View allAll Photos Tagged BEGINNING
Welcome, Spring! A fresh bloom of white cyclamen to celebrate the season of renewal and new beginnings.
♥ Thank you very much for your visit, collection and kind comments ♥
It's been such a long time since I've done photography, but I'm going to try my hardest to get back into it. Now that spring is coming I'm ready for a new beginning. :)
The delights of Mellon Udrigle serve up some wonderful opportunities for those of us who like looking down at our feet. Title shamelessly influenced by Mark Littlejohn's LPOTY winning image title...
Do not wait until the conditions are perfect to begin. Beginning makes the conditions perfect.
—Alan Cohen
This time spring feels like a new beginning.
Although I know you since years
Its like meeting you for the first time.
every word is full of emotions
every word is a seed in my soul
can you hold me again?
even when summer ends?
can you rest in winter ?
and bloom with me again in spring?
they say that a sunrise is symbolic of a fresh beginning, i believe its another chance to improve upon what you've allready begun the previous day.
(: watched it rise today with some friends, picked them up around 6.15. it was awesome.
After several years of anticipating a trip to the Clinchfield (despite only living a few hours away) I finally came up . Q692 is seen here entering the loops at Ashford, NC.
Besides the autumn poets sing,
A few prosaic days
A little this side of the snow
And that side of the haze.
~Emily Dickinson
There have been projects sitting “on the shelf” (read, in my clogged brain) for years. This year they are spewing out of me. And it feels incredible. Peace, Denis.
Roosting monarch beginning to warm up and move its proboscis on a foggy morning. Zoom in to see the dew droplets!
"The beginning, or the end"
"The [Sentiero] dei Fortini is a path that crosses the western coast of the island of Capri through four forts. It crosses very beautiful sites of the coast, cliffs, promontories and small creeks, connecting the Grotta Azzurra to the Faro della Punta Carena. It is a roughly three-hour walk, well-marked with points of red paint.
The forts were built between the ninth and fifteenth centuries to monitor the coast, regularly attacked by pirates (including Saracen pirates).
Leaving from the Grotta Azzurra, the path goes below the Imperial Villa of Damecuta, Punta dell’Arcera, to then reach il Fortino di Orrico, on the Punta del Miglio. A French landing took place here on October 4, 1808, taking by surprise the English who occupied the island. The semicircular fort is 20 meters in diameter, with walls 2 meters thick. It housed two cannons.
From Fortino di Orrico, you can see the circular stone structure of Fortino di Mesola, well integrated in the rocky landscape, on the promontory Campietello. It overlooks Cala del Rio, the cove that follows that of Cala del Lupinaro. The path leading to it is partly wooded. This is the most important of the forts. There were also two cannons there.
After the Mesola fort, the path continues along the wildest part of the route to the entrance of Cala di Mezzo which leads to a stone staircase. We arrive at the fortino di Pino overlooking the Cala di Tombosiello. The continuous path passing through the Fortino dell Canone.
A rather steep climb then leads to Punta Carena, dominated by the lighthouse and from which you can admire the sunset that colors the purple-red coastline" (naples-napoli.org).
www.naples-napoli.org/en/path-of-the-forts/
PLEASE, NO GRAPHICS, BADGES, OR AWARDS IN COMMENTS. They will be deleted.
In between sunset and sunrise at Héðinsfjörður, N-Iceland.
The past is the beginning of the beginning and all that is and has been is but the twilight of the dawn.
H. G. Wells
212/365
and suddenly you know ... it's time to start something new and trust the magic of beginnings ~ Meister Eckhart
for this weeks flickr friday theme: suddenly