View allAll Photos Tagged Namibia
As the sun dips below the distant mountains, the Namibian sky ignites in a breathtaking display of golden hues. Clouds catch the last rays of light, creating a dramatic and serene moment in the vast desert landscape.
The B4 tarred road into Luderitz is full of photographic surprises.
On one side of the road, there are wonderful panoramas north towards the Koichab region.
Turn the corner and this sandy scene awaits you to the south.
The trees always amaze me. Underground water does the trick: those in the far distance mark a former river swallowed up by the migrating dunes.
....of Namibia's beauty
The DRC - the Democratic Resettlement Community - at the outskirts of Swakopmund, Namibia. Home to around 5000 People, the majority unemployed, living under conditions that a lot of us can't even imagine.
Namibia is a beautiful country and can offer to the visitors such an amazing scenery very often.
When you drive your 4x4 you want to stop every 5 minutes and the journey gets longer and longer!
This one by Nikon D800 + Nikkor 24-70 f/2.8 at 24mm f/8 1/250s 64 ISO.
Namibia. Sossusvlei from the air.
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www.gettyimages.co.uk/detail/photo/panorama-royalty-free-...
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Meanwhile they are all at Big Mama dune I keep sticking to that idea that there might be some different perspectives in Sossuvlei. I kind of like the minimalism in this picture, must admit.
This stunning place resembling a surrealist painting is located in the Namib-Naukfuft Park in Namibia. It is estimated that acacias have been dead for more than nine hundred years. Its name derives from two languages: dead comes from English and means death and Vlei means lake or swamp in Afrikaans. This place resembles a pot of clay and gives the impression that it was a large lake.
Better quality in:
Swakopmund, Namibia
photo by: Sergey Aleshchenko
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Namibia. Dead Vlei.
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www.gettyimages.co.uk/detail/photo/dead-trees-in-salt-pan...
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Kolmanskop (Afrikaans for Coleman's head, German: Kolmannskuppe) is a ghost town in the Namib in southern Namibia, 10 kilometres inland from the port town of Lüderitz. It was named after a transport driver named Johnny Coleman who, during a sand storm, abandoned his ox wagon on a small incline opposite the settlement.[1] Once a small but very rich mining village, it is now a tourist destination run by the joint firm Namibia-De Beers.
Taken during a 2 week adventure holiday to Namibia with Exodus Travels, October/November 2006. Image taken with a borrowed Minolta Dynax 5D camera, the first DSLR that I ever used. Originally shot in jpeg format, then recently reprocessed using DxO PhotoLab 4 to try and get the best out of them, as I hadn't really appreciated the possibilities of what I'd taken at the time.
Namibian Landscape
photo by: Sergey Aleshchenko
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Namibia must be heaven for geologists...........the colours, layers and rock formations to be found here are ever so stunning