View allAll Photos Tagged Isolation
Freezing fog for this mornings walk around Calke Abbey. It was literally like Pea soup although I've never understood that saying.
For my Flickr friends in lock-down.
You are not as alone as you think you might be.
78 degrees north in a blizzard and no WiFi.
And that was just me :-)
Sunrise at Isolation Lake in the Upper Enchantments in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness, Washington, USA. Taken in July 2006. The lake had just melted out!
Shot on Fuji Velvia Slide Film.
Buy a print of this photo at Gilbert_Weidinger.imagekind.com
during springtime 2020. Dedicated to all FLICKR friends who have to stay isolated in these months of pandmic desaster. Stay safe !
I have to self-isolate due to the effects of medication and as I was using the last of my annual leave on Friday I decided to be isolated in the car.
I took a drive to the west coast and followed a coastal walk near Plockton without seeing anyone - bliss.
This little waterfall was just below the track I was following.
Explore #3 30/07/2022
Elegant isolation - An atmospheric misty dawn reveals the beautiful ruins of Kilchurn Castle reflected in the deafeningly silent and still Loch Awe; hauntingly beautiful in elegant isolation from its normally mountainous backdrop by the dawn mist rolling up the loch.
Dalmally, Argyll and Bute, Scotland
Knowlton Church Built on a Neolithic henge. An image taken in October 2018 on a misty morning, at this point in the sunrise the mist was burning off rapidly.
The Milky Way above one of the Twelve Apostles. It’s either Gog or Magog - I can never tell which of these dramatic limestone sea stacks is which. This is the view you get looking south from the bottom of the Gibson Steps, on the Great Ocean Road in Victoria, Australia. A shot from March 2018.
The Large Magellanic Cloud is in the bottom left of the shot and just to the left of the stack is Canopus, a massive star that is 10,000 times as luminous as the Sun and is the second brightest star in the sky. Oh, yes, and there's also a meteorite in the shot for good measure :-)
"Located about one kilometre east of the Twelve Apostles Visitor Facility are the Gibson Steps, a set of steps from a car park which lead down to Gibson Beach which provides access, at beach level, to the Twelve Apostles. The original steps were carved into the rock by Hugh Gibson, an early owner of Glenample Homestead. They have been improved over the years and offer a sea level view of the "stacks" that make up the Twelve Apostles. The two that are viewable from the beach are known as Gog and Magog."