View allAll Photos Tagged sunrays
Buttermere, Cumbria, UK. I resisted airbrushing the cottage as the scale of everything is indicated by it :-)
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Sincere thanks to all who view, comment upon or make a favourite of my shots, for each is a help and pleasure in equal measure. Phil :-)
Hogeschool Utrecht, Padualaan
Project of Ector Hoogstad Architects
Newly added to my series Lines and planes.
It covers surprising compositions in the everyday, a special view of buildings, interiors ... lines made abstract.
Sunrays...
A few weeks ago we made our way to Heart Lake and spend a few hours braving the cold to get some shots. While we were there a young girl waked by totally unprepared for the cold with a denim jacket only and it want done up. Some people would rather freeze than wear warm clothing i guess.
A brilliant blazing winters sun Blasted its way through the thin cloud cover sending light in all directions.
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© NICK MUNROE (MUNROE PHOTOGRAPHY)
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We stopped by the beach today on our way home and saw these clouds with sunrays lighting up the ocean. We don't see these too often, but we are getting the passing end of a storm today. No rain, though.
"Art is Art is Art
There exists No right No wrong
Just Love or Hate with indifference in between"
©Terry Morley™ 2020
A dramatic sky with rays of sunlight piercing through dark clouds, creating a captivating contrast against the urban landscape below.
Walking along the shore of Llandanwg beach with Trisha and Cali on a beautiful sunny afternoon in early January 2023
Habitat :
Le serval vit sur le continent africain, principalement dans les savanes humides.
Il évite les zones désertiques ainsi que les jungles équatoriales.
Reproduction :
Le serval peut se reproduire deux fois par an. Le mâle et la femelle restent quelques jours ensemble avant de s’accoupler. La gestation dure environ 70 jours et la mère met bas 2 ou 3 petits. Elle s’occupe seule des petits qu’elle élève dans son terrier. Les petits sont indépendants vers 5 à 6 mois.
Durée de vie moyenne : Jusqu’à 14 ans en captivité.
Particularités :
Le serval est plutôt nocturne. Grâce à ses longues pattes, il peut chasser efficacement dans la savane et elles lui permettent même de sauter jusqu’à 3 m de hauteur et ainsi pouvoir attraper des oiseaux en vol. Il existe une population de servals mélaniques (noirs) en zones montagneuses, jusqu’à 3’000 m d’altitude dans la vallée du Rift au Kenya.
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Habitat :
The serval lives on the African continent, mainly in humid savannas.
It avoids the desert and equatorial jungles.
Reproduction :
The serval can reproduce twice a year. The male and female are a few days together before mating. Gestation lasts about 70 days and the mother gives birth to 2 or 3 small. It deals only small amounts it in his burrow. The children are independent at 5-6 months.
Average life: Up to 14 years in captivity.
Special features:
The serval is quite nocturnal. With its long legs, it can effectively hunt in the savannah and allow himself to jump up to 3 meters high and thus be able to catch birds in flight. There is a population of melanistic servals (black) in mountainous areas, up to 3000 m altitude in the Rift Valley in Kenya.
Where a treetop shined
We floated on a river of time
And hope was steady "
HAEVN - The Sea (Live in Carré Amsterdam)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=TaDGW96tl3c
Stay blessed mes ami(e)s Flickr
g
I am still so happy with the photos of this perfect morning. When I see them I almost can't believe that these photos are my own.
Église Saint-Sulpice
Paris, April 2022
All of my photographs are under copyright ©. None of these photographs may be reproduced and/or used in any way without my permission.
© NGimages / Nico Geerlings Photography
A great morning out with Brad Eide and Terry Roberts for sunrise in the Lakes, this wasn't a planned location this morning but after the sun had risen and we had exhausted the previous spot we decided to give this a go as it would take the sun a while longer to rise over the Mountains so we should have still have some mist that hadn't been yet been burnt off.
When we got to the top here there was still mist but the light wasn't the best and what we had hoped for. However as usual if you just wait around sometimes things change up a gear and breifly we got light cascading down on Rydal Water through the mist that was now been burnt away. I'd already shot this scene with some nice light on it a short while before and though that was that so I had moved, but luckily I kept looking back and saw this happening so I up again quickly, reframed, and managed to capture it before it vanished.
A good mornings shoot, and all before breakfast, which vanished almost as quickly as this light did!
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