View allAll Photos Tagged middleofnowhere
Fields in the Spenge area in June. Not quite the middle of nowhere, but you can see it from there...
We went out for a drive and ended up in the middle of nowhere, but we got to see the Milky Way...
Have a lovely Sunday, My friends!
As usual, thanks for your visits, comments and faves!
:-)
Explore #6 : June 22, 2022
November 11, 2013 . . 2:06 pm
An abandoned 1955 Ford Country Sedan sits
in an unattended field in the middle of nowhere . . .
On a dark, rainy day : (
Pawnee Rock, Kansas Population: 225
– Fred Bear
Love the song by Ted Nugent - Fred Bear. Seen him in concert at least 3 times. Must be a Michigan thing. Hehe
100 x Scenery 8/100
Chalk formations Gove county Kansas. One of five National Natural Landmark sites within the state.
Stopped here while on a quick family road-trip, Wish I would have had more time but certainly glad I didn't pass up the opportunity to stop.
-Stanislaw Jerzy Lec
100 x Scenery 9/100
Here is another golden hour sleigh ride picture. I got all the best times of the day for this sleigh ride. I was so happy to have had the opportunity to go on it with my family. :)
Decided to have a day exploring, I do not own a sat nav, I do occasionally have a look at a map, but I have a knack of finding my way around. So on route to Dartmoor I felt sure there would be a river off to my right so down through all these country lanes, and bingo a beautiful river, plus the bonus of a bridge. When I got down into the river to my surprise there were two arches. What a beautiful autumn morning to be in a river.
Thank you for looking, and I really appreciate your comments.
This result was taken on a very fruitful day in November 2019, when lots of fog was hanging around on the hills and valleys. If you are going to visit the woods as well, leave nothing than your footprints and do not take anything than your impressions.
November 2019 | Niefern
© Max Angelsburger Photography
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Music recommendation: Chillout Electronic Music — Night City — Melancholy Vibe | www.youtube.com/watch?v=dg_VsotY0MU
My homeland Northwest Germany is poor in mountains and rocks, so the only exception has been a very popular and even mystic place for centuries. We took advantage of the nice Summer weather to visit the Externsteine on Sunday.
The Externsteine belong to the Teutoburger Wald and are a natural outcropping of five sandstone pillars, the tallest of which is 37 mtr high and form a wall of several hundred metres in length, in a region that is otherwise largely devoid of rocks. The pillars have been modified and decorated by humans over the centuries. The place has been an important location for religion and spiritual activities throughout history. In warm evening light the beauty performs perfectly.
-— Leroy Anderson, "Sleigh Ride"
100 x Scenery 11/100
Another sleigh ride shot. Through the woods we go, enjoying the peace and wintery bliss.
taken while going 80 mph down I-80 (no, i was not driving) in MiddleOfNoWhere, Nebraska, from the backseat, while watching "Hairspray" on DVD, and telling the boy not to pull on the door handle of the car.
this is mo' bettah
-Thich Nhat Hanh
100 x Scenery 93/100
Only a few more days until December! That means my 25 days of Christmas is here! :)
Am I the only one who hopes for a tornado when driving in weather like this? Taking a picture of a tornado is at the top of my photo bucket list.
Continuing the Rusted Relic image set with a shot from last winter. In particular I want to draw your attention to the near front fender (actually the only remaining fender). When I first slipped under the fence and walked around this car, looking closely, my jaw dropped: what artist created this masterpiece?
Wind. Numbing cold. Searing heat. Blown grit. And the more closely I looked, the better it got!
The car has been in this field for sixty years, and it might be for sixty more - disintegrating atom by atom, molecule by molecule. There are those who view abandoned hulks as eyesores, but I am grateful for them. It rests in one field among hundreds; all the others are empty of eyesores. I think there is room for a piece of history here, in the middle of nowhere, buried in full view on the lone prairie, a constantly changing masterpiece of shapes, lines, textures, and colours - and a constant source of inspiration for at least one photographer.
More to come...
Photographed at Rosefield, Saskatchewan (Canada). Don't use this image on websites, blogs, or other media without explicit permission ©2022 James R. Page - all rights reserved.
As a thick cover of fog laid over the hills and valleys around, this day in November offered superb opportunities for woodland photography throughout the day.
November 2019 | Niefern
© Max Angelsburger Photography
Thanks for your interest! Feel free to have a look on the other images of my portfolio as well.
Consider this photograph hanging on your wall? Contact me with your needed size to get advice regarding highquality photopaper, canvas and frame.
Please like, comment and share this photograph to support my work.
Become a follower as well to see my latest releases:
www.flickr.com/photos/153534027@N06/
www.instagram.com/max_angelsburger/
www.facebook.com/MaxAngelsburgerPhotography/
Music recommendation: Study Music for Better Concentration and Memory 🔵 Increase Productivity with Binaural Beats | www.youtube.com/watch?v=3P1yQYvZLsw
Going through the archives. I'm really not sure where this was. Somewhere in S. Utah, most likely between Capital Reef and Natural Bridges National Monument. In the second photo (below) you can see the bridge in the distance. While we were there, we got a bit freaked out when a small plane kept coming towards us and eventually landed right beside us on a small stretch of dirt road. He climbed out and started talking to us like it was the most natural thing in the world to drop from the sky in the middle of nowhere. I love this part of the southwest and the vast expanses with hardly anyone around.......until I need a restaurant, gas or a bathroom.
I imagine 150+ years ago, long before any road, this 400 ton, 2 story tall, glacially deposited massive boulder was a solitary landmark in this otherwise empty expanse.
People would see it from afar as they were riding along on their horses or pulling their wagons and go to it out of curiosity or to get out of the sun.
Eventually, it was used to help in directions for pioneers journeying though the area. A path started wearing into the ground east to west going past it, which eventually turned into a pioneer trail. From this, it progressed to a dirt road, into a gravel road and eventually into the lonely stretch of blacktop that it is currently.
All the while, this monstrous boulder sits, watching the years go by, suffering the indignity of teens' graffiti and thinking, "if only I hadn't been so dang large."
empire-press.com/2012/03/mansfields-yeager-rock-featured-...
this is from somewhere lol im sure my mum will tell me where it is later when she sees this. Just funny to see people building houses in the middle of nowhere...... Altho i can understand them. Imagine waking up to that view every day!!!
Don't use this image on websites or other media
without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.