View allAll Photos Tagged clouds
Driving to Barhaven this afternoon, the sky was covered in fabulous cloud formations, I
couldn't resist taking a few shots of them. You could see the tops of corn silks from
the cornfields all across the bottom of this pic! Forgot to mention I love clouds,
always ever-changing, it's the artist in me I guess =)
Raquel Cristina Roberto 2008 All Right Reserved ®
estar com você, na virada do sol é compreender que o que há de melhor ta na vida, na transformação da natureza, que me traz a noção;
na verdade eu não vou chorar, hoje sei o que a terra veio me ensinar sobre as coisas que vêm do coração, pra que eu possa trazer pra mim e pra você
Some giant leaves about a meter across in Dunedin Motanical Gardens. This was last weekend's weather. Today has been nearly as cold as yesterday when we had several hail storms.
Thanks if you feel like commenting! Have a good weekend whatever the weather.
Gunnera leaves - thanks Pat.
PS Don't trust the Exif on this one. It was a 20 year old MF f2.8 16 mm fisheye which my camera thought was taken with a big telephoto I programmed into it more recently :-)
Despite the clouds, the wind kept the rain away to enjoy the Scotrail HSTs. Approaching Blackford is the 11:41 Glasgow - Aberdeen service.
Early morning on the Pacific Crest Trail heading towards Three Fingered Jack. First clouds I've seen in a couple of weeks.
Most of the trees in this area were damaged by the B and B Complex Fire in 2003.
Walking across the Meadows and Bruntsfield Links, paused to admire the view towards Arthur's Seat, the huge, extinct volcano which sits at the heart of Edinburgh (the Old Town and Castle sit on a volcanic spur from this). Small, sparse clouds were drifting just below the top, so I had to zoom in and take a pic before continuing on my way.
One of the things I love about Edinburgh isn't just the history and culture, but that we also get landscape views right in the middle of the city. And that landscape is also historical - Arthur's Seat was one of the spots that sparked the interest of Hutton, who would become the father of the science of geology.