Sunday, July 29, 2018

Yes, but I brought them water--- Water for the people, water for the garden, water for the animals. I was important then.


Sharing today with Mersad's Through My Lens

14 comments:

Elephant's Child said...

Water is STILL important. Perhaps more so than ever before (says the woman whose country is again facing drought).

kwarkito said...

What a contrast ! Once again an amazing landscape

rupam sarma said...

Amazing

Francisco Manuel Carrajola Oliveira said...

Excelente contraste entre o passado e o presente.
Um abraço e boa semana.

Andarilhar
Dedais de Francisco e Idalisa
O prazer dos livros

Laura~Pretty Pix said...

Wonderful capture of past and present! ♥

Helen said...

Oh no! What a sad windmill. Obviously not a good redundancy package.

Andy said...

A treasure from the past.

Arthur Claro said...

Que foto linda.

Arthur Claro
http://www.arthur-claro.blogspot.com

Sharon said...

What an intriguing photo and quote. Reminds me of seeing the modern windmills in Palm Springs this past week with the smoke from nearby fires all around. Spooky.

Author R. Mac Wheeler said...

Nice composition

A Colorful World said...

That is an AWESOME photo! Love it.

Antonio Rodriguez said...

Preciosa fotografía y estupenda metáfora porque por mucha electricidad que produzcan los nuevos molinos, sin el agua extraída por el viejo molino, los otros lo hubieran tenido difícil.
Un abrazo.

Taken For Granted said...

Great shot of past and present. Windmills certainly have changed as technology develops. Lovely photo.

boromax said...

Fantastic. Such a tremendous contrast of old and new. I like that the elder is in the foreground; dilapidated but stately, nonetheless. And your caption is perfect. I hear the voice of the elder windmill!