heron by Georg Scharf
heron by Georg Scharf
Georg Scharf: Photos
der Fischer by Georg Scharf
der Fischer by Georg Scharf
Georg Scharf: Photos
Fresh air by Andre Villeneuve
Fresh air by Andre Villeneuve
Andre Villeneuve: Photos
Winterreiher by Georg Scharf
Winterreiher by Georg Scharf
Georg Scharf: Photos
Great Egret by Georg Scharf
Great Egret by Georg Scharf
Georg Scharf: Photos
Rotkehlchen/Just a Robin by Si...
Rotkehlchen/Just a Robin by Sigrun Brüggenthies
Sigrun Brüggenthies: Photos
Autumn at Maroon Bells by John...
Autumn at Maroon Bells by John S
The Maroon Bells are two peaks in the Elk Mountains, Maroon Peak and North Maroon Peak, separated by about a third of a mile. The mountains are on the border between Pitkin County and Gunnison County, Colorado, United States, about 12 miles southwest of Aspen. Both peaks are fourteeners. Maroon Peak, at 14,163 feet (4317.0 m), is the 27th highest peak in Colorado. North Maroon Peak, at 14,019 feet (4273.0 m), is the 50th highest. The view of the Maroon Bells to the southwest from the Maroon Creek valley is commonly photographed. The peaks are located in the Maroon Bells–Snowmass Wilderness of White River National Forest. A US Forest Service sign on the access trail refers to these mountains as “The Deadly Bells” and warns would-be climbers of “downsloping, loose, rotten and unstable” rock that “kills without warning”. Unlike other mountains in the Rockies that are composed of granite and limestone, the Bells are composed of metamorphic sedimentary mudstone that has hardened into rock over millions of years. Mudstone is weak and fractures readily, giving rise to dangerously loose rock along almost any route. The mudstone is responsible for the Bells’ distinctive maroon color. The Bells got their “deadly” name in 1965 when eight people died in five separate accidents. Maroon Lake (9,580′) occupies a basin that was sculpted by Ice-Age glaciers and later dammed by landslide and rockfall debris from the steep slopes above the valley floor.
John S: Photos
Autumn symphony by Ashraful Ar...
Autumn symphony by Ashraful Arefin
Inside of us, there’s a continual autumn. Our leaves fall and are blown out over the water. – Rumi
Happy Fall to you all!
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Ashraful Arefin: Photos
“Trolltunga” of Au...
“Trolltunga” of Austria by Nicholas Roemmelt
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FACEBOOK + HOMEPAGE + INSTAGRAM You probably know the famous TROLLTUNGA in Norway, don´t you? But we in Austria do have a „brother“ of Trolltunga … Ok no big lake or fjord beneath but I think it is not less spectacular than the big brother in Norway.
Nicholas Roemmelt: Photos
Forest light by Daniel Metz
Forest light by Daniel Metz
Daniel Metz: Photos
There Is a Light That Never Go...
There Is a Light That Never Goes Out by Timothy Poulton
Photography, for me, is a little bit like being in love, because suddenly all your senses are at the setting marked “10.” Suddenly you’re alert to the secret patterns of the world, and everything is just perfect.
Timothy Poulton: Photos