Alt + Neu - 2 x PiP
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Der Zaun in Vancouver
Das Ei
Skywalk
Frankfurt am Main, alt und neu
Der Zaun im Tannheimer Tal
Weg-Zeiger
Staub
U4, Hamburg
Die Zeil
Der Zaun in Vancouver, False Creek
Lichtinstallationen in der Katharinenkirche 2016
Macro Mondays
Luminale 2018 - Der Römer
Spiegelungen
Untermainkai, Frankfurt
Siesta
Luminale 2018 - Innenhof derLiebfrauenkirche
Wohin laufen sie denn ....?
26.03.2018 - Steine
Blaue Stunde in Frankfurt
Der Zaun in My Zeil
Der Zaun auf dem Weg zum Nordkap
Maintower
Inside Erbse
Wasserfall am Kicking Horse Pass
Hanspeterporsche Traumwerk
Detail:Römer-Eingangstür
Römer Hochzeitstüre
Neue Altstadt Frankfurt, Eckhaus am Hühnermarkt
35. 12.02.2018 - Büroklammern
Baumwipfelpfad
Flechten
Point Atkinson Lighthouse, BC, Kanada,
Der Zaun am Strand
Winter-Frühling
33. - 29.1.2018 - Bar - Geld
Kokerei-Restaurant Zollverein
Morsum Kliff, Sylt
Strandkörbe
scharfe Kurve rechts
Sonne, Erde, Mond
Mainz . . .
Whistler
1/500 • f/8.0 • 18.0 mm • ISO 250 •
NIKON CORPORATION NIKON D7200
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Vos photos de choc sans discrimination / Tus fotos de choque indiscriminado
Vos photos de choc sans discrimination / Tus fotos de choque indiscriminado
Bleu sans discrimination / Blue without discrimination
Bleu sans discrimination / Blue without discrimination
" Amazing Nature - Einmalige Natur - La nature unique - La natura unica "
" Amazing Nature - Einmalige Natur - La nature unique - La natura unica "
MAEZIOÙ / ARVESTVA /PAYSAGE /PANORAMA in mémoriam à Mahuphidos
MAEZIOÙ / ARVESTVA /PAYSAGE /PANORAMA in mémoriam à Mahuphidos
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Emerald Lake, Yoho National Park, Kanada
Emerald Lake is located in Yoho National Park, British Columbia, Canada. It is the largest of Yoho's 61 lakes and ponds, as well as one of the park's premier tourist attractions. Emerald Lake Lodge, a high-end lodge perched on the edge of the lake, provides local accommodation. A 5.2 km (3.2 mi) hiking trail circuits the lake, the first half of which is accessible to wheelchairs and strollers. During the summer months, canoe rentals are available; in the winter, the lake is a popular cross country skiing destination.
The lake is enclosed by mountains of the President Range, as well as Mount Burgess and Wapta Mountain. This basin traps storms, causing frequent rain in summer and heavy snowfalls in winter. This influx of moisture works with the lake's low elevation to produce a unique selection of flora. Trees found here are more typical of B.C.'s wet interior forests, such as western red cedar, western yew, western hemlock and western white pine. The alluvial fan on the northeast shore produces wildflowers in abundance during late June and early July.
Due to its high altitude, the lake is frozen from November until June. The vivid turquoise color of the water, caused by powdered limestone, is most spectacular in July as the snow melts from the surrounding mountains.
The first non-indigenous person to set sight on Emerald Lake was Canadian guide Tom Wilson, who stumbled upon it by accident in 1882. A string of his horses had gotten away, and it was while tracking them that he first entered the valley. The lake had an impression on even the most seasoned of explorers: "For a few moments I sat [on] my horse and enjoyed the rare, peaceful beauty of the scene." It was Wilson who gave the lake its name because of its remarkable colour, caused by fine particles of glacial sediment, also referred to as rock flour, suspended in the water. However, this was not the first time Wilson had dubbed a lake 'Emerald'. Earlier that same year he had discovered another lake which he had given the same moniker, and the name even appeared briefly on the official map. This first lake however, was shortly renamed Lake Louise. Q:Wikipedia
The lake is enclosed by mountains of the President Range, as well as Mount Burgess and Wapta Mountain. This basin traps storms, causing frequent rain in summer and heavy snowfalls in winter. This influx of moisture works with the lake's low elevation to produce a unique selection of flora. Trees found here are more typical of B.C.'s wet interior forests, such as western red cedar, western yew, western hemlock and western white pine. The alluvial fan on the northeast shore produces wildflowers in abundance during late June and early July.
Due to its high altitude, the lake is frozen from November until June. The vivid turquoise color of the water, caused by powdered limestone, is most spectacular in July as the snow melts from the surrounding mountains.
The first non-indigenous person to set sight on Emerald Lake was Canadian guide Tom Wilson, who stumbled upon it by accident in 1882. A string of his horses had gotten away, and it was while tracking them that he first entered the valley. The lake had an impression on even the most seasoned of explorers: "For a few moments I sat [on] my horse and enjoyed the rare, peaceful beauty of the scene." It was Wilson who gave the lake its name because of its remarkable colour, caused by fine particles of glacial sediment, also referred to as rock flour, suspended in the water. However, this was not the first time Wilson had dubbed a lake 'Emerald'. Earlier that same year he had discovered another lake which he had given the same moniker, and the name even appeared briefly on the official map. This first lake however, was shortly renamed Lake Louise. Q:Wikipedia
Amelia, Stephan Fey, Alexander Prolygin, Roger (Grisly) and 14 other people have particularly liked this photo
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