View allAll Photos Tagged sugarloaf
Jostling for a spot at the front of the cable car, I managed this shot as we ascended Sugarloaf Mountain.
Back to some panorama's.
This is an 18 frame panorama of the awesome WA spot of Sugarloaf Rock.
Thanks for viewing
Cheers
I had set out to fly over Sugarloaf lighthouse but the gusty wind had forced me to change my plans.
A quick stop into Sugarloaf Bay and this rocky island looked interesting enough from the land that I decided I’d see what it looked like from above. As it turns out it was much bigger than I had realised and to get it all in frame required a pretty high climb. Did I mention it was windy? Man the Inspire continues to amaze me..
Rio......my one and only trip there and Mt Sugarloaf was not very co operative that day,however it does display a lovely monochromatic atmosphere
So this is the Sugarloaf Point Lighthouse (1875).
Located at Seal Rocks - just a little to the north of Sydney.
Sugarloaf Point Lighthouse stands on a dramatic headland east of Seal Rocks village. Completed in 1875, it is the first lighthouse designed by colonial architect James Barnet and one of only two towers in Australia with an external stairway.
It was originally built to guide ships along the rocky coastline to the north of Sydney, after a number of incidents, including the shipwrecking of the SS Catterthun and the SS Rainbow.
Below the lighthouse are the Lighthouse Keepers’ quarters and outbuildings that have been refurbished to offer holiday accommodation for visitors.
www.nationalparks.nsw.gov.au/-/media/visitor/files/pdf/br...
My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L IS USM lens.
Processed in Adobe Lightroom and PhotoPad Pro by NCH software.
Showery late autumn afternoon panorama in Alesund, Norway, from Sukkertoppen (Sugarloaf) hill. My umbrella sure did a workout in the minutes prior.
In this view of the north end of Sugarloaf Mountain, dipping beds of Ordovician Bighorn Dolomite rests on flat-lying Cambrian Pilgram Limestone and Park Shale. The surface between the dipping and flat lying beds is the Heart Mountain Detachment fault. The mountain can be seen from the Chief Joseph Highway (WY 296) in Shoshone National Forest northwest of Cody, Wyoming.
Arista EDU 100 4x5 film shot on a Graflex Crown Graphic, developed in Kodak HC-110b. Digitized with a Canon 6d in 4 shots and stitched together
A very, very early morning drive to this bluff in my hometown. I should have planned my composition the day before to save on the stress of running around looking for one but I don't mind this one. I wish the bench was facing the sunrise and I was sitting on it. In post processing I noticed a bird in the tree.
In this view of the north end of Sugarloaf Mountain, dipping beds of Ordovician Bighorn Dolomite rests on flat-lying Cambrian Pilgram Limestone and Park Shale. The surface betwen the two is the Heart Mountain Detachment fault. the mountain can be seen from the Chief Joseph Highway (WY 296) in Shoshone National Forest northwest of Cody, Wyoming.
So just a little to the north of Sydney, at Seal Rocks, is Sugarloaf Bay.
This is the view looking north to Cape Hawke.
Photographed from along Kinka Road, near my sister's weekend and holiday beach shack. Occasionally she allows us to wander up from Sydney to stay for a few nights.
But it is not without controversy because the internet is VERY bad and wifi doesn't exist at this beach wilderness.
I do not mind BUT Miss 17 has a meltdown. "How will I connect with my friends on Tik Tok?
"I don't know," I reply, "but I am going for a walk along the beach!"
The gentle lap of the waves on the beach (as above) drown out the wails. OR, you can escape to the local 'Single Fin' cafe. See the view from this cafe:
www.tripadvisor.com.au/Restaurant_Review-g1902826-d119640...
My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L IS USM lens.
Processed in Adobe Lightroom and PhotoPad Pro by NCH software.
My Canon EOS 5D Mk IV with the Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L IS USM lens.
Processed in Adobe Lightroom and PhotoPad Pro by NCH software.
Taken from Parkhouse Hill looking at Chrome Hill. The feature in the foreground is known as the Sugar Loaf. ???
Organ Mountains in New Mexico. Shot taken with an Olympus OM-1 film camera in the summer of 1983. Uploaded to digital in 2006.
Sugarloaf Mountain, Co. Wicklow, Ireland
It was one of those afternoons where the Sugarloaf mountain was being lit by the sun as it peered through clouds. This gave excellent diffused light.
My brother-in-law taking a break as we attempted to get on top of the freaking mountain. I thought it was a steep hike, turned in to a "not at this point in my life", hand over hand climb. Didn't get to the top. I think we could have gotten up there, but probably would have needed a rescue chopper to get us down. Oh well. Still fun, and a good workout.
Mynydd Pen y Fal, otherwise known as Sugarloaf mountain, as seen from the ridge between Pen Allt-Mawr and Pen Cerrig-calch in the Black Mountains of south Wales. This is the southern end of the Black Mountains, above the small town of Crickhowell. These hills form the eastern end of the Bannau Brycheiniog, the Brecon Beacons National Park. It was a lovely day with hazy sun lighting up the Llanbedr valley and picking out the trees.
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Taken looking southeast from near Buffalo Gap, Virginia. Sugarloaf Mountain is the pointy hill mid-distance, and the 10-mile-long east-west jog of the Blue Ridge Mountains is the almost-level feature in the far distance.
Another take on the sugarloaf rock in WA.
Visited this spot over a few days, sunrise/sunset / middle of day.
There are so many compositions at this place, and i have plenty of others.
This rock sits in the wild indian ocean, it was fairly calm the day i was there, a LE on a wild day here could take hours :-).
Must be viewed Large to see all details....Press L
The Sugarloaf Cable Car is a cableway in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Moving between Praia Vermelha and the Sugarloaf Mountain, it stops at Morro da Urca (at 722 feet (220 m)) on its way up and down, and reaches the summit of the 1,299-foot (396 m) mountain.
Opened in 1912,[1] it was only the third cableway to be built in the world. it is used by approximately 2,500 visitors every day. The cable cars run every 30 minutes, between 8 am and 10 pm.*
*https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sugarloaf_Cable_Car