View allAll Photos Tagged roots
Holga 120N, neutral density soft surround filter, HP5+
D-76 1+2, 12½ min
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A small waterfall at Hoi Khua, in Luang Prabang, Laos. The tangle of roots in right foreground belong to the nearby jungle.
one of these roots looks just like a frog to me.. do you see it ?
oh goodness, forgive me, but I think this is a ficus tree. im so bad at distinguishing the banyan from the ficus.. they are amazing trees that speak to me. yep, im weird that way. but they make me feel more energized and strong :)
sooc.. ( I just found out sooc means straight out of the camera. which i think is so cool. )
A black and white study of the roots of a Yew tree. The roots have become exposed on a bank by a track in the Malvern Hills, Worcestershire.
Olympic National Park is the land of bigness. Within the park you will find some of the largest trees in the world including Sitka Spruce, Western Hemlock, Western Red Cedar, and coastal Douglas Fir. Of course at the bottom of it all a healthy root system is mandatory.
Here, deep within the Hoh Rain Forest the roots of the Sitka Spruce and Red Cedar form tangled and contorted shapes, as they spread out to stabilize the trees, and provide ample water and nutrients to foliage that can be many hundreds of feet above the ground.
Olympic National Park WA
Moss covered tree roots at Cholesbury Camp. lying exposed as they trace downwards in the ditch. Taken on my walk there last week
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Nature makes the best art!
We always see this uprooted tree in Harrington Beach State Park and admire it.
Reaching, caressing, exploring all that roots of a tree can reach !
If you would like to view my other Flickr site, just give a click. It is more on the effects side of creativeness. The photo above you can see treated on my Creative Bling site...creation called Hellfire....Enjoy.
www.flickr.com/photos/90258845@N05/
Pushing on that trigger is like pulling magic into my very soul...Darrell.
Have a safe and fabulous day dear Flickr friends !!!!
Anglesey Abbey, Cambridgeshire (UK)
Ja tornam esser-hi, on ho varem deixar sa darrera vegada i reprenem de nou amb gran il.lusió. Esperam amb forces que es generin aquestes arrels que cercam des de fa tant de temps. Arrelau-vos ben fort!
There are some gnarly looking trees and roots at the side of the lake and for a split second the sun came along and lit them up for me...............and also managed to ruin the light on the water all at the same time!
Tree roots break through the gently ascending forest path of the "Lattengrund" on the way to Schrammsteinaussicht.
Saxon Switzerland, Germany.
shot on film: Canon 500n - Fuji Superia X-Tra 400
There's probably a move reference in the title, but you'd have to be 50+ and most likely from the US to get it, and even then, it's not that great.
Lots of these were on the hiking trails in the Smoky Mountains - tree roots exposed from the thousands of hikers that traverse those trails each year. They make for very good tripping hazards (especially for those of us that that forget to raise a foot one in a while)!!