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Well, obviously this is not the real Sugarloaf. Reaching Half Moon Bay the weather was, well it is quite difficult to say really - foggy, rainy, snowy, wet, veiled - shall we say, there was precipitation that hid the scenery. And then when it started to get better this view showed itself and I said (something like) "Here comes sugarloaf mountain". A fellow passenger commented that he had been about to say the same.
This one is one of my Faves from the entire trip.
The Sugarloaf Mountain (in Portugese: Pão de Açúcar) in the bay of Rio de Janeiro. Seen from the Christ Statue.
www.benjamin-olson.com/photo/sugarloaf-cove/
The rising sun breaks through the clouds after a torrential storm hit Lake Superior.
While waiting for the sun to set at the famous Sugarloaf Rock, in SW Western Australia, on a rather grey afternoon, I took this long exposure of the rock under a mottled sky.
My son and I went mountain climbing yesterday. Took this shot from top of Sugarloaf Hill, part of the Knockmealdown mountain range. Galtees are in the background.
This is quite a popular photographers stop off during a trip to the South West of WA. I was hoping for a nice colourful sunrise, but, instead I was given a dark, gloomy, overcast afternoon.
This view is taken from a highpoint on the Beara way looking eastwards with Glengarriff in the distance and the Sugarloaf on the right.
Sugarloaf Point Lighthouse at night, located at Seal Rocks in the Myall Lakes National Park. This lighthouse has an amazing external staircase that wraps around its body. Built in 1875 it sits on the top of steep sheer cliffs and jagged and inclined rock platforms with Seal Rocks blowhole nearby
Facebook : Aegir Photography
500px : 500px.com/photo/84837041/3m-sugarloaf-ii-by-glenn-crouch
Sunrise at Sugarloaf Rock, near Yalingup, Western Australia. A 3 metre swell was running which changed the personality of this normally calm location considerably. Well worth the 5 lens cloths I used to keep my filters free of salt spray. ;)
Nikon D800 & Nikkor 16-35mm, Lee 1.2 GND filter. PP in PS CC using Nik Software and luminosity masks.
On the rugged coast a few kilometres south of Cape Naturaliste in the Margaret River Region, a gigantic granite rock-island looms up out of the ocean.
It is called “Sugarloaf Rock” because it looks like a sugarloaf, which supposedly has a conical/triangular shape like the rock.
This version had the foreground lit using a LED torch.
Post by Stephen Ball Photography.
Please don't use this image on websites, or other media without my explicit permission, blogs OK with notification and a link back, thanks! ©2014 Stephen Ball Photography, All rights reserved.
Little Sugarloaf earned my respect after I climbed to the summit - way up there!
I heard the most "eloquent" expression of February love while sitting there when a young couple wheezed their way to the summit. After enjoying the 360-degree view, he turned to her and said, "Now I have to get you down safely." She beamed and they started down...
The old rock looked very strange this particular night with the mist rolling over it. This was taken from a different position to the other shots i have taken of the rock. As we were hiking our way back up, the sunset turned into an amazing red glow but we couldn't stay as we didn't bring a torch and it was too dangerous to climb in the darkness.
The Great Sugar Loaf (501m), seen on a miserable November afternoon from behind some of the hundreds of magnificent old beech trees that line the avenue leading in to Powerscourt Estate in County Wicklow.
The summit of Sugarloaf mountain on the Beara peninsula. Sugarloaf is the imposing peak overlooking Glengarriff as you approach from Bantry or Castletownbere. This view looks east towards Bantry with Whiddy Island visible in the middle of the photo.
The Great Sugarloaf (Ó Cualann also Beannach Mhór) is 4km west of Kilmacanogue. Its isolation from other hills, steep slopes, and conical shape makes it appear much taller than it’s 501m height above sea level. It is composed of Cambrian quartzite and is an erosion-resistant metamorphosed sedimentary deposit that once formed part of the ocean floor.
Co. Wicklow
Ireland
This is the famous cable car in Rio de Janeiro, ready to go up the Sugarloaf.
This was a fun moment: while we were queuing to enter the station, I was taking some photos of the surrounding space and some girls in the cable car noticed that. The moment I pointed the camera to the car, one of them made the peace sign.