View allAll Photos Tagged Descended
We had just reached the Bryce Canyon at Sunset Point, when a strong thunderstorm descended northeasternly over the Escalante Mountains, while lights sprawled across the landscape from the west. Because it was only fast to attach the camera to the tripod to maintain this mood. And after a few minutes a huge (double) rainbow spread out, for which unfortunately the 18 mm of the lens was not sufficient.
Wir hatten soeben den Bryce Canyon am Sunset Point erreicht, als nordöstlich über den Escalante Mountains ein starkes Gewitter nieder ging, während von Westen Lichtspots über die Landschaft zogen. Da galt es nur, schnell die Kamera auf dem Stativ zu befestigen um diese Stimmung festzuhalten. Und nach wenigen Minuten breitete sich ein gewaltiger (doppelter) Regenbogen aus, für den leider die 18 mm des Objektivs nicht ausreichten.
Danke für deinen Besuch! Thanks for visiting!
bitte beachte/ please respect Copyright © All rights reserved.
Alles was wir am Sonntag Morgen nach dem Flohmarkt noch entdecken konnten war ein kleines Notenbuch auf einem Pfeiler. Das man entweder nicht wollte, oder schlicht und einfach vergessen hatte.
Everything we could still discover on the Sunday morning after the flea market was a small sheet music on a pillar. That one would have descended or simply forgotten.
Wien (Vienna) - Österreich (Austria)
November 2016
follow me on Facebook:
“Far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the western spiral arm of the Galaxy lies a small unregarded yellow sun. Orbiting this at a distance of roughly ninety-two million miles is an utterly insignificant little blue green planet whose ape-descended life forms are so amazingly primitive that they still think digital watches are a pretty neat idea.”
― Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Happy Sliders Sunday!
At the end of December, after a snow and cold snap, ~200 Dunlins descended on Tsehum Harbour. Never before have I seen so many Dunlins here, and certainly not at this time of year with snow on the ground.
As the tide is high and feeding is impossible, the flock choose a few exposed outcroppings offshore from Resthaven Island to catch a snooze...
One Dunlin decided to relocate and in the process, woke it's neighbours and even stood on the back of one. Perhaps it was tired of cold feet!
If you look carefully, there is one Killdeer in the bunch, finding security in a larger flock.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs, etc. without my permission.
While on a visit to Grand Teton National Park, I found this Black-billed Magpie looking for a late day meal as the sun slowly descended in the evening sky.
Black-billed Magpies are familiar and entertaining birds of western North America. They sit on fence-posts and road signs or flap across range lands, their white wing patches flashing and their very long tails trailing behind them. This large, flashy relative of jays and crows is a social creature, gathering in numbers to feed at carrion. They’re also vocal birds and keep up a regular stream of raucous or querulous calls.
Black-billed Magpies will sometimes pick ticks from the backs of large mammals, such as deer and moose. The magpie eats the ticks or hides some for later use, as members of the crow and jay family often do with excess food.
The longest-living Black-billed Magpie on record was at least 9 years, 4 months old and lived in Idaho.
(Nikon, 500 mm,, 1/500 @ f/5.6, ISO 560)
This Hawk lived up to its name. It was sitting in a tall tree between switchbacks in the road as we descended the mountain. We were out of the minibus in a jiffy with cameras at the ready.
Descended from large sled dog breeds, the now-tiny Pomeranian has a long and interesting history. The foxy-faced dog, nicknamed “the little dog who thinks he can,” is compact, active, and capable of competing in agility and obedience or simply being a family friend.
Captured as we descended from the walk through the Rainforest canopy with Treetops Adventure down to the forest floor.
Capilano Suspension Bridge Park
The Lark descended - a brief rest at ground level before again taking to the skies - the great Spring spectacle, from heathland near Kilvington Lakes in East Nottinghamshire (UK) (3162)
The mustang is a free-roaming horse of the Western United States, descended from horses brought to the Americas by the Spanish. Mustangs are often referred to as wild horses, but because they are descended from once-domesticated animals, they are actually feral horses. The original mustangs were Colonial Spanish horses, but many other breeds and types of horses contributed to the modern mustang, now resulting in varying phenotypes. Some free-roaming horses are relatively unchanged from the original Spanish stock, most strongly represented in the most isolated populations.
In 1971, the United States Congress recognized that "wild free-roaming horses and burros are living symbols of the historic and pioneer spirit of the West, which continue to contribute to the diversity of life forms within the Nation and enrich the lives of the American people".[1] The free-roaming horse population is managed and protected by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM).
Controversy surrounds the sharing of land and resources by mustangs with the livestock of the ranching industry, and also with the methods by which the BLM manages their population numbers. The most common method of population management used is rounding up excess population and offering them to adoption by private individuals. There are inadequate numbers of adopters, so many once free-roaming horses now live in temporary and long-term holding areas with concerns that the animals may be sold for horse meat. Additional debate centers on the question of whether mustangs—and horses in general—are a native species or an introduced invasive species in the lands they inhabit.
I had heard about a feral horse herd in the White Mountains but had never seen them. My wife and I were out for a drive and ran across them after all these years so I thought I would share them with you! There is a wealth of information on Wikipedia if you would like more information on them :)
I had one in my cowboy years :) She was a wonderful horse named Gypsy and I purchased her from a Navajo Indian. She was a wonderful horse I road for many years and there is a picture of her in my photos. She has a very special place in my heart :)
American goldfinches course across the countryside in large flocks during the winter on their quest for food. This is one of about seventy that descended on Lake Meyer Park today.
The blue hour has descended over Logan Hill in Wyoming’s Powder River Basin on July 2, 2016. Two Union Pacific coal loads have crested the hill, with the one in the foreground about to knock down a green block, while the DPU of the first one is about to disappear around the far curve. The lights of “greater metropolitan” Bill, Wyoming, are on the horizon.
This is an image of 'Fairy Glen' in North Wales and it really lived up to its name. As I descended the slippery rocks to the waters edge, this breathtaking scene began to open up and I couldn't wait to start taking pictures😀.
Samoyeds are descended from the Nenets herding laika, a spitz-type dog from Siberia with a thick, white, double-layer coat used for sledding, herding, guarding, and keeping their owners warm.
It takes its name from the Samoyedic peoples of Siberia. These nomadic reindeer herders bred the fluffy white dogs to help with the herding.
Its expression is animated, with the characteristic "Samoyed smile" created by the upturned corners of its mouth.
Not many of the races, Samoyeds may not be as fast as the other Nordic sled dog teams but they can be competitive and so pretty!
Over 2000 years ago, King Antiochos I, descended from a long lineage of kings, ruled the territory known as Commagene in Central Anatolia, modern day Turkey. When Darius II of Persia died, his son Antaxerexes, 400 BCE, became the king. One of the satraps, Orondes of Commagene, received the hand of the king's daughter in marriage for helping the king during a war. Ornades was a forefather of Antiochos I (69-31 BCE), who thus claimed his lineage to Darius on his father's side. Another forefather of Antiochos I, Mithradates married, Laodike, the daughter of a Seleucid king. Thus, on the mother's side Antiochos I claimed be a descendant of Alexander's mother's side. Armed with these impeccable lineage credentials, Antiochos I ruled Commagene territory with the help of Rome. It was a golden age for Commagene region of Anatolia. In addition to military construction projects, Antiochos I founded a God-kingship cult. He claimed that he was appointed by the Gods to rule Commagene. When Antiochos I died in 31 BCE, he left behind a powerful kingdom to his son Mithradates II.
Still the same place and time as in two previous photos. Now I descended the hill down and still wanted to admire the beautiful pink sunset. In reality it was already almost dark but in Lightroom I dug photo out of the black.
ICM.
I Can See Clearly Now ( Johnny Nash ) 👱♀️🎧🎶 Finland.
It looked like the clouds descended to hug the trees and caress the fields... All was grey and white... and silent... frozen and silent...
Only your footsteps can be heard... one step after another... walking on the frozen grass...
It's early in the morning... nature is between night and day...
Little birds start singing in the distance and the dull grey is replaced gently by a beautiful golden light that drives the fog away...
The rising sun brings energy and warmth... It melts the ice and covers the branches and the spiderwebs with little pearls... gold and silver is everywhere...
The fog is leaving... the day comes after night... and spring after winter...
"It's times like these, time and time again...."
Florence + The Machine - Times Like These - Live At Glastonbury 2015
Once that sun disappeared behind the hills we realised we weren't dressed for the cold that descended over Princess Point. This was one of the last captures for the evening.
A large flock of cedar waxwings descended on our flowering crabapple tree and proceeded to pick off the petals and eat them, one after another.
Having descended from the telegraph pole (see previous post) this Kestrel moved to a post in the field at the bottom of my garden from which to spot the subtlest movement suggesting the presence of a vole maybe in the grass below.
I thought that birds were descended from dinosaurs and were always cold-blooded in nature. But last week one of the RSPB experts and Bremton Cliffs explained that the clashing beaks was some a ritual to strengthen the birds' monogamous bond before laying their eggs.
The starlings have descended on our garden at the moment with their young, emptying the feeders in double quick time. A male Starling with junior!
Many thanks to all who take the time to view, comment or fave my images.
Ten thousand Chimney Swifts descended into the 1898 chimney in Farmington, Michigan. It was a spectacle like I had never seen before.
Chimney Swifts, with tiny feet, are unable to perch in trees, which means a lot of flying around all day, and at night clinging to the insides of hollowed out trees, or abandoned chimneys. This historic chimney roost is thought to be the largest in North America, with up to 50,000 birds at times.
As sundown approached, a swift circled the chimney. It was joined by another, by five more, maybe a dozen more, and within twenty minutes the sky was filled with a swirling mass of twittering swifts that resembled a tornado. The spectacle continues until all of the swifts descend into the 151 foot (46m)tall chimney, and find their roosting spot by clinging to the inside of the chimney!
Life bird photograph #229.
08-September-2022
"Roll cloud" is a low, elongated cloud, which is part of the numerous types of accessory clouds of a storm front (Fractocumulus genus), which signals the "gust line", or the change of wind just before the arrival of precipitation, along the virtual lines of air convergence and thermal discontinuity.
On the sea, as on the plains, the Roll cloud, formed by colder and denser air than the one it finds, literally rolls (and rolls up) at low altitude, skimming the ground, which unlike other frontal clouds, can sometimes move away from the storm that generated it for many tens of kilometers, thus resulting, in such cases, a harmless windy residue, but, as in this case, in the interaction with a more marked orography it tends to become irregular and therefore to dissolve.
The Roll cloud in the photo was formed on the sea by condensing the cooler air descended, through rain and hail, from the considerable T-storm that brought the water of the whole month in less than 3 hours on all the areas facing the Gulf of Trieste.
Wikipedia: Ko Panyi is a fishing village in Phang Nga Province, Thailand, notable for being built on stilts by Malay fishermen. The population consists of 360 families or 1,685 people descended from two seafaring Muslim families from Java.
The settlement at Ko Panyi was established at the end of the 18th century by nomadic Malay fisherman. Ko Panyi is known as Pulau Panji in Malay language. It was during this time that the law limited land ownership solely to people of Thai national origins, and due to this fact the settlement was, for the most part, built on stilts within the protection of the island's bay, providing easy access for fishers. With the increase of wealth for the community, due to the growing tourism industry within Thailand, purchase of land on the island itself became a possibility, and the first structures of relevance were built, a mosque and a freshwater well.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ko_Panyi
Team of two Samoyeds at Conta Musher Race: Les Contamines-Montjoie, Haute-Savoie, France.
Samoyeds are descended from the Nenets herding laika, a spitz-type dog from Siberia with a thick, white, double-layer coat used for sledding, herding, guarding, and keeping their owners warm.
It takes its name from the Samoyedic peoples of Siberia. These nomadic reindeer herders bred the fluffy white dogs to help with the herding.
Its expression is animated, with the characteristic "Samoyed smile" created by the upturned corners of its mouth.
Not many of the races, Samoyeds may not be as fast as the other Nordic sled dog teams but they can be competitive and so pretty!
A day after the typhoon we could visit Kamikochi (meaning roughly 'where the gods descended') is the prime attraction of the Chubu Sangaku Nationals Park. It is an ideal starting point for may alpine adventures.
Kamikochi (上高地, Kamikōchi) is a popular resort in the Northern Japan Alps of Nagano Prefecture. It is a roughly 15 km long plateau in the Azusa River Valley, about 1500 meters above sea level. It is surrounded by tall mountains, including Nishihotakadake (2909 m), Okuhotakadake (3190 m), Maehotakadake (3090 m) and the active volcano Yakedake (2455 m).
We only had one day so we enjoyed this beautiful area just by hiking the trails along Azusa River.
A large flock has descended in the grasslands on the edge of a near dry lake.
The birds are losing their breeding plumage and transitioning into their regular plumage. The reddish strawberry color on their bodies and beaks would gradually turn back into brown over the next month till the start of June / July. They are still beautiful, but not as attractive as in their breeding plumage.
Many thanks in advance for the faves and feedback.
Thanks for your visit and comments. Enjoy Your day):
And let me tell you the fascinating and dramatic story of this bird island Runde on the west coast of Norway. In the year 1725 a ship from the Netherlands descended here. The ship was loaded with gold. The entire crew of 200 died. The gold treasure was later found by divers. The small island today has only 150 inhabitants. But every summer, more than 500,000 seabirds come to the island to nest. And tourists from all over Europe come here, either to experience this adventure or to find remnants of the gold treasure. Highly recommended!
Come with me oh fallen star, I have descended upon this earth to enlighten you. To return you to heaven so you may be remade. The love you were meant to spread has been tainted, you've robbed humanity of choice. Fear not though Cupid, angel of love, I will redeem you if you but take my hands...
DREAMCATCHER Love Bites Hunt - Available @ Here Mainstore
R.O.T. Studios Like Wind FP (Wings / Halo) - Available @ Mainstore
Huge thank you to Boop.Exe for modeling this with me on short notice, this is a two part picture and she really contributed as a model and artist! Please Check out her work!
Hi there! Let me tell you the fascinating and dramatic story of this bird island on the west coast of Norway. In the year 1725 a ship from the Netherlands descended here. The ship was loaded with gold. The gold treasure was later found by divers. The island "Runde" has only 150 inhabitants. But every summer, more than 500,000 seabirds come here to nest. And tourists from all over Europe come here, either to experience this adventure or to find remnants of the gold treasure... Thanks for your visit and comments, my Flickr friends):
Hi! Lassen Sie mich Ihnen die faszinierende und dramatische Geschichte dieser Vogelinsel an der Westküste Norwegens erzählen. Im Jahr 1725 legte hier ein Schiff aus den Niederlanden an. Das Schiff war mit Gold beladen. Der Goldschatz wurde später von Tauchern gefunden. Die Insel "Runde" hat nur 150 Einwohner. Aber jeden Sommer kommen mehr als 500.000 Seevögel hierher, um zu nisten. Und Touristen aus ganz Europa kommen hierher, entweder um dieses Abenteuer zu erleben oder um Reste des Goldschatzes zu finden... Vielen Dank für Ihren Besuch und Ihre Kommentare, meine Flickr-Freunde. Genießen):
¡Hola! Déjame contarte la historia fascinante y dramática de esta isla de aves en la costa oeste de Noruega. En el año 1725 descendió aquí un barco de los Países Bajos. El barco estaba cargado de oro. El tesoro de oro fue encontrado más tarde por buzos. La isla "Runde" tiene sólo 150 habitantes. Pero cada verano, más de 500.000 aves marinas vienen aquí a anidar. Y aquí vienen turistas de toda Europa, ya sea para vivir esta aventura o para encontrar restos del tesoro de oro... Gracias por vuestra visita y comentarios, mis amigos de Flickr. Disfrutar):
Bonjour à tous! Laissez-moi vous raconter l'histoire fascinante et dramatique de cette île aux oiseaux sur la côte ouest de la Norvège. En 1725, un navire des Pays-Bas est descendu ici. Le navire était chargé d'or. Le trésor d'or a ensuite été découvert par des plongeurs. L'île "Runde" ne compte que 150 habitants. Mais chaque été, plus de 500 000 oiseaux marins viennent y nicher. Et des touristes de toute l'Europe viennent ici, soit pour vivre cette aventure, soit pour trouver des vestiges du trésor d'or... Merci de votre visite et de vos commentaires, mes amis Flickr. Apprécier):
Ciao! Lascia che ti racconti l'affascinante e drammatica storia di quest'isola di uccelli sulla costa occidentale della Norvegia. Nell'anno 1725 una nave dai Paesi Bassi scese qui. La nave era carica d'oro. Il tesoro d'oro è stato successivamente ritrovato dai subacquei. L'isola "Runde" ha solo 150 abitanti. Ma ogni estate più di 500.000 uccelli marini vengono qui a nidificare. E turisti da tutta Europa vengono qui, sia per vivere questa avventura che per trovare i resti del tesoro d'oro... Grazie per la visita e per i commenti, amici di Flickr. Godere):
Fog Tonight...
A heavy fog descended upon the city and lingered here and there, mostly in the lower lying areas. it covered the ground with a misty wet blanket that made everything look like a scene from a fifties spy movie. .
Thank you for visiting for marking my photo as a favourite and for the kind comments,
Please do not copy my image or use it on websites, blogs or other media without my express permission.
© NICK MUNROE (MUNROE PHOTOGRAPHY)
You can contact me
by email @
karenick23@yahoo.ca
munroephotographic@gmail.com
munroedesignsphotography@gmail.com
or on Facebook @
www.facebook.com/MunroePhotography/
On Instagram
Eventually this Otter emerged from the water's edge clambering up a prominent large rock which it used as a sprainting site. It then descended and moved rapidly between the rocks disappearing, presumably into its holt in the bank.
Thank you all for your kind responses.
From the Schneehüenderstock we first descended to the Lutersee, a lake at 2388 metres. It is situated above the Oberalppass in the Swiss Canton Uri. The peaks on the right are popular places to practise mountaineering.
In the distance you can see the alpine village of Andermatt.
It looked like the clouds descended to hug the trees and the fields...
All was grey and white... and silent...
Suddenly a crackle is heard... and another one... and another... Somebody was walking on the frozen grass...
It's early in the morning... and nature just awakens... The dull grey is gently replaced by a beautiful golden light that drives the fog away...
You can feel the warmth of the rising sun... it melts the ice and covers the branches and the spiderwebs with little pearls...
Gold and silver is everywhere...
The sound of the footsteps is closer now...
Who is she? Who is she?... (whispers the grass, as a little girl wanders in the garden)
She looks so determined and curious... What is she looking for?
Hahaha... Who is she? (laughed the wind)
That's a good question... But the answer is even better...
She is no one and everyone... Hahaha...
Where are you going now? (asked the wind)
Nowhere special... I'm just looking for snowdrops (said the girl)
I see... Did you catch the snowflakes? (continued the wind)
No... there was no more snow... (and the girl looked sad)...
I remember stories about winter and the snow queen... and when the snowflakes dance I imagine I'm in catching stars...
But winter is leaving and I can find signs of spring...
I can find snowdrops... (said the girl with a twinkle in her eyes)
Continued from Taste of winter... with a speck of summer...
A hundred or so Bohemian Waxwings descended on the neighbourhood on the coldest day of the year so far and stripped the trees bare of berries in 20 minutes flat. It was so worth the painful fingers to watch their acrobatics and interactions with one another; these birds seem to have tons of personality as well as being stunningly attractive.
Pelicans keeping a close eye on a friendly fisherman. Moments later, he caught a fish and these birds descended from their perch in a mob scene!
Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Washington
I was finally able to get out hiking again yesterday, and after a more adventurous than anticipated hike to a magical waterfall (more on that in an upcoming post), I descended into the beautifully forested lower section of the trail. There were no other hikers around at that time, so I was enveloped in the hush of the winter woodland, quiet save for the occasional sound of a bird call. Surrounded by trees in every direction, I breathed in the deep, rich scent of the forest.
As I hiked along, I noticed wisps of fog starting to float through the trees, dancing in and out among the trunks and branches. The sun was rapidly dropping toward the mountain peaks that would soon obscure its light, and as it slid down through the sky, the rays filtered through the forest canopy and caught the fog tendrils, as though playing a game of tag.
The sunlit fog seemed to illuminate the woods with a warm and beckoning light, and I suddenly felt as if I had been transported to an enchanted forest where everything shimmered with light and life and magical possibility.
All too soon the moment was over as the sun dropped behind the nearby mountains, and the forest returned to a state of being simply foggy and cold as the winter darkness rapidly approached.
Towards The Light.
A heavy fog descended upon the city and lingered here and there, mostly in the lower lying areas. it covered the ground with a misty wet blanket that made everything look like a scene from a fifties spy movie. .
Thank you for visiting for marking my photo as a favourite and for the kind comments,
Please do not copy my image or use it on websites, blogs or other media without my express permission.
© NICK MUNROE (MUNROE PHOTOGRAPHY)
You can contact me
by email @
karenick23@yahoo.ca
munroephotographic@gmail.com
munroedesignsphotography@gmail.com
or on Facebook @
www.facebook.com/MunroePhotography/
On Instagram
Ten thousand Chimney Swifts descended into the 1898 chimney in Farmington, Michigan. It was a spectacle like I had never seen before.
Chimney Swifts, with tiny feet, are unable to perch in trees, which means a lot of flying around all day, and at night clinging to the insides of hollowed out trees, or abandoned chimneys. This historic chimney roost is thought to be the largest in North America, with up to 50,000 birds at times.
As sundown approached, a swift circled the chimney. It was joined by another, by five more, maybe a dozen more, and within twenty minutes the sky was filled with a swirling mass of twittering swifts that resembled a tornado. The spectacle continues until all of the swifts descend into the 151 foot (46 m) tall chimney, and find their roosting spot by clinging to the inside of the chimney!
Life bird photograph #229.
Brown thrashers make it easy to see that birds are descended from dinosaurs with that distinct reptilian look to its eye.
Train In Fog...
In october last year i woke up early to find a heavy fog had descended on us. I got my gear together and headed out to get a few shots.
As I was crossing the tracks at Williams Parkway i heard the rumble of the train. i turned and quickly snapped this shot of the train rolling out of the mist.
Thank you for visiting for marking my photo as a favourite and for the kind comments,
Please do not copy my image or use it on websites, blogs or other media without my express permission.
© NICK MUNROE (MUNROE PHOTOGRAPHY)
You can contact me
by email @
karenick23@yahoo.ca
munroephotographic@gmail.com
munroedesignsphotography@gmail.com
or on Facebook @
www.facebook.com/MunroePhotography/
On Instagram
Hi there! Let me tell you the fascinating and dramatic story of this bird island on the west coast of Norway. In the year 1725 a ship from the Netherlands descended here. The ship was loaded with gold. The gold treasure was later found by divers. The island "Runde" has only 150 inhabitants. But every summer, more than 500,000 seabirds come here to nest. And tourists from all over Europe come here, either to experience this adventure or to find remnants of the gold treasure... Thanks for your visit and comments, my Flickr friends. I hope you're all staying safe and healthy. Enjoy life):
Lassen Sie mich Ihnen die faszinierende und dramatische Geschichte dieser Vogelinsel an der Westküste Norwegens erzählen. Im Jahr 1725 landete hier ein Schiff aus den Niederlanden. Das Schiff war mit Gold beladen. Der Goldschatz wurde später von Tauchern gefunden. Runde hat nur 150 Einwohner. Aber jeden Sommer kommen mehr als 500.000 Seevögel auf die Insel, um zu nisten. Und Touristen aus ganz Europa kommen hierher, um entweder dieses Abenteuer zu erleben oder die Überreste des Goldschatzes zu finden. Es ist ein Abenteuer... Vielen Dank für Ihren Besuch und Ihre Kommentare, meine Flickr-Freunde. Ich hoffe ihr bleibt alle gesund und munter): …
Laissez-moi vous raconter l'histoire fascinante et dramatique de cette île aux oiseaux sur la côte ouest de la Norvège. En 1725, un navire des Pays-Bas est descendu ici. Le navire était chargé d'or. Le trésor d'or a ensuite été découvert par des plongeurs. Runde ne compte que 150 habitants. Mais chaque été, plus de 500 000 oiseaux marins viennent nicher sur l'île. Et des touristes de toute l'Europe viennent ici, soit pour vivre cette aventure, soit pour trouver des vestiges du trésor d'or... Merci de votre visite et de vos commentaires, mes amis Flickr. J'espère que vous restez tous en sécurité et en bonne santé. Profitez de votre été):
Déjame contarte la fascinante y dramática historia de esta isla de aves en la costa oeste de Noruega. En 1725 aterrizó aquí un barco de los Países Bajos. El barco estaba cargado de oro. El tesoro de oro fue encontrado más tarde por buzos. Runde tiene solo 150 habitantes. Pero cada verano, más de 500.000 aves marinas llegan a la isla para anidar. Y los turistas de toda Europa vienen aquí para tener esta aventura o para encontrar los restos del tesoro de oro. Es una aventura Gracias por su visita y sus comentarios, amigos de Flickr. Espero que todos estén sanos y salvos):