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Remarkable Rocks is of the top tourist attractions on Kangaroo Island. These rock formations are indeed 'remarkable" and sit precariously on a cliff edge in Flinders Chase National Park on the island. 500 million years weathering and pounding seas have shaped these huge granite boulders.
A simple way to pass a warm summer evening.
Image imagined in MidJourney AI and finished with Topaz Studio 2.0 and Lightroom Classic.
creative commons by marfis75
Twitter: @marfis75
License: cc-by-sa
you are free to share, adapt - attribution: Credits to "marfis75 on flickr"
my sister and brittany.
going through old photos.
andddd, i can't believe i've had my pro account for almost a year!
it expires in 3 days.
Sit with me in the green
Where our love will be seen
Naked and in all its glory
Under trees, that tell a story
Filled with beauty, above our head
As our wild desires , they are fed
Spotted on a local farm yard. Perhaps the current owner or someone else back a ways found a creative way to use some old abandoned wagon parts and a couple slabs of rough sawn lumber.
Early morning short eared owl seemingly 'sitting down' and having a few moments of rest from hunting for food.
The most common thing I hear when I am near the meerkats is people are surprised at how small they are.
An adult Meerkat will be anywhere from 25 – 35 cm and weigh anywhere from 700 to 730g.
I think everyone has seen that tv show Meerkat Manor and for some reason their perception of the the meerkats are much bigger than what they actually are in real life.
At sunrise the ruins of a shooting lodge sits on Lairdside Hill looking down on the Renfrewshire village of Lochwinnoch.
I recently bought a field monitor to sit atop my camera to assist my aging eyes, knees and back in getting low perspective shots of small critters. In theory, the larger screen will help me as I track small birds and mammals like the prairie dog shown here. I say in theory because I did not get the chance to use it while we were in the Black Hills. These guys are very skittish (with good reason as I will post in the near future) and will typically run and slide back into their burrows when I even think about pointing a lens at one. Rather than get everything set up with the monitor, I decided to get out of the car to see if their skittishness would continue. Sure enough they all scattered - except for one. As you can tell from the facial expression and body language, it was not happy with me at all. Sorry bud!
My sincere thanks to all who spend the time to view, like or comment on my photos. It is much appreciated!
© 2024 Craig Goettsch - All rights reserved. Any unauthorized use without permission is prohibited.
This Polar Bear reminds me of a dog that has been told to sit, with its hind legs splayed and its front legs together, and keeping eye contact as if awaiting the next command. Except this Polar Bear was sitting nicely because he wanted to. He knew who was the boss, and he was taking orders from nobody. I took this from a Zodiac (inflatable boat) while the bear was sitting on a stony beach on the east coast of Spitsbergen in the Svalbard archipelago. We rounded a blind corner and the bear was there, right in front of us, so this is straight off the camera.