Recent Posts

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21
Travel Diaries / Re: Australia's South West Coast
« Last post by Akira on May 24, 2026, 12:20:47 »
The landscape captured in the last one looks very peculiar.  Thank you for sharing!

How do you like the Z 16-50/2.8 zoom?
22
Travel Diaries / Re: Australia's South West Coast
« Last post by Les Olson on May 24, 2026, 10:31:34 »
There is a difference between an interesting photograph and a photograph of something interesting, but I agree that one of the reasons photography is interesting is the inexhaustible specialness of the world.
23
Your Weekly Blog / Re: May 2026
« Last post by Fons Baerken on May 24, 2026, 09:34:44 »
May 24

Sundaymorning (Pentecost)

Z7_2  Voigtländer 65mm f/2
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Travel Diaries / Re: Australia's South West Coast
« Last post by Fons Baerken on May 24, 2026, 09:32:07 »
Without natural phenomena, like these, there'd be no photography.
25
Your Weekly Blog / Re: May 2026
« Last post by Hugh_3170 on May 24, 2026, 06:42:39 »
Most snail species are hermaphrodic - so I would guess that they all "got lucky".  ;D

Link:  https://www.google.com/search?as_q=snails+hermaphrodic&as_epq=&as_eq=&as_sitesearch=&as_filetype=&as_qdr=&lr=&cr=&tbs=&authuser=&sei=IIESasCeMLfBvr0P8ovjsAI 

This afternoon I was in the countryside looking for insects, and I saw that tower of snails, they must be acrobatic snails. D200
26
Your Weekly Blog / Re: May 2026
« Last post by Frank Fremerey on May 24, 2026, 05:13:07 »
This afternoon I was in the countryside looking for insects, and I saw that tower of snails, they must be acrobatic snails. D200


you live in a world full of wonder and beauty
27
Travel Diaries / Australia's South West Coast
« Last post by Les Olson on May 24, 2026, 04:36:58 »
The South West is a place apart, shaped by sandy soil, low summer rainfall, and a coast that is a sailor's nightmare - the long deep swells and frequent storms of the Southern Ocean, numerous reefs, no natural harbours, and plenty of seals to keep the Great White population healthy. Except for the sharks, a surfer's dream, especially in summer when a prevailing easterly wind smooths the face of the swell. These are on the Margaret River beach, with the famous point break on the right in the first one (Z50II with 16-50/2.8 at 16mm).

North of Perth there is less rain and the dominant trees are grass trees (Xanthorrhoea sp), which can be 6 m tall including the flower spike and form vast "forests". Also in this area there is a remarkable landscape called The Pinnacles - fields of limestone columns up to 4 m tall standing in bare sandy soil. They look like a petrified forest, but the mechanism of formation of the columns is controversial.

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Your Weekly Blog / Re: May 2026
« Last post by Akira on May 24, 2026, 03:05:58 »
This afternoon I was in the countryside looking for insects, and I saw that tower of snails, they must be acrobatic snails. D200

Interesting fine, Arturo!  I didn't know that there is hierarchy in the society of snails...
29
Your Weekly Blog / Re: May 2026
« Last post by ARTUROARTISTA on May 23, 2026, 22:20:11 »
This afternoon I was in the countryside looking for insects, and I saw that tower of snails, they must be acrobatic snails. D200
30
Your Weekly Blog / Re: May 2026
« Last post by ARTUROARTISTA on May 23, 2026, 22:14:46 »
lovely
Thanks, Frank. The ants take the corn from the pigeons to make popcorn.
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