View allAll Photos Tagged GLEN
A view up the fast flowing river Nevis with the Big Ben visible on the left with Stob Ban of the Mamore range in the distance.
A few days ago, while my wife and I were sightseeing in the Western Highlands, I took this photo in Glen Coe.
Sigma DP1 Merrill
Close in capture of the pretty Moss Glen Falls in Vermont. A stitch of two images here to get a wider view from close in at the base. Had to do this in order NOT to get the large fallen tree that was across the scene.
I just loved this backlit rain in Glen Affric which created an amazing 5 mins of light before it went all grey and gloomy!
Glen Trool in Dumfries and Galloway, the site of Robert the Bruces first victory in the Scottish independence war of the 14th Century.
Looking SE from near the summit of Am Bodach.
Original post (late June 2018) stitched from 4 shots; reprocessed and enlarged (to left) with 5th shot, May 2020.
Steve, Rob and I met up in Glen Affric before sunrise and decided on the view west along Loch Affric as our first shoot of the day.
This Panorama was taken about 40 minutes after the official sunrise once the sun was above the cloud in the east illuminating the scene and the distant clouds.
Explore 24/09/2022 No. 214
Looking up Glen Isla towards Caenlochan Nature Reserve (the glen running to the left in the distance).
Buachaille Etive Mor on glen Etive in the Scottish Highlands, taken from the Beinn A Chruaiste mountain at sunrise.
121MP panoramic using 8 vertical images, 3 brackets for each, with a total of 24 RAW files.
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View of Marsco from Glen Sligachan on a blustery day on the Isle of Skye in Scotland.
Cheers!
Bob G.
Looking down the glen, with the Three Sisters (spurs of Bidean nam Bian) on the left and the Aonach Eagach on the right.
Stitched from 2 shots.
Glen Etive road winds for 12 miles in the heart of the Scottish Highlands. It twists along as a single lane road while giving stunning views of mountains, moors, lochs, waterfalls, pools of water, stags and other wildlige beore it ends at the Northeast end of Loch Etive. It is known by James Bond fans as Skyfall Road. The famous scene has M waking up in the classic Aston Martin while Bond stands by the side of the road looking down towards his childhood home. Skyfall isn't located here but the views are simply some of the best I've seen in Scotland. This photo was taken directly after turning off the A82. Three people were walking along the road in the later afternoon light.
Brisbane Glen, looking across the Firth of Clyde to Arran at sunset.
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Before heading to Arran for a family holiday I'd done a little research for photo opportunities. This view in Glen Rosa is very much photographed, so much so that I was determined not to take it. That is until standing there in the magnificent and impressive scenery, when I just couldn't help myself.
The mountain in the background is Cir Mhor cloaked in cloud as is The Saddle to its left (viewer's right) and Goatfell to camera right.
Sparkling crystal clear peat-infused water rushing over a rocky riverbed. This is a stitched panoramic shot of the river Garbh Uisge in Glen Affric, Inverness-shire, Scotland. Processed from raw and stitched from 3 frames in Capture One Pro 23 to encompass the width of this fast flowing river.
The Glen Canyon Bridge is a steel arch bridge in Coconino County, Arizona, carrying U.S. Route 89 across the Colorado River. The bridge was originally built by the United States Bureau of Reclamation to facilitate transportation of materials for the Glen Canyon Dam, which lies adjacent to the bridge just 264 m upstream. The two-lane bridge has an overall length of 387 m with a deck 210 m above the river, making it one of the highest bridges in the United States. The bridge was the highest arch bridge in the world when completed in 1959.
Nov '04. Still from the mid section of the glen, below the Loch Beannacharan Dam.
Fuji Sensia film. Nikon F2.
DSC05251-HDR_Lr9
Looking down Glen Etive from Glencoe
A few images stitched together (12 in total) though i bracketed so actually shot 36 but only used surprisingly enough the 0 ev shots ;-)
(c) John Farnan
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Here is another shot from Glen Etive.
At this spot there is actually a lot of construction work going on to harness hydro power from within the Glen.
I have carefully composed the shot to minimise the view of the construction but if you look carefully you will see a digger and part of a bridge.
I do hope when they are done the impact will be minimal, this is such a beautiful place.
Fujifilm X-T2 with Samyang 12mm F2 @ F11