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A Gnarly Old Tree on top of Whitbarrow Scar, South Cumbria, looking towards the mountains of the Lake District. This a limestone pavement, perhaps not what is usually seen, crumbled but still a limestone pavement.
Canon EOS 5D MKII, Canon 17-40mm, F16, 30mm, ISO50, Exp 1/13 Seconds
Heliopan Polariser, Lee Soft Grad 0.75
Raw File Processed in Lightroom, Edited in Elements.
Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without asking my written permission. All rights reserved.....© Brian Kerr Photography 2011
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Breivikeidet Fergekai, Norway. Before taking the ferry the low tide revealed this "tree" pattern in the sand.
I went to the park today ,even though i was sick , we also stopped by my favorite organic store ,and i got some cough drops for my sore throat ,by the time i got home, i was really tired and even more sick , though i have to go to school tommrow because i can't miss two days in a row , and i have my web class which is hard for me and it's even harder when i miss that class
Bonnington is a dispersed village and civil parish on the northern edge of the Romney Marsh in Ashford District of Kent, England. The village is located eight miles (13 km) to the south of the town of Ashford on the B2067 (Hamstreet to Hythe road).
Bonnington has under 100 inhabitants and has historic connections with smuggling. It is also home to arguably the best rising sun Skyline in history. The parish used to boast its own school at the T-junction with the former B2069, and a public house (The Oak) located nearly two miles south east of the village. The parish church, dedicated to St Rumwold, the child saint, is about half a mile to the south of the hamlet, on the Royal Military Canal.
The parish council is now linked with the larger village of Aldington (where the population is now included) which is where the nearest shops can be found.
Walking and sweating at the peak moment of summer in the oldest desert in the world is an overwhelming experience in every respect. Finding intimate photographic compositions around towering sand dunes can be a challenge by itself.
Image created during my 5th photo tour, February 2024. There are two spots left on my 6th Namibia Photo Tour, Febr 19 - March 6, 2025. Join ‘last minute’ and be part of a great adventure!
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Image is under Copyright by Peter Boehringer.
Present image can be PURCHASED HERE.
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HTMT!
A beautiful group moderated by esther sarah emily
If you like taking photos of trees you should think about joining in! :)
Trees are poems that earth writes upon the sky, we fell them down and turn them into paper, that we may record our emptiness.
~Kahlil Gibran
photo © Jennifer Esperanza
Grape vines cut from oaks. The vines grow upward draging the trees to the ground. To free the trees, we cut them at the ground, coming back after they've died to pull them down.
Eine Baumgruppe in der Wahner Heide
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Old trees in the "Wahner Heath", a natural reserve near Cologne.
...the very old and mighty "Kaiser Wilhelm Oak" at and INSIDE the walls of Castle Lindenfels.
It was planted on March, 22rd in 1888.
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...die sehr mächtige und alte "Kaiser Wilhelm Eiche" an und IN den Mauern der Burg Lindenfels.
Sie wurde am 22. März 1888 gepflanzt.
A view from inside the Big Cypress Bayou.
Caddo Lake is a magical place. I return with something different every time I go.
Alyce Bender and I had another excellent workshop and we're already filling next year's event. Contact either me or Bender if you'd like to be included next season.
Memory tree stands at the exit of extinct extension.
The ocean takes a drop from here.
Steeply, to a depth of Hundreds of Meters.
The tree stands, awkwardly, marking this transition point.
The tree marks the limit, this island can be extended (grown) with reclamation.
The outer edge of reef.
The lagoon, (earlier this used to be!) together with reef, provides safety, and protects the island from many external forces.
When people intervene with nature, things start to go wrong.
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When people started migrating, en-mass, into this island, many things started to happen. Some wrong. Some very, very wrong.
Overcrowding and congestion led to many environmentally and socially unfriendly activities.
Houses spurted quickly, on beaches. Lagoons became the next beach.
Houses spurted quickly, on beaches. Lagoons became the next beach.
Houses. More houses...
Until finally the protective lagoon gave up.
Houses filled up every imaginable inch and space.
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Vulnerable.
One fine morning, in 1987?, A storm of tidal waves rammed the coastal areas and flooded the Capital island.
It caused massive losses to land and property, opening wide concerns of the environmental sustainability of the island.
The stupid actions of people cannot be reversed.
The island cannot go back to its former glory days.
A huge publicity campaign followed.
The disturbing pictures of this beautiful tropical paradise island faced with immediate extinction brought in sympathies from all over.
Hence, this 'temporary' 180 Million Dollar solution.
A kind donation by the Japanese.
The seawall around the Capital.
(Story coming.)
For an aerial view of the memory tree, please visit here!
www.flickr.com/photos/ahmedzahid/48210146/
Fact: In a period of 15 years, the Capital island of Male' has grown
Three times its original size.
Reflections of trees in the water at Beaver Creek Reservoir in Albemarle County, Virginia. This is a crop from a horizontal shot.