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#EXPLORE/Aug 20, 2010 ✗163
You can find other my photos in Explore:
* Butterflies,
* Buon Natale / Merry Christmas / Feliz Navidad / Joyeux Noël / Frohe Weihnachten,
* sunrise
I like doing stuff like this ok
I took this photo on the coach home from liverpool last friday
happyhappy thank you people
I love her.
Thank you on the Explore!
#273
www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10150335551638897.35313...
Naomi's new bantam chicks checking out my flower bed. It was a whole new world for them. In the last shot three of them are staring intently at a leaf stem. They were just too hilarious!
Pentax-M 24mm f/2.8
Palm Beach at night, with Noctilucent Clouds
Thank you very much for all the attention regarding my photo, displayed in Explore. It's a grand honour to have my photo chosen among so many excellent ones displayed on Flickr daily.
Other photographs of mine that have been selected for Explore are included in this album: flic.kr/s
Wonderful place to shoot. Only about a mile off of the main drag. Uphill to the middle, both directions. After I took this shot, we headed back uphill and were hit by a snow squall. Unusual day to say the least. Bottom center, opposite bank, is a boat tied up with four people fishing...just to give you a idea of the scale of this place. Explore No. 205, April 7, 2014.
Shooting flowers in 60mph winds presents a few challenges..... And some interesting shapes :)
*EXPLORE* is a bit like buses. You wait ages for a new one to come along, then you get 10 at the same time !
Devoke Water is a small lake in the mid-west region of the English Lake District, in the county of Cumbria. It is the largest tarn in the Lake District.[1]
It lies on Birker Fell, 1 km to the west of the road between Ulpha and Eskdale, at an altitude of 770 feet (223 m). It has a depth of 46 ft (14 m).
It can be reached via a bridle track. There is a two-storey stone boathouse-cum-refuge and a ruined stable.
Dedvoke waters Eskdale Cumbria.JPG
Devoke Water has an outlet in the north west, via Black Beck, which, after a short distance, plunges over rocks down a 26 ft (8 m) cascade, towards the River Esk.