View allAll Photos Tagged BEECH
Please go and look out for this unique picture from one of my contacts, to me it's something that you don't see everyday.
www.flickr.com/photos/birdcloud1/29892062033/in/contacts/
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Pentax K-5
SMC Pentax-DA 18-55mm F3.5-5.6 AL WR
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© 2016 stefanorugolo | All rights reserved.
In autumn, the leaves of the beeches assume warm and tones, red, orange or yellow. If the forest is exposed to the sunset, the result you get is this one. A normal wood becomes an enchanted forest and the trees seem to invite you to sit on their roots to enjoy the peace of the moment. Ever tried the sensation of being in front of something magic?
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Taken about an hour after sunrise otherwise the sun is too low for this part of Dorset.
Beech Avenue is on the main road running from Wimborne (Kingston Lacy) entrance to Blandford.
There were originally 365 trees on one side of the road for each day of the year and 366 on the other, for a leap year, I don't know quite how many there are now but considerably less now.
When the late afternoon light is just right on the silver bark of beech trees, it is an amazing sight. This was taken at the National Trust's Ashridge Estate in Hertfordshire, England.
Hampshire bluebell woods in the late afternoon.
Same woods as previous shot, but I had more time and better light :-)
Ypache, posing under the curved boughs of old, gnarled beech trees in my garden.
South Carrick Hills
SW Scotland
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Thank you for stopping by and all your faves, and comments :-)
Hugss
Location: Veluwe, The Netherlands
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© All rights reserved
Intentional camera movement in an autumn lit beech forest. Not everyone's cup of tea but an alternative view...with a happy accident thanks to unsteady hands to twist the pattern slightly, rather than just a vertical movement
The Rugley Burn winds its way under and along the foot of the trackbed of the old Alnwick-Cornhill railway line through some beautiful beeches at the south-eastern edge of Rugley Wood. The dog loved scuffing through the leaves as much as I did!
Some photos of one of the beeches forests I love the most, the Monte Giarolo, in Italy.
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Derbyshire, UK
© 2022 Paul Newcombe. Don't use without permission
I ummed and ahhed about visiting this location. But I'm glad I did. A beautiful place helped by the fantastic conditions today.
I hope I've given my take on it. I took lots of frames, continually fine tuning the compositions. A relaxing hour and a half that flew by.
Fiordland on New Zealands south island is extremely wet with 5 - 9 metres of rainfall/year. This results in a temperate rain forest many of are beech trees.They come in an astonishingly wide form and variety. Many are old and gnarled and therefore were a perfect choice for the movie of the Lord of the Rings. The weather in this image is very unusual accentuating the colour of the young leaves and the water. In fact the colours were so strong I have actually reduced the saturation of green and yellow in this image.
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Taken on a wonderfully misty day in Barnes's Grove, Buckinghamshire, these beech looked majestic standing proud in the mist. The scene was already in mono in my mind when I took the shot.
In the great hurricane of whenever.... was it '86? So many huge Beech trees fell across the Fosse way - now they have grown again, and we are surrounded by many beauties. Autumn is their crowning glory!
"the copper beech tree,
hangs over the road,
the branches move,
like a body of
fine hair in the wind,
to and fro to and fro to and fro."
By Katie Hagan
First photo edit of 2020. Strolling with my favorite beech.
P.S. that one lady who is giving us *the* look for taking a selfie
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Style credits at jangsungyoung.com