunst des Erzählens [org. title: How Fiction Works]
Michael Kraske: Der Riss. Wie die Radikalisierung im Osten unser Zusammenleben zerstört.
Kari Erlhoff: Die Drei ??? Tauchgang ins Ungewisse (reread?)
James Ellroy: Blutschatten [org. title: The Big Nowhere]
El Marto, Frederik Richter: Made in Germany: Ein Massaker im Kongo. Eine grafische Reise zwischen Afrika und Europa.
Juli Zeh: Leere Herzen
Maurice Leblanc: Arsène Lupin heiratet oder In Arsène Lupins Geheimnisse eingeweiht. Erzählungen. [org. title: Les Confidences d’Arsène Lupin]
Lemony Snicket: A Series of Unfortunate Events #6. The Ersatz Elevator.
Suzanne Collins: The Hunger Games #2. Catching Fire. (reread)
Ernest William Hornung: The Amateur Cracksman
Heda Margolius Kovály: Eine Jüdin in Prag. Unter dem Schatten von Hitler und Stalin [org. title: Under a Cruel Star: A Life in Prague, 1941-1968]
Louise Glück: Averno
Richard Breitman: The Architect of Genocide. Himmler and the Final Solution.
Marco Sonnleitner: Die Drei ??? Die Nacht der Gewitter
James Oswald: Prayer for the Dead. An Inspector McLean Novel.
George Orwell: Warum ich schreibe. Die großen Essays. [texts taken from “Essays” and “Fascism and Democracy”]
Kari Erlhoff: Die Drei ??? und das Fantasmofon
Louise Glück: The Wild Iris
Hendrik Buchna: Die Drei ??? Im Bann des Barrakudas
Suzanne Collins: The Hunger Games #3. Mockingjay. (reread)
James Ellroy: White Jazz [org. title: White Jazz]
Andreas Ruch: Die Drei ??? und der schwarze Fluch
Akwaeke Emezi: You made a Fool of Death with your Beauty (reread)
Ernst Jandl: Laut und Luise
Ben Aaronovitch: Eine Nachtigall in New York. Eine Thomas-Nightingale-Story [org. title: The Masquerades of Spring]
Audre Lorde: Coal
Suzanne Collins: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. A Hunger Games Novel.
Jan Wagner: Die Eulenhasser in den Hallenhäusern. Drei Verborgene. Gedichte.
John Steinbeck: Of Mice and Men
Christoph Hein: Verwirrnis
Audre Lorde: The Black Unicorn. Poems.
Megan Stine, H. William Stine: Die Drei ??? und der giftige Gockel [org. title: Murder to Go]
Maurice Leblanc: Arsène Lupin. Der Zahn des Tigers. Die drei Verbrechen des Arsène Lupin. [org. title: Les Dents du tigre]
Lemony Snicket: A Series of Unfortunate Events #7. The Vile Village.
Elisabeth Steinkellner: Papierklavier
Jiří Weil: Moskau – Die Grenze [org. title: Moskva – hranice]
Philipp Ruch: Es ist 5 vor 1933. Was die AfD vorhat und wie wir sie stoppen.
Ben Aaronovitch: Die Füchse von Hampstead Heath. Eine Abigail-Kamara-Story. [org. title: What Abigail Did That Summer]
Octavia Butler: Fledgling
Historia von D. Johann Fausten [Verfasser unbekannt]
Ines Geipel: Umkämpfte Zone. Mein Bruder, der Osten und der Hass.
DNF:
Allan Ginsberg: Collected Poems 1947-1980
Eva Völler: Helle Tage, Dunkle Schuld
Natsuo Kirino: Real World [org. title: Riaru Wārudo]
#kaj rambles#books#reading list#end of 2024#we got: 26 ddf books + 3 rocky beach crimes books#14 poetry books and 13 non-fiction#14/15 not orignally published in english or german#(french: 9; norwegian: 2; czech: 2; japanese: 1#plus 1 book *published* in german but containing stories/essays translated from various slavic languages)#14 rereads + 2 where i'm not sure (flammende spur + tauchgang ins ungewisse)#25 books i read directly influenced by specific people (both from tumblr and real life) (not counting assigned class reading)#this was certainly my most productive reading year since 'beginn der aufzeichnungen' xD#let's see what 2025 brings - my list already extends until the end of march if i can keep my average of 10 books per month.#finished no. 120 literally 3 minutes before midnight but. win for me!
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WAIT HOLD ON, BACK TO KH
to be at my most utter 'would piss off the lore whores in the most horrific way'
What if someone who had Luxu's role as watcher but on the OPPOSITE side?
#aka the 13 darknesses going 'da fuck they doin ova der' and sending a less powerful darkness to just... watch#not doing anything just watching#and... kissing men who wear unicorn masks i guess#auuughhhh he needs a CRUSH TAGGGG#hearts will sacrifice
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women + portraits
#portrait of an egyptian woman by unknown#portrait of a lady in oriental headdress by mortiz stifter#mona lisa by leonardo da vinci#portrait of a lady by rogier van der weyden#portrait of ginerva benci by leonardo da vinci#portrait of lady elizabeth keppel adoring a herm of hymen england by sir joshua reynolds#portrait of edith jocelyn by heinrich m. muller#portrait of princess gouramma by franz xaver witerhalter#portrait of a lady wearing a floral wreath by marie genevieve bouliard#portrait of unknown swiss woman by unknown#infantin of isabella clare eugenia at 13 by alonso sanchez coello#portrait of a lady by abbey alston#portrait of a noblewoman by cesare agostino detti#a portrait of a beauty qing dynasty by unknown#portrait of a noblewoman by jan adam kruseman#on a balcony self portrait by marie spartali stillman#portrait of a greek woman by ioannis doukas#portrait of maria manicini by jacob ferdinand voet#unknown by sir frank dicksee#ms charles sabine thellusson by margaret sarah carpenter#portrait of a girl holding a lily by john simmons#girl with vase by leopold carl muller#portrait of a spanish lady by henri-guillaume schlesinger#lady beatrice butler by ellis william roberts#portrait of a woman by felipe santiago gutierrez#an african womab by willem van mieris#1889 moorish girl by francesc masriera#an oriental beauty by franz xavier kosler#an egyptian girl by franz xavier kosler#young girl with veil by albert aublet
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Heute ist der 12. und Donnerstag, was bedeutet, dass Reinhard Mey heute wieder den nervenaufreibendsten Tag seines Lebens hat
#is das sehr niche? naja.#german stuff#ankomme freitag der 13.#UND#das Geheimnis im Hefeteig#truly.#was für ein Tag für ihn
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National Train Day
Go out and take a ride on a train, or watch them go by from a comfortable vantage point, whether fast, sleek commuter trains or large, loud steam engine transporters.
They cross thousands of miles across the countryside all over the world, transporting goods and passengers to places far-flung, and bringing back the same to their point of origin.
Two gleaming lines of silver lay their path as they move through cities and forests, mountains, and plains to bring everything to those who need it, whether it’s cargo or people. Of course, we’re talking about trains, those powerful machines that inspired so much of history, and have done amazing things for economies and industry all over the world.
National Train Day commemorates these beautiful machines and the role they play in our lives.
History of National Train Day
The history of National Train Day is the history of trains, and that history goes back farther than you might suspect. Railroads were actually a progression from wagonways, which were essentially railroads powered by horses, and have a history going back over 2000 years.
The first example of what we might call a “train track” emerged near Corinth in Ancient Greece in around 600 BC. Men and animals would pull boats along grooves in limestone across a five-mile course to their destination in the sea. The Romans did something similar in Roman Egypt.
The reason wagonways (and of course railways) came into existence was one of pure practicality: you could transport larger loads over a greater distance with prepared paths!
The first modern ‘ways’ weren’t even created with metal rails, they were instead created with wooden rails, and in the distance path even cut-stone tracks. By being carefully prepared, you could increase the amount a single horse could haul from one ton to nearly 13 tons! That’s a considerable improvement in cargo capacity and a massive boon to those who have to move a lot of it a good distance.
Of course, with wooden rails, they had to be often replaced, and so it became common practice to cover them with a thin metal plate to help the wood last.
The industrial revolution changed all that, and metal rails became more prominent. Around 1750, industry began producing dramatically more iron than at any point in the past. New techniques made possible by the modern science of metallurgy and engineering created the conditions for an output explosion.
With increased supply, the price of tracks began to fall. It suddenly became feasible to lay more of them, replacing the problem-stricken wooden versions that tended to break often.
There was still a problem, though: some consignments had a nasty habit of veering off the rails – literally! In response, an industrial innovator and colliery manager called John Curr saw that the problem was flat wheels. He realized that you needed some way to keep the wagon on the line. His idea was to create an L-shaped profile to the wheel on the inside that would prevent it from slipping off the track.
Of course, none of this early development mentions steam-powered locomotives – the thing that people think about first when they talk about trains. The actual steam engine only emerged in 1769 following James Watt’s proof-of-concept. But even he didn’t see the potential. He wanted to use steam to power wheels in factories, not necessarily trains.
It took more than thirty years for the first fully functional steam locomotive to appear in 1804 under the direction of Richard Trevithick. Trevithick, however, didn’t manage to commercialize the idea. While he built plenty of demonstrations, he didn’t have the means to put it to good use. Thus, the first commercial train journeys only began in 1812, and on a tiny scale.
But, of course, we all know what happened next: trains took over the world. They gave birth to our modern, productive civilization and transformed the life of the average person forever.
Because trains played a big part in our collective history, it was only a matter of time before someone, somewhere developed the idea of hosting a “train day.” An event like this would be a chance for everyone in the world who has benefited from locomotives to celebrate their valuable role, choo-chooing humanity into the future.
In 2008, Amtrak established National Train Day to help celebrate the history of the locomotive. The idea was to engage the general public more on the subject of trains and their history in the development of the modern world. National Train Day was a homage to the efforts of our ancestors in building out the rail network. It focuses, particularly on the transcontinental railway. During its heyday, National Train Day was a major event. While Amtrak was the clear lead, museums and other institutions related to trains all took part. Even charities got involved, seeing it as an excellent opportunity to fundraise.
Amtrak decided to host events every year, but, unfortunately, got into financial trouble. The firm closed its official National Train Day in 2015. That, however, wasn’t the end of the matter. Enthusiasts loved it so much, they carried on celebrating the occasion in the years that followed.
How to celebrate National Train Day
The best way to celebrate National Train Day is to go out and take a ride on a train! It doesn’t matter where it’s going, riding a train can be a fantastic and relaxing experience.
Some towns have steam trains that are part of their history and still in operation, and dinner trains are always a nice experience. Or, if you’re planning on taking a trip, rather than taking a car or plane, take a train for a relaxing ride across the country. National Train Day is a great chance to go out and see the world and experience these amazing vehicles.
Source
#Toronto Railway Museum#Be 68 Krokodil#Verkehrshaus der Schweiz#travel#Swiss Museum of Transport#Dampflok C 56 Elefant#Elko#Luzern#Lucerne#Chattanooga#Craigellachie#Kingman#Mora#Sweden#Canada#USA#13 May 2023#original photography#tourist attraction#landmark#indoors#outdoors#National Train Day#NationalTrainDay#Second Saturday in May#technology#cityscape
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