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Tynemouth Pier extends 900 metres out to sea and the walk to the pier lighthouse is rewarded with some magnificent views of the river entrance and back towards Tynemouth Priory & Castle. The pier is a Grade II Listed building and dates back to Victorian times when its construction was a major feat of engineering.
8 second exposure with 2-stop soft split GND and CPL filters. Low tide revealed the foreground element under first morning light. I was standing in water during the exposure.
"For the last three years, ProRail, The Eye Association Netherlands (Oogvereniging) and more than 200 Dutch municipalities have worked together to make Dutch train stations accessible to the 350.000 blind or partially sighted people in the Netherlands. On Tuesday, October 31, the task, costing around 30 million euros, was completed.
Measures taken
In order to make NS stations accessible to the blind and partially sighted, more than 90 kilometres of visible and perceptible guidelines have been installed in 410 train stations. The guidelines will ensure that visually impaired people do not lose their way."
( www.iamexpat.nl/expat-info/dutch-expat-news/all-dutch-tra...)
The human eye needs a certain amount of time to get used to the alternation of light and dark, and this bridge is no exception. However, thanks to the bright strip of light on the ceiling, I couldn't get lost even during the day and reached the other side safely.
Ilford HP5+
Adonal 1:100 + sea salt
60´, 19,5°C
Nikon F2 (1971-1980)
Nikkor 28mm/f 3.5 K (1975-1977)
Darkness falls over Bressay and Noss as LK174 Avrella, a whitefish trawler, returns to port in Lerwick.
Nürnberg, Hafen
Nikon D850, f/10.0, 1.6 sec, 105.0mm, ISO 100
AF-S VR Micro-Nikkor 105mm f/2.8G IF-ED
The small light house at the end of Travemünde pier. It marks the mouth of river Trave and the approach to the Scandinavia quay, destination for many ferries from the Baltic states.
Travemünde, Germany.
Canon 100d - Tamron 17-50 f2.8
Another shot from a fun spot that I've visited numerous times in the last 10 years. May the light find you all this year.
The sun bursts through the cloud at Narrabeen Beach on Sydney's Northern beaches at sunrise.
Canon 6D
Canon 24-70 f/2.8L II USM
ISO 100 | 24mm | F11 | 1/40 sec
7 image stitched panorama
Guide Falls on the Guide River, North West Tasmania.
A very attractive waterfall that is a leisurely amble from the car park and is surrounded by lawns and numerous picnic spaces.
The geology here is remarkable. During the Tertiary period, hot, fast moving basalt flowed down a gravel-floored river valley, pooled and cooled relatively slowly. That left a flow around 4m thick in places with strong columnar formations. Subsequent erosion of the gravel from beneath the lava flow resulted in the collapse of the basalt in great, van-sized blocks like so much 'lego'.
The Guide follows that weakness in the surface today.
Nikon Z6, Nikkor Z 24-70/4 S, 1/5th sec at f/14, ISO 64. FL ~24mm, Breakthrough Photography 6 Stop ND filter.