Saturday, February 27, 2010

Somebody's cul-de-sac

A look down a "dead end" street or more eloquently said, a "cul-de-sac."

13 comments:

Dina said...

It must be a nice quiet street to live on.

EG CameraGirl said...

This looks like an upscale neighbourhood that might be offended by the words "dead end." :)

Marie said...

Cul de sac (with "de" in French) is a French expression but here we don't use it a lot. We will say "impasse" ou "voie sans issue" rather :-) I'd like to live in a cul du sac as it must be very quiet there.

Louis la Vache said...

No doubt the poor souls living here make a weekly trek to the Food Bank...
;-)

Living in California, «Louis» forgets that there are places in the U.S. where you get more than a postage stamp for a lot on which to build a house...

Kate said...

Snow, snow, snow! When will it end? I guess the Midwest is better off this year than the Northeast, tho.

Jørgen Carlsen said...

A lot of the snow here has changed from a stabel white (or black) material to a panta-rhei-state, which means the snow now is partly water and is running (to the sea somewhere).

tasteofbeirut said...

That's the time of year when I don't mind living in Texas!

cieldequimper said...

Actually we do use it quite often for dead ends. The ummm... er... bottom of the bag. Er... not quite the bottom, I can't possibly write the correct word here, can I? :-)

At first from the thumbnail I thought this was water!

JTG (Misalyn) said...

Looks like a quiet place. The bare trees and snow added an extra drama to the subject. Great capture. Am thinking how it will look like in monochrome....hmmm it must be fantastic.

Have a great weekend.

Lowell said...

Oh, good grief. Don't you have any flowers sprouting up yet!

And where's the food?

Andreea said...

I would like to see how this looks in summer.

Firefly the Travel Guy said...

I see you still hace lots of snow around. We on the other hand had a great hot weekend. But technically summer is over today.

Unknown said...

Beautiful photo! I like the brownish trees, almost the only touch of colour here.