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Now you can shoot Fuji with the milky way just before the dawn from the west side of the mountain. My exhibition "Sea Change" will start from March 9. Don't miss it!
Visit my website: yugakurita.com
夏の天の川を夜明け前に撮れる季節になりました! 3/9から3/18まで個展『Sea Change』を開きます。みなさん是非お越しください!
Amazing to see Mount Fuji from our hotel room in the middle of Tokyo on our first night there this trip! Black and white treatment really brought it out with Tokyo Tower in the foreground. We went to Hakone hoping to see mount Fuji closer up but the weather was not kind so this was our only time seeing it.
Fuji san (Mr/Mrs Fuji) is a symbol of Japan and deeply within their culture
Fuji becomes pink at sunrise or sunset in winter. We call this phenomenon Benifuji in Japan. In summer it becomes red and is called Akafuji.
Nikon D810A + AF-S Nikkor 300mm f/4E PF ED VR
Lily's growing in a container.
If you like what you see then help keep me in film and buy me a coffee.
Lake Yamanaka, Fuji 5 Lakes
山中湖・富士山
With excursion ship, "Swan Lake".
左下は山中湖の遊覧船「白鳥の湖」です。
Yamanakako-mura, Yamanashi pref, Japan
Mt Fuji at Twilight on the shores of Lake Kawaguchiko | 夜で河口湖から富士山
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when we flew in Fuji san was on full display. when we came back 5 weeks later she was always hidden in the clouds . have to come back again to get a closer look.
You are at the edge of one of the most ecologically important places in Banff National Park.
Wetlands are scarce in the mountains. Water seems to be in a hurry to get somewhere else.
Glaciers deposited massive amounts of gravel, sand, and silt in this broad valley and its tributaries. In the 15,000 years since the glaciers retreated, annual flooding by the Bow River and its tributaries has carried much of the loose material into the relatively flat valley floor. Here, the river slows and as a result, its ability to carry sediments dwindles. Over time, the valley has filled with stream-borne sediments. Today, the Bow River meanders across a wide, well-watered floodplain atop those deposits.
These low elevation wetlands offer a longer growing season for plants and animals than valleys higher in elevation. Rich silt soils are more productive than the rockier soils on higher slopes.
Biological diversity and productivity, make these montane wetlands unique in the Rockies. Here you can see the boreal toads, Wilson's Warblers, beavers muskrats, and a variety of rare species.
Wildlife that travel widely depend on these wetlands for survival from the elk herds that winter here to the grizzly bears that sometimes fish for spawning while suckers in the Spring, to the migratory birds that arrive for the summer.