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With an apple tree in the foreground. A friend noticed that it looks like deer have been eating the apples off the lower branches.
Odashiro wetland, the environment, forest of a white birch and a larch
The wetlands which are much at the small wetlands circled by forest.
Wetlands in the high plain where a plant grows and is just neat.
They seem to say so.
After it rains in hoarfrost field in real autumn October.
It's a morning mist so that you may say that it be sure on the day which cleared up.
It often starts to occur.
It's the autumnal tints of the larch in autumn leaves and the last ten days at the first ten days.
Grassland is colored beautifully.
I aimed at a chance and went, feeling,
A morning mist is beautiful faintly in a morning of , the landscape, illusion
It was transformed into a mark.
It shines on wetlands and turning woods of the fog deposit in which I peaked and is included.
The morning sun, while shaking a body in a chill, an expectation, chest
is the result for which I waited eagerly earnestly!
Purple tulip field near Achthuizen on Goeree Overflakkee.
Don't use my images without my explicit permission
Tea fields at Ba Gua tea garden in Nantou County.
In Explore #264 on November 2, 2014.
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browsing through old pictures i didn't get to upload.
i really envy you who are having autumn. it's almost 100 degrees here!
appears weird to me and it may marks a closeness of the Halloween time this year. I'm sure those won't be there anymore but some ghosts and spirits of the season may still stay in the air around. Woo!!!
There were people working on the rice fields near the trees they use to perch and this one was a bit far away.
"We're all golden sunflowers inside."
Who wouldn't want to live in that peaceful house on this sunflower field? Sunflowers are amazing. Some can last for about a decade but only bloom for a few weeks a year. Sunflowers always remind me that even though life is full of challenges, keep your head high, smile, and be happy.
Mýrdalssandur (Nootka lupine) 20210715
The human factor on the flora and vegetation of Iceland
The influence of Homo sapiens on the vegetation can be split in the effect of medieval Viking settlements and the more modern footprint of the human culture on the Icelandic vegetation. For one thing, the early Vikings destroyed most of the original birch forests. For more on this topic see vegetation types/forests. But even up to date one can question some of the farming practices in Iceland. The sheep culture is so deeply embedded in the Icelandic heritage that the erosion effects of these practices on the landscape are socially undebatable. Nevertheless, the Icelanders have become aware that something had to be done about erosion. One thing that was done - as so often all over the world - was not to address the real problem (erosion by overgrazing) but to find a quick solution. The idea was that a single species from Alaska, being the Nootka lupine (Lupinus nootkatesis - Lúpina) would solve the problem. It has been sown all along roadsides (where soil degradation is most apparent). And it has been successful, so successful that it grew to become monocultures giving no chance to indigenous species!
Source: Natural History of Iceland Site.
I would never find this place if this was a normal year. It is 10 minutes walk from a huge garden centre. Also 10 minutes walk from a major dual carriageway. It's one of the places you drive past on the way to some great photography spots.
I saw an article a few days ago saying the lockdown made us appreciate the outdoors. It's definitely true. It is true that it made us appreciate our nearest surroundings as well. I've never focused so much on the local OS maps as in the last 10 weeks - every path, bridleway and local road is now full of undiscovered treasures.