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Dance with the waves, move with the sea, let the rhythm of the water set your soul free.

~ Christy Ann Martine

 

One from Vancouver Island a few years ago. Makes me long to be there again....

陽が沈んだ時、東の空にビーナスベルトが現れました。

しばらくの間私はシャッターを切り続けました。

山で見る星空は美しいですが、満月もまた美しいです。

When the sun went down, the Venus Belt appeared in the eastern sky.

For a while I kept pressing the shutter.

The starry sky seen in the mountains is beautiful, but the full moon is also beautiful.

 

Nikon D810

24.0-120.0 mm f/4.0

ƒ/16.0

120.0 mm

1/10s

ISO100

[ In Explore ]

 

Copyright © Silent Eagle Photography

 

Thanks so much all My Flickr Friends The Comments & Faves..... ;-)

Copyright © Silent Eagle Photography

 

Thanks so much all My Flickr Friends The Comments & Faves..... ;-)

f/13 20seg iso100 16-35 a 16mmFiltros:Haida ND 1.8(64x)/Soft nano IR GND16 (1.2) nisi

Cr/Ps/Tk

Spéciale dédicace Joëlle :-) Une sortie du placard...

 

F8 - 160S - ISO100

ND1000 + 2 x GND SOFT

Thank you my friends for popping by.

I really appreciate your visits, comments & favourites.

Wishing all my Flickr friends a Happy Week

 

Thank you

💓💓💓💓💓

using Closeup-lens

Mit 26 MM Zwischenringen

With 26 MM Extension tubes

 

(攝於羅東林場)

 

Olympus OM-1

Zuiko 28mm

Fujifilm ISO100 業務用

10/12/2010 18:35

Eos50D + 8mm

30 sec ƒ/4 ISO100

  

www. C A N O N I K O S .com

 

Más fotos de Azkorri / More pictures from Azkorri

 

Schokland has a rich history and was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1995. The area is known for its archaeological remains, including evidence of human habitation dating back thousands of years.

ISO100/5sec/Nikond3200/Nikkor18-55mm

  

Contact and more photos:

www.facebook.com/zsoltsnagyphotos

Location: Eger, Hungary

 

Thanks for the help, Geri!

heath or heathland is a shrubland habitat found on mainly infertile acidic soils, characterised by open, low growing woody vegetation, often dominated by plants of the Ericaceae. It is similar to moorland, but is generally warmer and drier.

Heaths are widespread worldwide. They form extensive and highly diverse communities across Australia in humid and sub-humid areas. Fire regimes with recurring burning are required for the maintenance of the heathlands. Even more diverse though less widespread heath communities occur in Southern Africa. Extensive heath communities can also be found in California, New Caledonia, central Chile and along the shores of the Mediterranean Sea. In addition to these extensive heath areas, the vegetation type is also found in scattered locations across all continents, except Antarctica.

  

Olympus OM-1

Zuiko 50mm

Fujifilm ISO100 業務用

Am Lagazoui, Venetien, Italien auf 2.700 Meter Seehöhe.

Aufgenommen mit D750 und

Tamron SP AF 28-75mm F/2.8 XR Di LD Aspherical (IF)

28mm, 1/250, F/8, ISO 100

Crop: 3300x1800 (16:9) (DS)

PP: + 1.3 EV

18mm f/14 1/25s ISO100

Ursa Beach - Portugal

'Het Speulderbos' is called ' the forest of the dancing trees'. The forest is not just mysterious, it is also very rare. It's a paradise for birds (of prey), deer, badgers and wild boars. So there is enough choice to have a good time!

Program:Manual

Lens:18-105mm f/3.5-5.6 G VR

F:11.0

Speed:1/250

ISO:100

Focal Length:18.0 mm (35 mm equivalent 27.0 mm)

AF Fine Tune Adj:0

Focus Mode:AF-C

AF Area:Dynamic Area (3D-tracking)

Shooting Mode:Single-Frame

VR:On

EV:-1/3

Metering Mode:Multi-segment

WB:Auto1

Picture Control:Standard

Focus Distance:4.22 m

Dof:inf (1.09 m - inf)

HyperFocal:1.47 m

 

Due to the fact that the wind comes almost from West, the waves become the same direction, from W to E, and wash the sand away

To stop/make less this washout effect, to break the stronght of the waves - that's the reason of this pillars. In the northern part of Zeeland there are beaches , many km long, and there are this pillars, always two lines together, repeating so about 500m. Depending from tide/low tide you can see 2,0m or nothing from them.

Modern mechanized hay production today is usually performed by a number of machines. While small operations use a tractor to pull various implements for mowing and raking, larger operations use specialized machines such as a mower or a swather, which are designed to cut the hay and arrange it into a windrow in one step. Balers are usually pulled by a tractor, with larger balers requiring more powerful tractors.

 

Mobile balers, machines which gather and bale hay in one process, were first developed around 1940. The first balers produced rectangular bales small enough for a person to lift, usually between 70 and 100 pounds (32 and 45 kg) each. The size and shape made it possible for people to pick bales up, stack them on a vehicle for transport to a storage area, then build a haystack by hand. However, to save labor and increase safety, loaders and stackers were also developed to mechanise the transport of small bales from the field to the haystack. Later in the 20th century, balers were developed capable of producing large bales that weigh up to 3,000 pounds (1,400 kg

Long Exposure, first time with the LEE 10 stop ND

ISO100 65 sec. f/11

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