North wild 

326 creative works found

  • The highest peak in Tasmanias south west, Mt Anne. This photograph was taken from the rarely visited north east ridge. Minolta 404si body / Tokina 19-35 lens / Circular polarizing filter / Tripod / Shutter release cable / Fuji Velvia 50iso 35mm tranny While you’re here, why don’t you check out my Galleries: Wedding Tasmania’s Wild Places Macro Creeks, Rivers, Waterfalls Mountain Neon Coastal

  • Photograph taken on top of the Dome, Dawson City, Yukon Territory, Canada. / Summer solstice 2006, MIDNIGHT (June 22nd). / The sun that goes through the Inukshuk adds to the F-stop effect. Photography is a great way to capture what we want to remember. / Great souvenir for those of you who have traveled north to the Yukon and that have witnessed Solstice there as well. / A picture is worth a thousand words. / This one a thousand beautiful souvenirs.

  • Stormy North Sea at Roker Pier in Sunderland, North East England.

  • Stormy North Sea at Roker Pier, Sunderland, North East England.

  • Wild Stallion on the sand dunes of North Carolina

  • A portrait of one of the wild mustangs that inhabit the Currituck Outer Banks of North Carolina. The herd consists of about 200 horses.

  • The Buffalo was one of the most respected animals among American Indians. Its spirit was praised before every hunt with a tribal ritual dance. The buffalo supplied virtually everything that the Indians needed to stay alive; food, clothing, tools, and housing. These noble beasts were virtually wiped out by unscrupulous persons attempting to eradicate the primary food supply of the Indian. The featured warrior is Kiowa Apache, Ah Keah Boat, known as “Two Hatchet.”

  • Wild horses still roaming freely north of Currituck in Corova, NC. They are magnificant animals, so neat to be able to catch them in their natural habitat. It is believed that the Corolla Wild Horses have roamed the barrier islands of the Outer Banks for the past four centuries. Brought here by early explorers, these horses are descendants of Spanish Mustangs. I just loved the blonde mane on this beautiful horse.

  • “There is no such thing as a perfect image, only a perfect moment.” Joe Buissink Camera make: Canon / Camera model: Canon EOS 40D / Shutter speed: 1/2500 sec / Aperture: f/5.0 / ISO: 800 / Lens: Canon Zoom Lens EF 70-300 IS USM f1:4-5.6 IS USM. / Image Stabilizer – Ultrasonic // This shot was at 225mm / Original image size: 3888×2592 Pixels / Flash used: No / Date taken: Sunday, January 13, 2008 / Time taken: 8:37 AM

  • I like the way the sunlight made the fern’s leaves translucent. / Dryden, ON. Olympus E-410, 70-300mm All rights reserved. Top Ten Challenge Placement; / Flower and Foliage: Foliage-Your Best Shot – February 28, 2009 Group Features: / DSLR Users – March 13, 2009 / Freedom to Shine – April 12, 2009 / Color and Light – October 22, 2009 / Americas – Rura, Urban, Wild, Free – October 25, 2009 !

  • New South Wales, that is. Best viewed LARGE

  • Rock wallabies specialise in rugged terrain and have modified feet designed to grip rock with skin friction rather than dig into soil with large claws. There are at least fifteen species and the relationship between several of them is poorly understood. Several are endangered. This photograph was taken at a Granite Gorge, Far North Queensland. Sony Cybershot wsc w200 12.1 mega pixel camera

  • From my collection: / Emerquinox / Spirit of Alaska ~ Alaska North Star Winter Scenics Copyright © Sharon Mau 2009 / All Rights Reserved Emerquinox is a word I coined when I combined the words Emerge and Equinox The Great White North I took this photo in deep winter 20 January 2008 midway between Fairbanks and North Pole Alaska. In summer this area is a peat bog. It is actually quite deep as in late Autumn I have watched a cow Moose submerge herself and swim in the pond at sunset. Near the Chena River, in winter it is used as a ‘highway’ for mushers and their dogsleds and also for snowmachines. I removed the natural blue hue with a white balance adjustment. Then I desaturated selective colours pulling down the yellow, magenta, and green. With a slight adjustment on contrast, I then used the lasso tool and selected only the sky to remove the digital noise as I had my ISO setting too high at 400 and, along with the cold, this created too much noise with the original photograph. The temperature on this day had actually warmed to about 10F. Within a week it plunged again to appx minus -47F. Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XTi / Shooting Date/Time 20 January 2008 16:41:50 / Tv( Shutter Speed ) 1/125 / Av( Aperture Value ) 5.6 “Permafrost, perennially frozen ground that maintains a temperature at or below the freezing point for at least two years. Vast tracts of permafrost lie across Alaska, Canada, northern Europe and Asia, and Antarctica. About 80 percent of Alaska’s land area contains permafrost. In the Interior region, vegetation must adapt itself to short, warm summers and long, cold winters. Trees grow slowly, and their root systems must be shallow because they cannot penetrate the permafrost. In Alaska, permafrost occurs as a continuous sheet north of the Brooks Range, extending from a few inches below the surface down to as deep as 1,000 feet. As one goes south, however, it gets progressively thinner, the melted layer on top gets thicker, and holes or gaps begin to appear in it. Permafrost may extend to depths of more than 500 m (1,600 ft). Clues to the age of the permafrost of the Northern Hemisphere lie in the numerous discoveries of mammoth remains embedded in frozen ground. Mammoths became extinct about 10,000 to 15,000 years ago, coincident with the end of the most recent ice age. Some scientists, however, think that much of today’s permafrost may have formed as long as 120,000 years ago.” Source: Wikipedia “As with all great journeys, the vision is the beginning / Dreams of all the possibilities, / of the many paths widening to the future / Of all the great and extraordinary things our mind can imagine / The persistence of our own opportunistic souls reaching for what is yet unabridged / An unconscious decision to struggle forward yet again / And without even knowing of our focus / We start forward / All of our past, our teachings, our experience are brought into play / The trials of our past giving us the tools that we need to find our way / Our way to fulfilling this newest quest for our dream / No obstacle too great, / no argument rebuff / The journey begun, we will not allow defeat / We can only see the unfolding, as it will be / And as always, / the goal is reached / And there, / sated in the peace of our newly added thread in the web of our life / We rest / And the vision comes again” / ~ by Steve ‘Easy’ Whitacre 2005

  • After I demonstrated a few wave painting techniques, I later thought to join them up into a painting! A Spontaneous watercolour! Watercolour 14” x 10” on Bockingford rough 140lb. So far, nobody has spotted the little men in white shirts, clinging for life, to the torn-off mast (left side of painting). I’ve entered this into Impressionism Cafe,‘seascapes’

  • Captured in four-wheel drive country, in pursuit of the Wild Horses that roam freely in Northern Corova. The grasses gently blowing in the oceans’ breeze just begged to be photographed. Taken with the Nikon D300 and the Sigma 50-500mm (since I was hunting for horses).

  • For more information please visit Brian’s Homepage or on Flickr

  • Slipping the truck into four wheel drive, we drove off the highway onto a gravel pullout, climbed and topped the hill overlooking this beautiful valley. I was so amazed and surprised as one cannot see this view from the highway. It was my first glimpse of the beautiful Matanuska Glacier. This shot was taken as it was raining. Traveling south from the Alaska interior, just before passing through the Chickaloon-K’Nik Nelchina Trail System on the Glenn Highway, one enters a fascinating vista of the Chugach Mountains and one of the largest accessible valley glaciers in Alaska, the Matanuska Glacier. Fireweed in foreground with brilliant colours. Fireweed in Alaska is nature’s seasonal gauge. When the fireweed blooms top out, and blows seed, winter is only weeks away. Copyright © Sharon Mau 2009 / My images do not belong to the public domain. Reproduction is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved Beautiful Art and Greeting Cards For Sale ~ Shop securely and view my collection here Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XT / Shooting Date/Time 20 August 2006 20:35:46 / Tv( Shutter Speed ) 1/200 / Av( Aperture Value ) 8.0 / ISO Speed 100

  • Faraid Head, Sutherland in Scotland. This photo was taken 10 minutes or so after this: after the squall had passed (with great ferocity and velocity!), leaving this rainbow behind me.

  • From Balnakeil, in Sutherland, Scotland – looking towards Cape Wrath /

  • This small Alpine Pool of water reflects the Summer Clouds on its Surface. / I took this photo in the Summer of 08 during the harsh mid day light. I find it challenging to take photo’s at this time of day. / this spot is high up on a mountain, located on British Columbia’s North Coast Area. / west coast of Canada / almost nobody has ever visited this spot, it is very unique and unspoiled by mankind’s presence. / Basically pristine Canadian Wilderness / The Water is Red from Tanin’s that occur in this region. / this photo is a 3 shot HDR and I probably went over board with the Saturation but was just trying to get the Lupin Flowers Brighter. / In retrospect it would be nice to get up there and photograph that spot again with a ND Grad Filter instead of doing HDR. / I much prefer the Filter over the HDR effect.

  • The Russel Burn tumbles down from the mountains of Applecross, seen as you take the spectacular drive over the Bealach na Ba ( the Pass of the Cattle ) single track road. It is an old drover’s route, and rises to 2,053 feet, from where, on a clear day, you can see outstanding views of the Western Isles in all their glory. Mostly though, it will be so cold and windy that you will will not want to stay too long !! It is a very wild and remote area, so incredibly beautiful. Taken on a Canon EOS 40D, mounted on tripod, / canon 17-85mm IS lens at 17mm. Polariser fitted, ( to slow the shutter for more blur) / f23, three shot hdr (-2EV , +2EV and 0EV …..from a minus 1 stop underexposure reading 0f f23, 1/15 sec. on Aperture priority ) iso 100, Auto wb, RAW files converted in Photomatix and Adobe CS3. / Finished with a little Orton. FEATURED IN / http://www.redbubble.com/groups/digital-photography / AND / http://www.redbubble.com/groups/dslr-users-only-3-a-day / AND / http://www.redbubble.com/groups/the-ashes-australia-vs-england / AND / http://www.redbubble.com/groups/all-water-in-motion / AND / http://www.redbubble.com/groups/collage-and-landscape-photography / AND / http://www.redbubble.com/groups/fine-art-of-landscape-photography / AND / http://www.redbubble.com/groups/northern-landscape / AND / http://www.redbubble.com/groups/human-animal-nature-cz-owiek-zwierz-natura / SEE MORE OF MY SCOTTISH HIGHLANDS SET HERE

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