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Mein Lieblingsbaum an einem nebligen Dezembermorgen (zusammengesetzt aus 9 Einzelaufnahmen) / My favorite tree on a misty December morning (composed of 9 images)
Hopefully going back to Warley Place, Essex, on Monday to have another attempt at photographing the daffodils (this was taken a couple of years ago with my old camera so hoping for slightly better results!!) Hopefully the weather will be kind and I may even lug the tripod!!!
I love this tree in the winter ... then it looks even older and I wonder what he has probably experienced in the last 500-600 years.
My first and probably last upload coming from my cellphone...During my running training this morning I had that paradise feeling which I want to share a little...
A windy ride, but the last mild day before the temperature drops below freezing according to the forecast.
eine von den 1000jährigen, so wird zumindest gesagt. Aber wenn auch nicht ganz so alt, beeindruckend sind sie allemal.
Letztes Jahr kam mir die Idee, meinen Lieblingsbaum - die alte Eiche - im Wechsel der Jahreszeiten zu fotografieren. Von Oktober 2014 bis jetzt, August 2015 habe ich dieses Projekt verfolgt und zu jeder Jahreszeit auf gutes Wetter gelauert. Nun ist es vollbracht und ich hoffe, das Ergebnis gefällt euch :-)
This dead oak stands on the edge of Loch Maree and was a perfect subject for the end of surf and turf workshop. He looks like a ent and I've named him old Oakenshore.
Two almost identical in height oak trees down a country lane in the springtime, plus two identical 50 mph road signs in the distance...
My initial intention was to edited this in a mytical, even slightly threatening way: the usual approach to these woods. But as it progressed I thought of it in a more uplifting way. Happy Hobbits would want more joy in their lives, sparkle & colour. Hence sunshine permeates the dowdy rocks & moss. Who is to say that this is not how it is when we are not looking. After all, them pesky humans mess everything up so we need to fool them to leave us alone.
So my thinking went . . . .
Der Nationalerbe-Baum Richteiche St. Gangolf steht vermutlich seit etwa 650 Jahren am Weg von Besseringen nach St. Gangolf. Erstmals erwähnt wurde sie 1487. Noch vor der Entdeckung Amerikas. Die Eiche ist innen komplett hohl.