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3 minute exposure using a Lee 10-stop filter, polarizer and Sky Blue. The swirling effect of the sky was due to the long exposure (not Photoshopped). Minimal post-processing. Can you see an owl face in the clouds? :)
© Mark K. Daly - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use. Absolutely no permission is granted in any form, fashion or way, digital or otherwise, to use my Flickr images on blogs, personal or professional websites or any other media form without my direct written permission.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved. Louis Laliberté Photographie
Location: Baie St-Paul, Charlevoix
You said you have chestnut hair
And a chestnut-like sparkle in your eyes
And it felt so good to be together, beloved,
Among the golden leaves, the wind, and the stars
When the wind pelted the chestnuts with hail
You suddenly whispered, lowering your voice,
I am leaving today, but where I'm going
I'll take with me this golden night
Beloved, beloved
Chestnuts are falling off of trees as before
Right under the feet of laughing couples
Like the russet one they hail down
When at night in the alley
The russet chestnut I gave you and my heart
And you said three words to me and nothing more
That you love me and the wind
Already the third autumn gilds the park
Chestnuts are falling off the trees for the third time
But your love is not returning to me
Although so many leaves and stars shine
And only a golden chestnut I still have
A small talisman of the happy days
And this simple autumn song
Which the wind may perhaps carry to you
Beloved, beloved
Chestnuts are falling off of trees as before
Right under the feet of laughing couples
Like the russet one they hail down
When at night in the alley
The russet chestnut I gave you and my heart
And you said three words to me and nothing more
That you love me and the wind x2
taken from
The top of the St Columba Falls is fed by the South George River in Pyengana, Tasmania. In the drier months (like here) the flow of the falls drops considerably. The St Columba Falls are among the highest in Tasmania at 90 metres.
Who else is ready for..
Colorful leaves, hoodies, jeans and boots...
Crisp air, hot chocolate, cool nights...
Carving pumpkins, Halloween... and the beauty of fall...
Autumn Mood - A beautiful male American Kestrel perches in the chaparral against some fall sycamore trees. American Kestrels are one of my favorite birds - and birds that I have had to fortune to work on a conservation project with. I don't see them as much as I used to - they apparently are in decline throughout much of their range.
It was nice shooting this bird with a friend who saw this background!
Species: American Kestrel (Falco sparverius)
Location: Northern California, CA, USA
Equipment: Canon EOS R5 + EF 100-400mm IS II + EF 1.4x TC III, Handheld
Settings: 1/400s, ISO: 500, f/8 @896mm (APS-C Mode), Electronic Shutter
The rain began again. It fell heavily, easily, with no
meaning or intention but the fulfillment of its own nature,
which was to fall and fall.
Helen Garner
♥
E313 rumbles past the signals at Ashford along the former Clinchfield mainline on a beautiful Fall afternoon.
This colorful view of grandfather mountain was definitely the highlight of my autumn trip to the Blue Ridge Parkway! (#486 in explore 10/27/15)
Granite, Falling Water. Yosemite National Park, California. May 4, 2014. © Copyright 2014 G Dan Mitchell - all rights reserved.
A spring creek cascades across dark fractured granite, Yosemite National Park
Yosemite's Tioga Pass Road (Highway 120), which passes through the park and across the Sierra crest at Tioga Pass, opened earlier than usual this year. It was not the earliest recorded opening, but the very small snow pack of the winter season meant that in early May it looked much more like a typical June. There was some snow left on the ground, but rather than being the deep and compacted remains of months of winter snow it was mostly what was left from a single spring storm a few days earlier.
In a more typical year, a drive over this route on the opening weekend provides an experience that is, to my way of thinking, mostly about water. Not only do we get to see vast remaining snow banks holding water that will irrigate the Sierra for months to come, but the spring melt brings wild, watery scenes nearly everywhere. Waterfalls and creeks appear in places where there is almost no evidence of their existence weeks or months later. Creeks spill across the highway flood sections of it. Larger creeks and rivers overflow their banks and turn meadows into lakes. But not this year. The photograph features a small section of a larger cascade which bounces down a steep and rugged section of granite boulders. Beautiful as it is, it should look like this in late June rather than early May.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist whose subjects include the Pacific coast, redwood forests, central California oak/grasslands, the Sierra Nevada, California deserts, urban landscapes, night photography, and more.
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Text, photographs, and other media are © Copyright G Dan Mitchell (or others when indicated) and are not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.