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Thursday 9th of November did not disappoint. Waves of 25 feet plus was entering the cove and the atmosphere was quite simply awesome.
Picking out and tracking waves with my 100-400 was challenging to say the least and it was not safe on the beach either with those pesky breaking waves on the shoreline. Shooting conditions were brutal...
Captured handheld at 400mm I was pleased with some of the shots I came away with. Although going through close to 2k shots not so much fun...
Thanks very much for viewing. Wishing you, your families and friends a very happy Christmas and a happy and healthy New Year :)
I was taking a photo of the insides of a tulip when I noticed this little curl and photographed it instead. :)
Macro Mondays: Sharp as a Tack! A sharp photo of the pointy bit on the flower.
580EXII bounced off white wall to the left.
This is a type of fern, taken near Lake Rotoiti during end of year vacation. It was raining at the time.
Click on the image or hit the L key if you have the time~
thanks for viewing...
:)
Taken between thunderstorms at Blue Ridge Daylilies. An amazing Daylily nursery located just a few miles from where I live.
Looking down from my ladder, I spied next door's cat Smuggly curled up in my leaf shovel below. She often sleeps in it as its a perfect shape for a cat. Although she only eats next as far (as we know) she seems to spend a lot of time relaxing in our garden
Model: Madison League
© 2015 Theodore Lee
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A different view of North Curl Curl during the big swell this morning with the @focusaustralia Group.
Sony A7r2
Canon 24mm TS-E II
ISO 100 | 24mm | F11 | 3.2 sec
Lee Filter 1.2 ND
3 Shot Shift Panorama
Instagram @johnarmytage
A wave jacks up as it encounters the steep seaward edge of a rock-shelf; the lip over-reaches and spills briefly as clear water.
Bar Beach, Newcastle
We were on our way to the city Friday and saw this weird phenomenom. This is not a great shot because I had to wait until later in the day, on our way home, to get a picture. By then they were melting and collapsing.
Caused by wind and the right snow conditions they form along the fields and icy river surfaces. There were tons of them but from the highway at 90kms per hour in the van... almost impossible to shoot. I've never seen them before and hope to get another chance ... but you know photography.... one can almost never recapture the way something looked if you go back later!😏