View allAll Photos Tagged devil
Saw this little (2 1/2'') guy on e-bay, and just couldn't resist him! He's so cute in a strange sort of way, and i am so pleased i managed to win him! :O) He was listed as a lucky troll, so fingers crossed! ;O)
Looking down at the Devil's Bath, which seemed to be low due to the exposed green mud bank. The color of the pool comes from collodial sulfur and ferrous salts. The color is intense in the sunlight - not so much in cloudy weather.
2nd October 2010.
Kirby Lonsdale - Devils Bridge.
My first efforts in colour on the M6 - I think this is one of the only times i have managed to get my son just to pose for a snapshot - he fed the ducks and I got stung by a wasp.
Leica M6- Kodak Portra 160vc.
Scanned with a Canoscan 8800FF
US Marines fighting the Germans during the First World War at the Battle of Belleau Wood in 1918 were first given the nickname "Devil Dogs", which has stuck to this day. The graduation ceremonies at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island feature a real live Devil Dog, and English Bulldog ranked as a Corporal
The bottom of the punchbowl's mostly woodland or open heath, but a boggy stream also cuts its way through
Klick here for a large view!
Devils Garden, ein kleines Tal mit Sandsteinfiguren, nahe Escalante, Utah, an der Hole In The Rock Road gelegen.
The Devils Marbles are described as granite rocks of volcanic origin erode to the formations you now see
For more photos of the Devils Marbles please click on the link www.flickr.com/photos/71914671@N03/7892118096/
Devil's Cornfield. Death Valley National Park, California. March 31, 2011. © Copyright 2013 G Dan Mitchell - all rights reserved.
Early morning light slants across the arrow weed plants of the Devil's Cornfield area of Death Valley National Park
For the record, while I have no evidence either way regarding the role of the devil in creating this terrain, there is definitely no corn growing in this field! The plant is known as "arrowweed" (or arroweed or arrow weed), and the tall shapes are apparently formed as the sand erodes from around the roots.
This spot is one of several in Death Valley that have been hard for me to see as photographs. (Other "challenges" include the Devil's Golf Course - which mostly looks like crusty, dried mud to me - and Salt Creek - which I've mostly visited at the times of day when the light hasn't been idea.) I came close once before with a closer view of the plants that revealed their actual color a bit more and which placed them in front of a backdrop of more distant barren mountains. This photograph certainly doesn't provide a strong center of visual interest, but I like the sense of the plants leading off into the distance, the angles of the blue shadows, and the contrasting warm colors of the plants in near golden-hour light.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist whose subjects include the Pacific coast, redwood forests, central California oak/grasslands, the Sierra Nevada, California deserts, urban landscapes, night photography, and more.
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Text, photographs, and other media are © Copyright G Dan Mitchell (or others when indicated) and are not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.
HDR image of the Devils Cauldron in Lydford Gorge, Dartmoor National Park.
Really difficult to take from a wobbly platform, in a dark gorge, with people moving around!
Formed by the glaciers 15,000 years ago, when they filled in both ends of a great river valley, Devil's Lake has always occupied a unique place in the Baraboo hills, its still waters surrounded by brooding 500-foot quartzite bluffs. The Indians called it Spirit Lake, and that seems a more accurate description than the modern name. It's situated in Wisconsi's busiest State Park, and it tends to get overrun in the midsummer tourist season. But catch it in the off-season, and its brooding presence comes through. It does seem to be presided over by spirits. Black and white seems the best way to capture its haunted mystery photographically on days like this.
The Devil's Bathtub is a gorgeous lake located north of Lake Thomas Edison in the Sierra National Forest, California, at about 9,167 ft. elevation, reachable by a 4.5 mi. (tough) hike. Having said that, OMG, it's stunning! A must for a day trip if you're in the area.
Yep that's my new bride.. Sexy little devil.
Shot @ the SnapMup October Event.
www.snapmup.ning.com for more details
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karlu_Karlu_/_Devils_Marbles_Conser...
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karlu_Karlu
© Copyright 2012, All rights reserved. Do not copy or otherwise reuse my photos.
Very cool natural feature on the Oregon coast, a big bowl with two natural arches (or are they bridges?) opening to the sea.
The thing is, unfortunately, almost completely inaccessible for pictures (cliffs, warning signs, state park personnel, too many people around) so these are the best I could do. It would have been nice to get down on top of the rock and get both openings in a single photo but that shot wasn't worth getting bagged for.
Devils Tower National Monument is an laccolithic butte composed of igneous rock in the Bear Lodge Mountains. It is near Hulett and Sundance in Crook County, northeastern Wyoming, It rises dramatically 1,267 feet (386 m) above the Belle Fourche River, standing 867 feet (265 m) from summit to base.
Devil's Tower was made famous years ago in the movie Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
This dish is a Sri Lankan favourite, however first time round and I overcooked the potatoes, I'm going to try and recook so I can take a better photo before posting.
Over in Sri Lanka this is made with maldive fish, but I've simply taken these out and swapped a few ingredients to make a vegetarian version of this simple yet spicy and not forgetting tasty dish!
Recipe available at www.melbedggood.com/recipe-devilled-potatoes/