World Pictures/Videos of the Day

Miragedriver

Brigadier
potd-husky_3235255k.jpg

A husky walks on water in northern Russia. The image was taken after heavy rainfall covered the frozen lake. The rare phenomenon was captured by the dog's owner Fox Grom.
Picture: Fox Grom/News Dog Media

POTD_lizards_3220760k.jpg

A chilled out forest dragon lizard was photographed in Jogja, Indonesia by its owner
Picture: Roni Hendrawan/HotSpot Media


Back to bottling my Grenache
 

Miragedriver

Brigadier
potd-mountain_3237719k.jpg

Dent Blanche mountain is illuminated with pyrotechnics during the 13 Stars on the Summit event, in Val d'Herens, Switzerland. The event is part of the celbration of the 200th anniversary of Valais membership in the Swiss Confederation.
Picture: EPA/OLIVIER MAIRE


potd-volcano-1_3241814k.jpg

Have you ever wondered what it must look like to stare into the depths of hell? This is the 150-foot wide continuously active basalt volcano at Erta Ale in Ethiopia which is one of only six lava lakes in the world.
Picture: Karel Tupy / Media Drum World


potd-well_3241789k.jpg

Nepalese worker Bechu Chaudhary, 45, hangs on a rope as he digs a well in Kathmandu, Nepal. On the backdrop of rapid urban population growth, industrialization and uncertainties caused by climate change, Kathmandu has been facing a water crises during winter and spring seasons.
Picture: EPA/NARENDRA SHRESTHA


potd-seal-_3237728k.jpg

A baby seal rolls in the snow in the Gulf of St Lawrence, Canada. The harp seals, aged between two and ten-days-old, roll around in the snow and explore their new surroundings.
Picture: Ellen Cuylaerts/HotSpot Media


Back to bottling my Grenache
 

Miragedriver

Brigadier
potd-dolphin_3243567k.jpg

A hungry dolphin takes part in a feeding frenzy on a school of sardines. The huge cluster of sardines form a ball as a defence mechanism to try and look bigger but that doesn't stop the predators attacking them. Wildlife photographer Michael Aw managed to capture the shots on the East coast of South Africa.
Picture: Michael Aw/Solent News


Back to bottling my Grenache
 

SteelBird

Colonel
Meet the animal that's rarer -- and cuter -- than a panda
VAz1u9M.jpg

1SVoSeB.jpg

yJLV7vz.jpg

Beijing (CNN)Native to a remote region of China, this tiny mammal, known as the Ili pika, doesn't know it's a member of an endangered species -- and neither do most people.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
there are less than 1,000 of these teddy bear-like creatures living in the Tianshan mountain range in the Xinjiang region of northwestern China, says conservationist Li Weidong.

Li discovered the pika, formally known as Ochotona iliensis, in 1983 and named it after his hometown, Ili.

Last July, Li spotted and photographed the elusive creature for the first time since the early 1990s. He estimates its numbers have declined by almost 70% since its discovery.

"I discovered the species, and I watched as it became endangered," he told CNN.

"If it becomes extinct in front of me, I'll feel so guilty."
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
It's early Spring in SW Idaho. This makes for some really neat photography, and interesting, changing weather patterns.

I took these over the last week or ten days. Some as a result of my personal activities, some while on trips associated with my work:

I have all of these pictures on a Flickr Photo Album:

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


Here are a few of them:


shafer-butte.jpg
Shafer Butte behind a farm in the early Spring

squaw-butte.jpg
Squaw Butte in the background in the early Spring

south-fork-boise-river-snow.jpg
Beginning descent into the South Fork of the Boise River Canyon on a snowy March morning

bennet-mountain.jpg
Canyon of the South Fork of the Boise River on a late March afternoon.

bennet-mountain.jpg
Bennett Mountain on a late March afternoon
 

Attachments

  • south-fork-boise-river-canyon.jpg
    south-fork-boise-river-canyon.jpg
    396.8 KB · Views: 0

Miragedriver

Brigadier
potd-crack_3250137k.jpg

A split appears in a frozen lake making it look as if the world is cracking in half. The cracks run for hundreds of metres from one side of Lake Baikal in Russia to the other.
Picture: Alexey Trofimov/Solent News


potd-volcano_3250005k.jpg

Smoke billows from the Villarrica volcano, in Pucon, some 800 km south of Santiago. Part of southern Chile is on orange alert because of an increase in activity at the Villarrica volcano, just weeks after it erupted and forced thousands of people to evacuate.
Picture: SEBASTIAN ESCOBAR/AFP/Getty Images


Back to bottling my Grenache
 

Miragedriver

Brigadier
potd_-_59081992_TO_3252702k.jpg

A tiger butterfly sits on the nose of a child


potd-stars_3252976k.jpg

This image reveals the movement of the Earth as it spins on its axis at around 1,040 miles per hour. The photo shows hundreds of different pictures taken of the night sky on a fixed tripod over a long period of time. The images are then layered on top of each other to create a single image that shows the movement of the Earth as it spins on its axis, making it look as though the stars are creating a huge spinning black hole. Toth Gabor Gyula took the pictures, each one requiring several hours of patient photography in the dead of night.
Picture: Toth Gabor Gyula/Solent New


PTOD_-_59111772_A-_3252696k.jpg

A gaucho is unseated by a wild horse during the annual celebration of Criolla Week in Montevideo. Throughout Easter Week, 'gauchos', the Latin American equivalent of the North American cowboy, from all over Uruguay and neighboring Argentina and Brazil will visit Montevideo to participate in the Criolla Week to win the best rider award.
Picture: REUTERS/Andres Stapf


Back to bottling my Grenache
 

Miragedriver

Brigadier
Natural and Human wonders to see, or in other words how to spend your children inheritance.

Machu Picchu
ruursG2.jpg

The draw of Machu Picchu (“old mountain”) hardly needs restating: this 550-year-old citadel built by the most advanced – and in Peru the very last – pre-Columbian society in the spectacular setting of a saddle between two forest-clad Andean peaks has been preserved enough to be recognizable as a city. It is high: 7,973ft above sea level. It is large: the ruins are the size of a village, and combined with adjoining wilderness park, the Unesco-listed “historical sanctuary” covers more than 116 square miles. It is also mysterious: we know its functions were partly residential, and partly religious, but still wonder about its cosmic positioning and its academic importance to the Incas. Machu Picchu is set in humid subtropical forests, providing a protected habitat for ferns and palms and several endangered species, notably the spectacled bear. Add in swirling clouds, llamas grazing on the terraces and the option to arrive following a hike on mountain trails and/or a train trip through the valley of the Urubamba River (aka the “Sacred Valley”), and you have a trip that can last two, seven or 14 days.


Patagonia
zOiM7LL.jpg

Vast and empty, wind-swept and barren, Patagonia is an archetypal landscape of the imagination. Its headlining acts – the extraordinary ice field of Perito Moreno glacier, the Torres del Paine national park, the southern right whales off Península Valdés – are undeniably spectacular. But for some travelers, the most memorable moments will not be at the photogenic highlights, but on the road trips in between: the huge dome of the sky, tufts of coirón grass bursting through the desert, a solitary guanaco keeping watch from a hilltop. These are the scenes that define South America’s great tabula rasa. At a practical level, the tourism offering is ever more diverse: 4x4 adventures, golfing, salmon fishing, cruising, riding, quad-biking and skiing. For those who need a break, the remote – and increasingly luxurious – estancias are an opportunity to read, drink good (Patagonian) wines and dine on the finest lamb.


The Amazon
WWiiqPW.jpg

The Amazon is a 4,400-mile river with thousands of tributaries; it is a 2,600,000-square-mile basin, draining rivers and streams in eight countries; its broad-leaved forest is the largest on the planet and its biome – the forest combined with the savannah, floodplains and rivers – is a region of immense diversity, sheltering more than 30,000 plant species, 1,800 fish, 1,300 bird species, 311 mammals and 165 types of amphibian. The river itself flows through Brazil, Colombia and Peru. Brazil offers, arguably, the archetypal Amazon trip – a cruise from Belém on the Atlantic to Manaus or up to the Colombian border – but the interest here is more anthropological. You’ll doubtless dance samba on deck at sunset, but you won’t see many toucans. Peru, Ecuador and, to a lesser extent, Colombia are notable for their wildlife. For birders and lepidopterists, the banks of the tributaries and the forested slopes of the Andes provide plenty of entertainment. For those who want more specialist wildlife, tour companies take groups in search of spectacled bears, jaguars and rare monkeys.


Angkor Wat
PmSfAxj.jpg

Angkor Wat is Cambodia’s most beloved and best-preserved temple. The 500-acre site is one of the largest religious monuments in the world and represents the architectural pinnacle of the Khmer Empire. Originally dedicated to the Hindu god Vishnu, it has remained a place of worship since its founding in the 12th century. Thought to be a miniature replica of the universe, its composition of towers, moats and concentric walls reveals an architectural sophistication, and the bas-reliefs with their plump figures and triumphal battle scenes reflect a robust, healthy and wealthy period of history.


Taj Mahal
IXXAAe7.jpg

The Taj Mahal attracts so many visitors that it has almost become a victim of its own perfection. But in the right light, it is still magical, looming like a mirage through its main gateway. It seems to float, as though painted on gauze: pink at dawn and dusk, dazzling white at noon, pearly silver by moonlight. The Taj – commissioned in 1632 by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan as a mausoleum for his third wife, Mumtaz Mahal – is many visitors’ first experience of India, often viewed as part of a “Golden Triangle” tour that also takes in the monuments of Delhi and Jaipur.


Back to bottling my Grenache
 
Top