Sepia Saturday (a day early) brings the idea of bridges to mind.
So I am off to search for any kind of structures that cross space or water...
1890s "Otto Mears’ Toll Road, a daring creation that connected Oray Colorado with the now "Million Dollar Highway."
I've been waiting for a chance to share this structure! I wonder how long it lasted! Isn't it interesting to see the rejected lumber lying about all over the place!
Old Bridge over Flat Creek, Montreat NC 2014
The old bridge with Rhododendron rails over Flat Creek, Montreat NC
Bridge rebuilt in 2022 over Flat Creek - before Hurricane Helene floods washed it away in 2024.
Rod Chase- Twilight in Central Park, NY
Van Gogh, The Gleize Bridge over the Vigueirat Canal
A modern covered bridge (over a road I believe) in Old Salem NC...where my friend stood as we began our tour of the old town.
A true bridge to nowhere, near Arches National Park, Moab Utah. 2025
by Koowah Shining - The High Shoals Bridge on South Fork River NC, for History of North Carolina on FaceBook.
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Sharing with Sepia Saturday this week!
Our host, Alan, gives this introduction:
For want of something better, I have given this week's prompt image the title "Bridges To Nowhere". The photograph comes from the extensive collection of my Uncle Frank, and shows a very decorative bridge across a seaside boating lake. As it leads simply from one side of the lake to the other, I suppose you can say that it is a bridge to nowhere, but that is not something that can be said about old photographs in general. Old photographs provide us with a bridge to somewhere, and that somewhere is the past. So, once again, we ask you to share your old photographs here on Sepia Saturday, by posting them on or around Saturday 22nd November 2025 and adding a link to the list below. And if you would like to plan your Sepia Saturday posts for the remainder of the year, here is a list of our weekly prompt images.
I invite you to consider joining the fun of sharing an old photo or two with Sepia Saturday sometime!-----
Today's quote:
I wanted to live my life so that people would know unmistakably that I am alive, so that when I finally die people will know the difference for sure between my living and my death.
-June Jordan, writer, teacher, and activist (1936-2002)
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Today's goddess:
Beautiful pregnant goddess figurine, created about 24,000 years ago at the Kostenki - Borshevo region on the Don River, north of the Black Sea.
Kostenki / Kostienki is a very important Paleolithic site on the Don River in Russia. It was a settlement which contained goddess/ansestor figures, dwellings made of mammoth bones, and many flint tools and bone implements. Actually it is not a single site but an area consisting of more than twenty Palaeolithic site locations on the right bank of the river, between the villages of Kostenki and Borshevo.
The Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia
Thanks FB post The Mother Goddess











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There is today, more than ever, the need for a compassionate regenerative world civilization.