View allAll Photos Tagged ColdTemperature
Power plant in Notodden and part of UNESCO World Heritage site. In front you see the old timber gutter for transportation of timber down to the lake.
Most these Herons are having gone south flying away from the cold weather and the start of a few Ice water. This one remains here, perhaps will leave now as temperatures below 0 at night, already as low -7 and this Friday high -5 and low to -10. Heron could die from the cold weather soon! I’ll try to follow again.
Beautiful scenery as seen along a river bank in Potosi, Wisconsin, about 30 minutes from where I live in Dubuque, Iowa. It was a nice drive for lunch and able to get a scenic photo shoot in at the same time. Photo Images credited to Vickie Lynne Klinkhammer of Vickielynne Photography and Designs(VLP & Designs). Images may appear on wearable art or home essentials. www.vlpdesigns.com
Antarctica is Earth's southernmost continent, encapsulating the South Pole. It is situated in the Antarctic region of the Southern Hemisphere, almost entirely south of the Antarctic Circle, and is surrounded by the Southern Ocean. At 14.0 million km2 (5.4 million sq mi), it is the fifth-largest continent in area after Asia, Africa, North America, and South America. For comparison, Antarctica is nearly twice the size of Australia. About 98% of Antarctica is covered by ice that averages at least 1 mile (1.6 km) in thickness.
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"Seagulls flying through the mist with Parliament in the background..!"
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Looking across to Mt. Goryu (2,814m or 9,232 ft) from Mt Sobatsubu in the Japan Alps . I was recently passing though Tokyo and ducked out to the alps on the bullet train to catch up with a very old friend of mine from my rock climbing days. He now runs the beautiful White Silver Hakuba lodge with his wife. It’s an epic base to hit up the nine ski resorts in the valley. The Hakuba area receives over 10 meters of snow per year with 135 lifts accessing over 200 runs and a heap of backcountry. Japan is one of the most mountainous countries in the world with ~73% of its total land mass covered by mountains (a comparable level to Norway). Hakuba, Honshu, Japan
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Danco Island, Antarctica
March 09, 2020
Photo © Brigitte Wagner
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The elders tell of a legend from this area. On a gray afternoon in late autumn, an old man came to the village and asked to be admitted for only one night. Although it was getting dark and the icy autumn wind was very terrible for the old man, no one of the people in the village was politely enough to help him. The proud villagers had nothing but scorn and derision for the old man and some even spit in the face of him or mockingly slapped him with the palms of their hands. At the richest courtyard of the village an angry farmer set vicious dogs on him so that the hiker had to take refuge in even higher and colder mountainous regions. With his last strength he reached a protective against the wind rock niche. The old man was very exhausted and due to the severe frost he should not survive the coming night! With a trembling voice the dying stranger still imposed a curse on the mountain village and its inhabitants. The earth began to shake and huge cracks were opened in the underground. And all the houses of the village fell into the black abyss. Since that day dark shadows draw over the mountain peaks and the rocks are always dark and gloomy.
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In Scotland, between “ The River Garry “ and Loch Oich, near the Village of Invergarry is a magical unnamed mossy forest. On this cold December morning a rare event occurred. Cold temperatures, fog, and a high pressure front created perfect conditions for hoar frost to form. Before my very eyes, the forest transformed into a mystical sugar coated delight. You can see the beginnings of the frost coating the tree top canopies, delicately glazing the intricate branches.
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©2017 Matt Anderson All Rights Reserved. This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media without permission of the photographer. Hey, just email me if you have usage questions. matt.anderson.photography@gmail.com Also, if you want to buy an awesome fine art print of this image.
Fresh powder snow dampens sound in a way that has to be experienced before you really understand it. The sense of quiet comes from the high porosity of loosely packed crystals of freshly fallen snow which trap sound waves. The shot was taken on Hudson Bay Mountain just outside of Smithers in Northern British Columbia, Canada.
It was one year ago last night that I captured this image. It is one of those shots that keeps drawing me back to work on slightly different versions of it. I think I am however getting close to a result that does it justice. It was taken looking south towards the North Face of Mt Robson with the Milky Way rising along with the aurora related phenomena of STEVE accompanied by a ‘Picket Fence’ travelling east west below it. If you want some more information about Steve check out my pinned story on it. Berg Lake sits at an altitude of 1,646 m (5,400 ft) while the north face of Mt Robson rises 2,308m (7,572ft) out of the lake to a total height of 3,954 m (12,972 ft) and is the highest peak in the Canadian Rockies. Mount Robson Provincial Park, British Columbia, Canada. The image is two shots layered, a base shot of the mountain and mountain reflection taken late in blue hour (f5, 25sec, and ISO800), overlaid with a sky image taken from the same camera position (20sec, f2.8, ISO3200). Had some friends up there this weekend and they had 5cm of snow ! Summer has vanished straight into winter without any autumn this year it seems.
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On June 25th, the UNESCO added five german regions to the now known as "Primeval Beech Forests of the Carpathians and the Ancient Beech Forests of Germany" World Heritage. This picture was taken in one of them, on Rügen, Germany's largest island (located in the Baltic sea). The weather was overcast and foggy, and I used my 85mm at 1.4, to enhance that feeling by the limited depth of field, rendering the more distant trees unsharp, giving the mist its deserved prominence.
Ice Ice Baby...
Not the sunrise we had hoped for, to be honest we had no sunrise at all… but still awesome to be at this amazing location under these extraordinary arctic conditions! Just to be there, walk on the ice and enjoy the view made the whole trip unforgettable!!
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Solar activity has been minimal over the past couple of months so here is a fresh edit from the September last year. This shot is looking South towards the North Face of Mt Robson with the Milky Way rising along with the aurora related phenomena of ‘Steve’ accompanied by a ‘Picket Fence’ travelling east west above it. Berg Lake sits at an altitude of 1,646 m (5,400 ft). The North Face of Mt Robson rises 2,308m (7,572ft) out of the lake to a total height of 3,954 m (12,972 ft) and is the highest peak in the Canadian Rockies. Mount Robson Provincial Park, British Columbia, Canada. I had previously edited up some landscape shots of this; however noticed that I also had a few portrait shots to play with. The image has the mountain stacked from multiple frames to reduce noise; yet uses a single image of the sky and water as stacking the sky over multiple frames would remove the definition in the aurora. Love Life, Love Photography
There was a group of Redpolls scouring the fields in search of food during the deep of winter at minus 20C temperatures.
They found a few left over wild plants which obviously offered some seeds.
We have been in a deep freeze for the past few days in Collin County, TX. Light snow (and everyone goes crazy) that is already gone. But still we are at freezing temps. The water fountains turn into "ice art" however! This is a part of a columnar water fountain and I noticed the angled shadows of the sun.