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“You can't do clear observation if you ain't in the field.
You can't be a pure observer if you're now in the field.”
~ Toba Beta
Photos and contest are protected by copyright, Gio F. Copyright © 2016 - All rights reserved For any use need my written permission
Il mio cavalletto non lo abbandono, è solo in attesa.
Sempre.
So fare quel che posso, quel che posso è questo.
Quel che io ho sempre fatto in ogni caso.
Ho una grande macchina, fa più lei che me, o fa quel che so fare io con il suo potenziale che non uso al meglio.
Lo faccio per me, per uscire fuori da cose enormi che possono schiacciare chiunque.
Non è un gioco, è il mio rifugio.
E il mio rifugio è la musica, le cose mie.
La mia famiglia, lo sport...
Gio
for "Smile on Saturday" ;-)
Mas de Brunelly, Paradou, Provence
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Sorry, to me is very difficult to visit people that always only leave a fav without commenting...
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Do not use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission.
All rights reserved - Copyright © fotomie2009 - Nora Caracci
Bass Point is a headland in Australia on the New South Wales south coast. The point was named by Matthew Flinders in around 1800, after his friend and fellow explorer George Bass. Wikipedia
Gibbous moon composite with Point Pinos Beach in Pacific Grove, California near Monterey. Long exposure processed with Lightroom, Photoshop, layers and Topaz Simplify filters.
Castle Point Lighthouse is a truly majestic lighthouse standing on a rocky cliff which was formed 2 million years ago. It’s the tallest lighthouse in North Island. It’s a charming place, which every photographer will love. It takes less than 15 minutes to walk to the top viewpoint. You can still see some fossil shells in the rock if you walk to the end of the boardwalk.
* A second shot from Spurn Point this time looking inland. Spurn is well known as somewhere to see fantastic sunsets . However this evening it was not that spectacular but still rather enjoyable to see . This was taken looking across the Humber estuary towards the East Yorkshire “ mainland “ . There is not a lot of water in the shot just some very wet mudbanks .
If you are interested in the area there is a description of Spurn Point in the text of my previous post
THANKS FOR YOUR VISIT TO MY STREAM.
I WOULD BE VERY GRATEFUL IF YOU COULD NOT FAVE A PHOTO
WITHOUT ALSO LEAVING A COMMENT .
Late afternoon shot from Shelley point showing the beach, hence the name, lighthouse and ships waiting to enter Saldana Bay to load ore.
Blue hour at Marshall Point Light in Port Clyde, Maine, with color removed.
The current lighthouse was built in 1858, and following a lightning strike to the original, the current keeper's house was built in 1895.
Located in Mendocino County, California ~130 miles north of San Francisco. The first lighthouse on this site, built in 1870, was destroyed by an earthquake in 1906. The current lighthouse became operational in 1908 and was modernized in 1978. In 2000 a nonprofit organization called the Point Arena Lighthouse Keepers became the official owners and it is now designated at a California Historic Landmark.
Novigrad na Dobri castle (14th ct.), Croatia
(trying to achieve a moody film look by manipulating curves, levels and colors from the RAW file)
Isn't it just like Heaven
When You walk into the room
There's not a thing that's hidden
When every eye is on You
Can't get enough of Your presence
It's the perfect point of view
Isn't it just like, just like
Just like Heaven?
Hmm, come a little closer, stay a little longer
Hmm, I can't get enough of You
Hmm, come a little closer, stay a little longer
Hmm, I can't get enough of You
Doesn't it sound like Heaven
When You're singing over me
There's not a voice more constant
Your melodies, they never cease
Here I will stand in Your presence
In my true identity
Doesn't it sound like, yeah, it sounds like
Just like Heaven
Beluga Point is a popular viewing spot on the Anchorage to Seward Road, Alaska Rt. 1. Here you're looking across Turnagain Arm, a fjord off of Cook Inlet.
Photographed and toured the Long Point Lighthouse in Crow Head on North Twillingate Island off the Northeast Coast of Newfounland
Long Point Lighthouse is an active Canadian lighthouse located outside Crow Head on North Twillingate Island off the northeast coast of Newfoundland. The lighthouse, completed in 1876 and is historic to the town of Twillingate.
©Copyright Notice
This photograph and all those within my photostream are protected by copyright. They may not be reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written permission.
Sunrise over the Panamint Range west of the erosion landscape at Zabriskie Point / Death Valley.
Thanks for visiting! Danke für deinen Besuch
please respect/bitte beachte Copyright © All rights reserved
DEW POINT
The dew point is the temperature at which dew would form assuming all other conditions remained the same. The dew point is a function of the air temperature and humidy. The dew point temperature can never be higher than the air temperature. If the dew point temp and air temp are the same, than the humidity must be 100%.
Bass Point is a headland in Australia on the New South Wales south coast. The point was named by Matthew Flinders in around 1800, after his friend and fellow explorer George Bass. Wikipedia
The last light of day on the Point Bonita Lighthouse in the Marin Headlands, California, as seen from Lands End, San Francisco.
Point Lookout Lighthouse ~ Original lighthouse built in 1830. In 1927, the lighthouse was expanded toward the Potomac River and divided into a duplex so that two families could live in the lighthouse. The lighthouse was deactivated in 1966.
A sundown at the Zabriskie Point in Death Valley National Park. It was a very cold December day after the sun set. It was also a very warm looking sunset. This was shot a couple of months after the record setting flood that swept Death Valley. Some of the roads were still closed. National Park Services from CA, NV, and AZ contributed to restoring most of the main roads.
The low area in Zabriskie Pont is now covered with light colored sandstone sediment from the heavy rains. Earlier that year, the low area was dark colored.
Later after blue hour, I took a hike down into the low grounds for some panoramas. It was cold, and the ground was hard. The winds had picked up and the temperature had dropped about 20 degrees once the sun went down. Nevertheless, a peaceful hike.
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“Seeing things from a different point of view can help us understand why other people act the way they do. We too often judge people without having all the facts.”
Sean Covey
DSCN4520-001
* Given that Spurn Point is relatively close to Hull I guess it's surprising I do not go there often. It is the oddest and wildest part of East Yorkshire with huge skies. However I find it too desolate to really enjoy, though some of my friends who are serious birders love it . This shot was taken on the narrowest parts of the spit. On the left hand side is the North Sea and on the right the waters of the Humber estuary . The little wooden cabin is a shelter in case a high tide cuts you off from the mainland which is not uncommon. You can see the lighthouse which is about four miles further along the spit.
Its a hard place to describe so I will borrow some text from the Yorkshire wildlife trust .
From the Yorkshire wildlife trust website
Spurn Point (or Spurn Head as it is also known) is a narrow sand spit on the tip of the coast of the East Riding of Yorkshire, that reaches into the North Sea and forms the north bank of the mouth of the Humber estuary. It is over 3 miles long, almost half the width of the estuary at that point, and as little as 50 yards wide in places. The southernmost tip is known as Spurn Head or Spurn Point and is the home to an RNLI lifeboat station and disused lighthouse. It forms part of the civil parish of Easington.
Spurn Head covers 280 acres above high water and 450 acres of foreshore. It has been owned since 1960 by the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and is a designated National Nature Reserve, Heritage Coast and is part of the Humber Flats, Marshes and Coast Special Protection Area.
The peninsula is made up from sand and shingle as well as Boulder Clay eroded from the Holderness coastline washed down the coastline from Flamborough Head. Material is washed down the coast by longshore drift and accumulates to form the long, narrow embankment in the sheltered waters inside the mouth of the Humber estuary. It is maintained by plants, especially Marram grass . Waves carry material along the peninsula to the tip, continually extending it; as this action stretches the peninsula it also narrows it to the extent that the sea can cut across it in severe weather. When the sea cuts across it permanently, everything beyond the breach is swept away, only to eventually reform as a new spit pointing further south. This cycle of destruction and reconstruction occurs approximately every 250 years. The now crumbling defences will not be replaced and the spit will continue to move westwards at a rate of 2 metres per year, keeping pace with the coastal erosion further north.
THANKS FOR YOUR VISIT TO MY STREAM.
I WOULD BE VERY GRATEFUL IF YOU COULD NOT FAVE A PHOTO
WITHOUT ALSO LEAVING A COMMENT .
Happy find -- going thru old stuff found an old favorite that never got to share.....
Big Sur sunset ............
I loved the rocky points and sandy beaches in Finistère, Brittany. This view of the Pointe de Toulinguet is from the Pointe de Penhir, Crozon Peninsula. Two handheld images merged in Photoshop.
I hope you are enjoying the weekend. Thanks, as always, for stopping by and for your kind comments, awards and faves -- I appreciate them all.
© Melissa Post 2016
A sunrise worth sharing taken on Saturday morning with a telephoto lens at Torquay Beach in Victoria, Australia. The swell was large and colours vivid.
McGulpin Point Lighthouse (1869) is located on a bluff overlooking the Straits of Mackinac. It was deactivated in 1906 and until recently the lighthouse was a private residence.
Emmet County purchase the lighthouse for $720,000 in the summer of 2008. In the Spring of 2009 Emmet County replaced the long missing light & lantern room and began returning the residence portion of the lighthouse into a museum dedicated to the history of McGulpin's Point Light and the surrounding McGulpin family land. Since May 30th, the McGulpin Point Light shines across the Straits for the first time since 1906.
The grounds are open anytime. McGulpin Point Lighthouse is now a museum, but I think the best reason for entering the building is to climb the winding red stairway to the top of the tower. Even better it's FREE!
Thank you for taking the time to visit, have a wonderful weekend. :-)
Lowell Point recreational trailhead located in Seward, Alaska. The beginning of a awesome hike to south beach and the old military fort I have yet to take.