View allAll Photos Tagged greenery
Lisgar Gardens, located on a beautiful hillside in the heart of Hornsby, is a well establisehd garden that is known for its range of Camellias and secluded location.
The gardens, covering an area of 2.6 hectares (6.5 acres), are often referred to as "The Secret Gardens" and boasts a variety of native and exotic plant species.
Built on a steep hillside, the garden’s different levels were created by the construction of sandstone block walls. By 1950 the gardens were planted with rhododendrons, azaleas, gardenias and other exotics in harmony with native trees and ferns, highlighting the varieties of camellia.
The gardens now boast more than three hundred specimens of camellias (including over two hundred varieties), mass plantings of annuals in the formal gardens, a covered pavilion for weddings and other celebrations, a shade house containing the fish ponds, three waterfalls, informal lawn areas, picnic tables and a rainforest walk.
Thank you everyone so much for sharing your quality photos which is a great way to see and keep in touch with the world from home. Also for your kind comments and favours which are much valued.I am not able to take on any more members to follow or to post to groups. I prefer not to receive invites to groups
Who's ready for spring greenery? Well, it doesn't get any greener than the temperate rain forests in Olympic National Park. In fact, the green here is so intense that it almost doesn't seem real! Did you know there are four rainforests in Olympic NP? Mosses, ferns, Douglas fir, red alders, Western hemlocks, and Sitka spruce thrive in these forests that record 12-14 feet of rain per year!
This is one of my favorite workshops as we photograph such a wide range of landscapes. Rugged coastlines, old-growth rainforest, wildflowers, and glaciated peaks...you get it all!
actionphototours.com/workshops/olympic-national-park-phot...
Thank you for viewing my images.
Positive comments are welcome
Please follow me on:
Flickr --- flickr.com/photos/moranguy/
Facebook --- www.facebook.com/moranguy
Instagram --- www.instagram.com/moranguy
Thank you everyone so much for sharing your quality photos which is a great way to see and keep in touch with the world from home. Also for your kind comments and favours which are much valued.I am not able to take on any more members to follow or to post to groups. I prefer not to receive invites to groups
A view that looks through the greenery and nature that surround and represent the Agence Parisienne du Climat.
To see more go to www.eutouring.com/images_agence_parisienne_du_climat.html
Late afternoon in the local woods and the grass was seemingly giving off its own light. It feels so good to be photographing grass again ;D
Before the heat sets in and shrivels up all but the toughest life forms, the Sonoran Desert puts on a brief spring show of wildflowers and leafy greenery - Tonto Basin, Gila County, Arizona
{ L } Lightbox view is best
© All Rights Reserved
This shows the lush foliage in the mountains of North Carolina. I was impressed by how many different kinds of plants and wildflowers seemed to be growing all over. Another thing that really comes through in post processing is how very different and shaded all of the trees and vegetation are. there is such a huge range of color that it's fascinating. The human eye picks up a lot of these variations and our brains process the info and tell us, "Wow! This is really gorgeous!" Unfortunately, many cameras don't present those variations in the original SOOC pics. Often a scene looks like just a bunch of green, not purples, reds, yellows and various shades of green and brown. It seems those colors are hidden in the information that was captured, though, and do appear if you tweak the image a bit. That is why I love post processing so much. What the mind "sees", the eyes can, too!
If you look closely, there is a patch of grass to the left of center in the pic, between the distant mountains and the foreground. There appears to be a road there. Perhaps there are homes down there. What a beautiful place to live!
66531 whisks 4L75 Trafford Park to Felixstowe south through the Staffordshire countryside on the approach to Rugeley Trent Valley.