View allAll Photos Tagged gog
Set apart from the 12 Apostles are Gog & Magog, two limestone stacks moulded over millennia.
This gloomy evening presents them in a forbidding mood.
After getting up a little to early for sunrise I headed out to the Gibson Steps. The colour started an hour before sunrise which is an indication of a cracker sunrise. I almost changed my plans to stay up on top of the cliffs to capture it but decide to stay the course. I am glad I did as the soft pinks really contrast with the yellow sandstone of the sea stacks.
I know that if I make the effort to get up and visit a place at sunrise it means I really like that place, so when I get up for sunrise and stay there until sunset 3 days in a row it means I absolutely love that place!
I probably should have paced myself a bit because I was like a zombie by the end of my week along the Great Ocean Road but I was just too excited to explore as much of one of my bucket list Australian locations to waste time getting a good night's sleep!
A very crisp morning at Port Campbell, however, we were greeted with a lovely sunrise. Well worth getting up early for the shoot.
This image is included in 2 galleries 1) Nature related - most and 2) Landscape - Coast, both curated by Odd K Hauge.
Yep, another Garden of the Gods Park image. This might be my last one............maybe:)
I think of Dinosaurs when I look at this.
HDR Vertorama.
Great Ocean Road | VIC | Australia
A shot I found in the archives from almost 12 years ago of the two towering sandstone and limestone stacks named Gog & Magog on the Port Campbell National Park Shipwreck Coast, shot from down the Gibsons Steps on the Great Ocean Road, with heavy storm clouds looming.
Some members of this colourful Molly Dance troupe posing for pictures at Thriplow. Is she a rose
between two thorns…?
The rain finally stopped, sky had turned to patches of blue with strong cloud formation,& folks took the opportunity to have a walk along the beach with their dogs
From 1671. Part of the clock which protrudes from St Dunstans in the West, Fleet Street. When the old medieval church was demolished in 1831, the Marquess of Hertford bought the clock (and giants) and set it up at his villa in Regent's Park.
The clock was returned to St Dunstan's by Lord Rothermere (who had taken over the lease of the Regent's Park villa) for George V's Silver Jubilee in 1935. Just as well as the villa suffered a fire the next year and was demolished.