View allAll Photos Tagged MOUNTAINS!
A Mountain Bluebird (Sialia currucoides) oversees his territory from the vantage point of a fencepost surrounding a pasture east of Tofield, Alberta, Canada.
9 June, 2011.
Slide # GWB_20110609_3518.CR2
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© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
A Mountain Bluebird (Sialia currucoides) female resting on a rustic barb wire fence on the edge of a pasture near Beaverhill Lake east of Tofield, Alberta, Canada.
17 May, 2018.
Slide # GWB_20180517_0339.CR2
Use of this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission is not permitted.
© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
I haven't been here (Joy Mountains) since our semi lockdown from the middle of May. I'm glad I was here again. Faced this beauty, I thank God and pray.
Mount Hehuan is a 3,416-metre-high (11,207 ft) mountain in Central Taiwan. The peak lies on the borders of Nantou and Hualien counties and is located within Taroko National Park. Hehuanshan is a popular destination in central Taiwan. The 3,421-metre east peak and 3,422-metre north peak of Hehuanshan are both higher than the main peak.
Mount Hehuan is part of the Central Mountain Range.
It flows mainly south to southeast. On the upper course, the stream, in the middle part a mountain stream and at the inlet to the Elbe a smaller river, first flows through a slightly narrow valley, from the mountain village of Černý Důl the valley is more constricted. On the upper course, it flows through the Krkonoše National Park and a protected section in the protection zone of the healing resources of Janské Lázně.
Fog covered most of the valley floor at sunrise. By mid-morning, it was starting to burn off and it opened around a few peaks. This is Crowfoot Mountain just as the fog lifted. It was named in 1959 after the glacier that is on its northeastern corner. The top of the glacier is visible on the far, right side of the image.
The Cordillera de la Sal was formed millions of years ago. It was an ancient lake, whose bottom was raised by the same movements of the earth's coast that gave rise to the Andes Mountains. Molded over time by the rain, wind and sun of the Atacama Desert, its final form as we know it today has a great variety of natural sculptures, different types of stratifications and colorations varied by the mineral diversity of the place.
On the road from Lytton to Lillooet.
We spent 6 days exploring roads, lakes and mountains in the Cariboo - Chilcotin region, BC Canada.
I did a small hike yesterday at Peaked Mountain in Monson, MA, just to make sure I don't get totally out of shape. It's a small 2 mile hike, and not very strenuous at all, but it was very pleasant. It was finally blue sky on Sunday and temperatures rose to the freezing point.
Long Exposure, Looking through the forest following the mountain river/stream and trying to grab the last bits of summer colour before Autumn takes hold!
You can also view this image as a monochrome in my portfolio!
We hiked up to this mountain cabin quiet often on sunny days. On this day the fog in the background allowed to work on the structures and mood in a very exciting way. Praxmar, 2019.
Hautes-Pyrénées.
Entre les nuages au col du Tourmalet.
Le col du Tourmalet est un col de montagne des Pyrénées centrales françaises, à une cinquantaine de kilomètres au sud de Tarbes, dans le département des Hautes-Pyrénées en région Occitanie. Il est emprunté par la route des cols.
Du haut de ses 2 115 m, il offre une vue spectaculaire sur le pays Toy et la vallée du Bastan. Au pied du Pic du Midi de Bigorre, il est un passage mythique du Tour de France.
Panorama réalisé avec 5 clichés verticaux.
Olympic National Park, Washington
When I was hiking the Hoh River Trail lat weekend I wandered down by the river for awhile and there was one spot where some of the snow capped peaks of the Olympic Mountains were visible through the clouds and the trees.
A Mountain Lion (Puma concolor) is momentarily distracted while we view it from our boat from a safe distance while on our way to Glendale Cove to photograph Grizzly Bears. The trip originated from Knight Inlet on the north end of Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada.
4 June, 2013.
Slide # GWB_20130604_0773.CR2
Use of this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission is not permitted.
© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
What a beautiful bird!! Hang on. What are those yellow things at the base of his beak? Probably feather mites! I don't recall seeing those on any of the bluebirds I've photographed prior to this spring.
I camped on the top of Slieve Binnian in The Mourne Mountains, Northern Ireland last weekend hoping for a glorious sunset - instead there was cloud and drizzly rain. Sunrise? A whiteout. But descending, the clouds broke and golden light bathed the hills around me. Looking north.
A female Mountain Bluebird (Scalia currucoides) brings a morsel to the growing young in the nest box located on a fence post next to a pasture west of Tofield, Alberta, Canada.
9 June, 2011.
Slide # GWB_20110609_3800.CR2
Use of this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission is not permitted.
© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
When you go out past Kilchoan, towards Sanna on the most westerly edge of Ardnamurchan you enter a very remote, dark and barren land of mountain, moor and bog. The volcanic rock is largely black, but everywhere the dark rock split with patches of white where white quartz has bled through the molten rocks. Seeing this prompted me to look for mountain hares in their winter garb. After all the landscape would appear to be ideal habitat for them, although a large eagle population might cull their numbers. Yet, I haven't seen one so far (this is an old picture from Manchester days). There are some over towards the east in the Cairngorms ( I last saw one near Glendoebeg) but none I am aware of in Ardnamurchan. I wonder if they could be re-introduced in Ardnamurchan?