Carved by water (Explored)
Peacock feathers (Explored)
The moon is almost full (Explored)
The red building
On the waterfront
Victoria Hotel
Wandering about the old town
Calm water, rough water
Sunset in Stavanger
A face in the clouds (Explored)
The paperweight near the window (Explored)
Looking up
Welcome to Flåm
Four fishing cottages near Flåm
Along the Nærøyfjord
Steep slopes
Steep walls
Feeding the fjord
Flowing through the pines (Explored)
City hydrant
Grunge (Explored)
Large Ferry, Larger Mountain
The Hardingen Ferry
The power of water
Split falls
Visiting the falls
Meeting the water
Large cliff, small boat
Near the entrance of the Lysefjord (Explored)
Lighthouse near the Lysefjord
Lines
Striped
Modern Stavanger
Wading in the clouds
The Domkirke
Red roofs of Stavanger
Cloudy evening on the North Sea (Explored)
All alone
The church amid the fields
Neolithic Village
Hidden sheep
Jackdaw
New Year's Resolution
The many sides of Stonehenge - 6
The many sides of Stonehenge - 5
1/400 • f/10.0 • 94.0 mm • ISO 500 •
Canon EOS 70D
EF24-105mm f/3.5-5.6 IS STM
EXIF - See more detailsSee also...
Scandinavia (Denmark, Iceland, Faroes, Finland, Norway and Sweden)
Scandinavia (Denmark, Iceland, Faroes, Finland, Norway and Sweden)
Keywords
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220 visits
From mountain heights
In the Lysefjord in Norway.
"End to end, it measures 42 kilometres (26 mi) with rocky walls falling nearly vertically over 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) into the water. Not only is the fjord long and narrow, it is in places as deep as the mountains are high. Starting at a depth of only 13 metres (43 ft) deep where it meets the sea near Forsand village, the Lysefjord then heads inland and drops to a depth of over 400 metres (1,300 ft) below the Preikestolen."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lysefjord
AIMG 6596
"End to end, it measures 42 kilometres (26 mi) with rocky walls falling nearly vertically over 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) into the water. Not only is the fjord long and narrow, it is in places as deep as the mountains are high. Starting at a depth of only 13 metres (43 ft) deep where it meets the sea near Forsand village, the Lysefjord then heads inland and drops to a depth of over 400 metres (1,300 ft) below the Preikestolen."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lysefjord
AIMG 6596
Arlequin Photographie, Gudrun, Nouchetdu38, Andy Rodker and 5 other people have particularly liked this photo
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