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© All rights reserved Arnaud Chatelet. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.
3 layer composite with one photo supplying the foreground and cityscape, although the skyline has been enlarged, and a cloudscape composited from another photo taken in Spring of 2017.
Várias vezes já falei que fico vibrando com o resultado de muitas de minhas fotos.
Essa é uma das que vibrei muito.
É uma super-macro de uma micro planta suculenta, com duas flores, uma abrindo, outra por abrir.
Essa planta mede, aproximadamente 1,5 cm de altura por 2 cm de largura (dá para cobrir com a ponta do nosso dedão da mão), e estava num tronco de árvore a cerca de três metros de altura, no meio do mato, o que tornou a foto muito difícil de ser realizada.
Mas consegui uma foto muito nítida.
O tamanho da plantinha pode ser avaliada comparando-se o tamanho dos liquéns, que todos conhecem e que estão espalhados ao redor dela.
Não fosse uma agressão à natureza, eu levaria essa plantinha para casa, de tão linda.
This plant measures approximately 1.5 cm height by 2 cm width.
Mounds of phlox growing in the sands near the Glen Canyon Dam and Lake Powell on the Navajo Nation Reservation.
Some 250 kilometers northeast of Kunming, the capital of China's Yunnan Province, lies Dongchuan, a rural area with the world's most imposing red earth. Spread over vast terraced fields, Dongchuan’s unusual brownish-red color comes from its rich deposit of iron and copper. Exposed to the warm and humid climate of Yunnan, the iron in the soil undergoes oxidization to form iron oxide which is naturally red in color. These oxides, deposited through many years, gradually developed into the extraordinary reddish brown soil seen here today. Every year during spring, when this area is ploughed for agriculture, a large number of visitors and photographers come to see squares of freshly upturned red earth waiting to be sown along with areas of budding green plants. The fiery red soil juxtaposed with emerald green barley, and golden yellow buckwheat, against a blue sky produces one of the richest color palate rarely seen in nature.
Turnips and roots scattered for the sheep, I can only think with lambing time getting closer. We have seen lambs in the past during February in this area!
Here is a 2-image Vertorama that I captured last Friday afternoon... along the railway line... somewhere between the towns of Caledon and Villiersdorp.
Vertorama, Nikon D800, Nikkor 70 - 200 mm at 200 mm, ISO of 800, aperture of f/18 with a 1/80th second exposure.
Morning Rays beginning to light Tropic Ditch Waterfall
According to the town history of Tropic, Utah (www.townoftropicut.gov/town-history.htm), "Ole Ahlstrom and thirty-nine other men completed the ditch by the spring of 1892. It was on May 23, 1892 that the ten-mile canal brought the waters flowing from the East Fork of the Sevier River over the cliffs of Bryce Canyon into the Tropic Valley, a drop of 1,500 feet; the only streem so far known to have been diverted from the Great Inland Basin, and which would eventually find its way into the Gulf of California through the big Colorado River. "
This waterfall and the Mossy Cave trail that takes you to it is in Bryce Canyon National Park.
explore on 6 December 2011
شكرا لكم احبائي على الزيارة
Thank you my friends to visit
اترك لكم نقدها
على راحتكم انقدوها
فيها شيء عجبني
اتمنى يعجبكم
وهو من صنع الخالق عز وجل
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وشكرا من الاعماق لابوصالح
نبهني للمكان
The Milk River flows slowly through Writing-On-Stone Provincial Park in Alberta, Canada.
Canon FTb
Kodak Gold 200 film
Scanned using a Nikon Super CoolScan 9000 ED with the FH-835S 35mm strip film tray.
Here's the complete album of the photos shot on this Road Trip.
Check out an album containing more of my photos shot in 2001.