For this week’s challenge, bridges seemed like an obvious choice to visualize connections. Burro Creek bridge, above, spans a pretty deep canyon, but you’d never know it by this shot. Winter morning fog was the remnant of a significant storm from the previous days, and made for a great morning photoshoot.
A place renowned for its fog, San Francisco, is where you’ll find the Bay Bridge connecting that city to Oakland and points beyond. I had clear skies on my last visit there, allowing me to capture this panorama of the Bay Bridge.

Another piece of architecture, the downtown Seattle library, looks as though it is three separate structures connected together.

In nature, I came across these hanging flowers in a botanical garden in Hawaii. They appear to be connected by a long red rope.

Also in nature, I visited Chiricahua National Monument in southern Arizona, home of the Pinnacle Balanced Rock. It’s a pretty amazing sight to see something of that size and weight connected to its base on that tiny spot.

Lastly, the strongest connections you will ever encounter are the human kind. Emotional bonds are the source of many decisions we make in life, and not always for the best.
For an example of a physical connection, I have chosen this pair of ballroom dancers. In any type of partner dancing, nothing works if there is not a connection.

In response to The Daily Post’s weekly photo challenge: “Connected.”
September 4, 2015 at 9:43 pm
Great choices and great shots!
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September 4, 2015 at 9:46 pm
Thank you, Nadia!
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September 4, 2015 at 11:07 pm
What a beautiful, well-rounded post. Love the panorama and the Hawaiian plant, and the dancers – and everything in between.
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September 5, 2015 at 1:41 am
Thank you, Cynthia. When I saw the week’s category, I knew there wasn’t going to be a call for too many of my landscape shots. I was glad I had these in my files, and I like the way the post turned out.
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