View allAll Photos Tagged oldtree

Hobbits are little people. They are actually smaller than Dwarves, variable between two and four feet. Since they are much smaller than the big folk, their name to the humans, they are shy from them.

The black frame is the unexposed negative, not cropped.

This is exactly what I see on camera.

luciérnagas brillan en la oscuridad,

se esconden del sol que agoniza,

sin saber que son pequeños soles perdidos...

en el espacio infinito...

I always love this old tree ~ it's obviously dead as there has been no leaves or growth for many years but there is always something intriguing about it!

 

No. 6 365 ~ 2018 .... No Longer! ....

 

Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all.

Bright sunny day on the beach. Neat drift wood

I love this gnarly old tree. It goes so well with the house.

Bristlecone pines in the Inyo National Forest, White Mountains, California. In this place there is the oldest living tree on earth.

Crazy fun sunset on my way home the other night. Clouds were perfect. Used orton.

I spotted the Speedwell by the old trunk. The blue really stands out!

View this "whomping catalpa tree" Large on black.

#395 in interestingness (on 2007-07-21) as of 2007-07-23 Thanks everyone.

#338 in interestingness (on 2007-07-21) as of 2007-07-25

 

Compare the twist in this tree trunk to that of oldest catalpa in the world, the 150-year-old specimen in the Minster graveyard of St Mary’s Butts in the English town of Reading in Berkshire. www.flickr.com/photos/h2oalchemist/385507828/

 

View old muggle car here.

  

View current most interesting by Rascaille Rabbit.

Through a crack in an oak tree. Taken on a Nikon N70.

The floodplains are where the earth meets the sky and blossoms in the fullness of its beauty (Sarah White)

Moab, Utah

Caltar 65mm f4.5. Provia 100iso, f5.6 for 2 hours.

Some iPhone shots I took last month. I tend to use my phone camera while walking around, but then forget I took any shots when I get home.

 

MichaelLeePicsNYC.com

 

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When a Giant Redwood dies, often the roots throw up more trees around it. Once the Giant is gone, there is an empty ring where the old giant once stood. This giant footprint was more than 20 feet across!

Natural area Road to Mt Evens, Colorado

(from the "Trees Are People Too")

This is an old tree that i saw near the Kakkayam Dam reservoir - Kakkayam, Calicut

 

View IN THIS SIZE

 

Explore #453 On July 22, 2008

 

Image taken just outside of the city of Cork, in Ireland. I was driving from Kerry towards Cork and saw this lonely tree emerging from the lifting fog. As the sun started to illuminate the scene I parked, grabbed my gear and went for a couple of shots. I couldn't let the moment go by without having taken some pictures of this. Regards, Tjerk

This set of images were taken in a remote park in Osceola County and is not widely known. I only saw about one third of it but you can bet I'll go back again.

This is an old cypress grove near Westport. Driving through the grove the dappled light and feeling was so unique I had to go back and take this photo. Since the cypress trees are lined on both sides of the road, I imagine they were planted by someone long ago perhaps by one of the early settlers.

. . . at Walnut Canyon. From about 1100 to 1250, a community formed in the cliffs high above a creek near Flagstaff, Arizona. Walnut Canyon National Monument gives visitors a close-up look at the remains of this prehistoric community.

I have just made a number of reed pens and wished to try these out.

A walk in nature leads the soul back home (Mary Davis)

Big old oak on the edge of a floodplain off the Suwannee River. If you have never walked a floodplain this time of year in fall you really should! Absolutely beautiful.

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All images are © Fenix Blue Photography, All Rights Reserved. You may not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify this image without my written consent.

This old Willow used to stand between two fields, which

Cattle would have browsed in.

The tree would have been regularly pollarded, high enough

to stop cattle feeding on it.

After many years of this the trunk would have got thicker and

thicker, as you can see in the picture.

At some point this field was turned over to timber production

and the willow was left to its own devices.

As this tree grows on the banks of the river Teme, which

Is prone to regular flooding and battering from the

South-Westerly's, has become unseated and gone over

at an insane angle, this points the tree in a North-Easterly

direction - Good for navigation.

The dune pan at Sandbanks Provincial Park.

I remember the term "fox hole" being used during WW11 - but it takes on a whole new meaning in our boreal forest. I'd like to think that we'll see some new little foxes emerge from this den this summer. What a photo-op that would be.

Now that's a tree that has what it takes to survive! If you look closely, it has 4 large rocks in the roots, that were taken right from the rock face as it grew!

Trees are the poems the earth writes to the sky. (Kahlil Gibran)

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