View allAll Photos Tagged Sub-Zero
I took this shot on Christmas Day. Surprisingly, there were those who decided to soldier on in the blistering cold to catch something fresh for the big dinner.
Then again, there were those who decided it was worthwhile to walk-around with a camera in sub zero temperatures. To Each Their Own.
Thank you for your appreciation and comments. I also welcome constructive critique and criticism. Take care.
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A cold start to the day but beautiful. We headed to Sandsend on a high tide, hoping that the clouds would under-light and we were lucky. I'm always flattered and honestly surprised to feature in Explore. Thanks for looking, your kind comments and favourites are an added bonus.
An eastbound grain train cuts through the cold and wind down at Charlesville on the BNSF Morris Subdivision approaching Norcross.
I recently finished my December photo article for the National Parks Traveler, about photography in a winter wonderland. Now, we know that not everyplace is cold and snowy, but this particular place (the south shore of Lake McDonald in Glacier National Park), during this particular time I visited, was sub zero and biting cold.
This shot was captured early in the morning, as the sun - such as it was - started to rise. This freezing blue landscape started to whiten up a little as the clouds pinked up for a few minutes before everything returned to a sort of gray shade of cold.
Copyright Rebecca L. Latson, all rights reserved.
All is still so very gray and bleak up here...caught between seasons...so there isn't much inspiration for me these days....
I was playing in my winter scenes from last year yesterday .... little momentos to bring to Australia ...and it donned on me that when I return in Feb, this is what my beach will look like again......and that's okay....give me sub zero cold...lots of snow and oh so pretty winterscapes ...well at least for now...It's how I feel...lol..
When my frying pan finish began to chip off, I thought of how one of my dear Flickr friends, "Moon Rhythm," repurposes all manner of delightful objects into her garden to us as feeders for wildlife. This was my silly attempt at the same idea. The animals took right to it.
Sometime back in the cold winter months amidst these high mountains, this was my home for about two weeks & now how do i miss those experiences, camping in alpine weather at sub-zero temperature in thin air & the most basic amenities to survive, baring extreme climatic conditions. It is there that you truely live every life's moment.
Oh Gods of Mountains, take me there again.
Hemis High Altitude NP.
Snow Leopard Expedition.
Altitude gained: 14000ft
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This pond outside of Sundre, Alberta, is slowly freezing over as temps have been sub zero for a couple days now, with no end of that in sight right now.
Similar to a previous post but without the sun in the frame. Amazing backdrop of countryside on a cold and frosty morning with mist filling the valley. F4.0 70-200mm on the camera for this shot to keep the sheep as sharp as possible.
The CPKC Holiday Train 2024 rolling over the frozen Mississippi River heading to one of their Christmas concerts in Northeast Minneapolis Minnesota. It was a freezing, sub-zero night and the conductor was blowing his airhorn to the tune of ‘Jingle Bells’
Happy Holidays everyone! 🎅🚂🎄
Fast flowing river rapids at minus 27 Celsius.
Getting this shot was a challenging affair because steam rising from the river rapids was frozen instantly in the air and continuously deposited (as fine ice particles) all over the camera and lens/filters.
Photo taken at -27 Celsius, January 2018 (long exposure image).
Ottawa River/ Rivière des Outaouais, Quebec , Canada
Camera: Olympus EM1
Lens: Olympus 12mm f2.0
P1061031
The outside temperature was six degrees below zero when I left the car and headed down to the River Brathay. A thick frost coated the grasses and reeds along the banks which I thought worked well against the subtle pink hues just before sunrise.
Shenandoah National Park
Dark Hollow Falls, completely frozen after several days of sub-zero temps during this month's polar vortex (dubbed Arcticgeddon on social media). I have never seen these falls totally iced over as they were, it was so cool to see (literally!)
I wanted to experience the bitter cold firsthand in the mountains before the vortex moved out so I decided to make the trek down into the hollow on Sunday morning (1/07/18), the temp at trailhead at 7am was a whopping -2 degrees.
THANKS FOR VIEWING!
Sub-Zero Temps and Ice and Snow, make some visual beauty <3
“There are only two ways to live your life.
One is as though nothing is a miracle.
The other is as though everything is a miracle.”
~ Albert Einstein
Thank-you to all who take the time to comment on my photos it is greatly appreciated!
Frogspawn appeared in my small garden pond this morning. About a week earlier than the previous earliest appearance in the last 10 years. A male frog was encased in solid ice in the recent sub-zero temperatures and did not survive so I was not optimistic of seeing any spawn this Spring.
Taken tonight in what felt sub zero temps at Bosham near Chichester.
First ten pictures did not come out as I forgot to focus the camera, Duuuuuuuh.
Have you ever had a moment in time where you just look to the heavens and say, "Thank you God". I did when taking this picture. Once I had set all my gear up a guy with Binoculars walked past me and stood right in the centre of this picture near the pole for a full 20 minutes as the sun was going down looking through his Binoculars at the birds. I wasn't to fussed as I usually take my shots after the sun has gone. Anyway after 20 minutes I was just about to ask him to move when he did anyway. I swear as he walked past me and as he looked at me he grinned.
Anyway as you can see the area in front of me looks pretty muddy and it can be dangerous if you don't know the tide and mud flats. I have lived here all my life so I do. The guy swaggered past me as guys do and headed across this mud in front of me, that I have to admit does look solid because of stones and gravel in it. He went about 20 paces with his nice hiking boots on before he went down DEEEEEEP. I could have helped him but thought, "Naaaaaah".
Anyway he lost one boot and filled the other. When he hobbled past me I just nodded and smiled, it was then that I muttered, "Thank you God".
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights
The first month of 2025 has been an essay in how cold we can get! Although we are on the same latitude as Moscow, we do have the warming influence of an ocean around Scotland's shores. So we probably shouldn't complain, but of course we do 😊
-16c was the lowest we managed - and snow a foot deep. So we were quite home-centred, and shooting, even in the garden, was quite an adventure. After keeping ourselves warm, we spent a lot of time trying to ensure our garden birds survived too. Icy weather for a few days is not too bad - but when it extends to 2 or 3 weeks, they were suffering. Both water and food froze solid so quickly!
So there are a lot of white images in the monthly collage! I used one snow bokeh image as the background for the collage. Happily the group challenges gave me inspiration for indoor and tabletop still life shots, as we felt the memories of 'lockdown' returning 😊
February is beginning with the same sub-zero world, though much of the snow has gone. But we are looking forward to a very early and very warm Spring! Well - we can dream!
As ever - many thanks to everyone who has visited my photostream and for the comments and faves.
All my collages are collected here: At a Glance
Despite the sub-zero temperatures, the morning glow added enough warmth to inspire me on this solo paddle of the lake.
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112/100 Paddles, 2016.
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preserved
sub-zero
sustain
a state of blue red
the last days
of mind
giving up
the lips
never to return
repeating blue red
replay
replay
replica
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Sub zero temperatures at Golborne Junction as celebrity shed GBRf 66734 'Platinum Jubilee' rounds the curve over Golborne Dale with the Avonmouth - Clitheroe cement empties. Still extant in the foreground is the wooden fence, a last remnant from the steam era.
*Pole @ 8m.
Sub zero. 3 shot multi exposure with canon dsr All in camera even the wavy horizon courtesy of the imagine stabiliser in the lens!
This is a photograph of the Aurora Borealis as seen from a very dark forest. The lights in the sky weren't all that dramatic, but I still managed to register some color.
A walk around the local woods in the early morning was just the tonic I needed. Oddly, I got chatting to a dog walker who told me she had been feeding an escaped parakeet which seemed to be surviving despite birds of prey and the sub-zero climate.