Hiking walk 

389 creative works found

  • From the website: / "The ancient pink Granite of Cape Woolamai, Phillip Island’s highest point, rises out of the ocean with majestic beauty. Golden sweeping beaches linking the Cape to Phillip Island’s volcanic past make this a perfect place for a beach walk at any time of the year. / The series of walking tracks and viewing platforms take the more adventurous to breathtaking areas such as the Pinnacles, the Woolamai Light and the old Granite Quarry. Cape Woolamai is home to the largest colony of Short-tailed Shearwaters on Phillip Island and is one of the most popular surfing beaches in Australia. This beach is patrolled by the Cape Woolamai Surf Life Saving Club in season. "

  • From the website: / "The ancient pink Granite of Cape Woolamai, Phillip Island’s highest point, rises out of the ocean with majestic beauty. Golden sweeping beaches linking the Cape to Phillip Island’s volcanic past make this a perfect place for a beach walk at any time of the year. / The series of walking tracks and viewing platforms take the more adventurous to breathtaking areas such as the Pinnacles, the Woolamai Light and the old Granite Quarry. Cape Woolamai is home to the largest colony of Short-tailed Shearwaters on Phillip Island and is one of the most popular surfing beaches in Australia. This beach is patrolled by the Cape Woolamai Surf Life Saving Club in season. " basspixel photography

  • From the website: / "The ancient pink Granite of Cape Woolamai, Phillip Island’s highest point, rises out of the ocean with majestic beauty. Golden sweeping beaches linking the Cape to Phillip Island’s volcanic past make this a perfect place for a beach walk at any time of the year. / The series of walking tracks and viewing platforms take the more adventurous to breathtaking areas such as the Pinnacles, the Woolamai Light and the old Granite Quarry. / Cape Woolamai is home to the largest colony of Short-tailed Shearwaters on Phillip Island and is one of the most popular surfing beaches in Australia. This beach is patrolled by the Cape Woolamai Surf Life Saving Club in season. " / basspixel photography

  • Photography 101 / Olympus C750 / expos.10/130 sec / iso 200 / exit 2.2 / apf2.8 / Not much room to take photographs atm due to fences being erected, and people jostling for a possy I took this on auto and as fast as I could I didn’t want to get in people way. My camera is so easy to use no woried about shaking at all.no editing at all. Beautiful setting and a fantastic bush walk in the Nunimbah / Springbrook National Park Queensland Hinterland of the Gold Coast /

  • The cliffs at Willapark near Forrabury, Boscastle, North Cornwall on a March day. The white building is a former summerhouse, now used by the National Coastwatch Institute as a lookout. The South West Coast Path passes nearby.

  • Taken at guide falls Ridgley Tasmania A Card Laminated prints

  • Located between Passo Falzarego and Passo Giau in Dolomiti, Italy, Nuvolau (2575 meters above the sea level) is a fascinating cliff offering fantastic 360 degree view of the beautiful surrounding mountains. August 2001. Canon EOS 500N, Sigma 28-135. Post-processing: retouch, sharpening, color pencils, burn.

  • Big Tree’s National forest in California. 2007

  • Snow Covered Hills / Taken At Rushup Edge Peak District / Derbyshire.UK

  • Orton Effect /

  • My kids and I love walking the beaches of lake Ontario. they like to collect the worn pieces of glass that wash up on shore. We call it sea glass…

  • Another pic on our day hike through The Big Thicket in deep East Texas… / Post edited with watercolor /

  • A dramatic morning sky overlooks the drystone walls of Carperby, Wensleydale, Yorkshire Dales, Yorkshire, England Canon 5D Mk 2 / F14 / ISO 100

  • another pic on the hike today…

  • Bridge at Schmitz Preserve Park, Seattle, WA. I loved the yin/yang of nature and man-made beauty in this shot. Shot this with my Panasonic point and shoot camera. This artwork was featured June 22, 2009 and placed in the top 10 in the group If It Doesn’t Belong

  • This is a collection of some of my photos of Yorkshire. Some from Whitby, the Dales and from York

  • A view of the hills above Grassington in the Yorkshire Dales taken whilst en-route to Conistone. Nikon D40 – Sigma 10-20mm @ f/11 / ND Grad

  • You just can’t beat being out in the British countryside

  • I have spend many days over more than 40 years walking around the tracks and behind this waterfall , sat and painted from this viewing point in several formats ,taken heaps of photos from box brownies to the latest digital, I still find it one of the best and easiest places to go to, and to top it off there’s a fabulous picnic area to enjoy too. / / Olympus E.520 / f 5.61 320 sec. / iso-100 / 70 mm / ap 4

  • Canon EOS450D, Tv-30 secs, F20, ISO-100, 18-55@ 55mm, taken at the end of my walk on the way back, I didnt use the tripod for this instead to get closer to the water I rested the camera on a rock and propped it up with old ferns and edited to a sepia feel with the Canon soft ware. / Near Derby, N/east Tasmania, aprox 1.5 hours from L,ston. near by /

  • Scroll down for another image of this beautiful Cow Moose and her darling calf From my collection: / Emerquinox ~ The Spirit of Alaska ~ Alaska North Star Winter Scenics Emerquinox is a word I coined when I combined the words Emerge and Equinox. This magnificent Cow Moose and her young calf were photographed near North Pole Alaska, which is about a twenty minute drive from Fairbanks Alaska on Badger Road. Did you know more than one Moose is still Moose? Many Moose, or two Moose, or one Moose, it is always Moose. Just thought you would want to know that. :) I have many more images of this beautiful Cow Moose and her yearling calf as they permitted me to watch and photograph them for over an hour. Many of my viewers seem to perceive I am standing on the ground within arms length of this 1200+ lb Moose!! I wish for everyone to know and understand that I remained in my truck watching her with her adorable calf for well over an hour. And while she did approach me as I remained in my truck watching her, (with my engine idling and heater blowing as the temps were subzero!) once she decided I was no threat to her, she seemed as curious about me as I was about her and her darling calf! The Cows are very protective of their young, and the Bulls are aggressive and unpredictable as well. And I would advise everyone to never approach a Moose. She is a ‘resident’ Moose, and she and her calf live in the deep forest surrounding my home in the wilderness when I lived in Alaska near North Pole. She is wild, and certainly not tame, as someone asked. A Cow Moose will kill you if you come between her and her calves. Cows are generally not hunted, and she is simply accustomed to being around humans since she is one of several generations of Moose born in this area. With an abundance of Diamond Willow (their favourite) and other tender shoots along the roadways, and the remnants of summer gardens, they simply brush off the snow with their noses and browse. She has no need to migrate. There are many many more in this area. They are elusive however, and nocturnal for the most part, so it is always a thrill to see one! It is only in winter when one sees them struggling to survive the deep winter browsing during the “daylight” hours. And then too, in winter it is dark for so many hours so the night is extended! Most people think of Alaska as The Land of the Midnight Sun. That is true only for a short time in a very brief summer. In winter Alaska is The Land of Perpetual Darkness. The calf’s first winter is the most precarious. This calf is experiencing her first winter. I can see that she is a female calf by her fine feminine sex characteristics. The male calves are larger and masculine. During summer it is generally late evening, dusk, during the night and early morning when one sees the beautiful Moose browsing and foraging in the forests and along the rivers and roadways. ~ Sharon Mau The moose (Alces alces) is the world’s largest member of the deer family. The Alaska race (Alces alces gigas) is the largest of all the moose. Copyright © Sharon Mau 2009 / My images do not belong to the public domain. / Reproduction is strictly prohibited. / All rights reserved Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi / Shooting Date 20 January 2008 /

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