Lining a dirt road near the remote western coast of Madagascar, ancient baobab trees grow skyward as they have for centuries. After spending 20 hours in what the locals call "taxi brousses" (literally, "bush taxis") we finally made it to the famous "Avenue of the Baobabs," tired, thirsty, and not a little giddy from the scene before us. Surrounded by ancient giants, we watched day fade into night, as we fed mosquitoes and waited til just the right moment to snap the photo above. A Land Rover drove through the shot during the 30-second time delay, giving it a nice touch.
Showing posts with label night. Show all posts
Showing posts with label night. Show all posts
Friday, February 1, 2013
PHOTO FRIDAY: BAOBABS AT NIGHT IN MADAGASCAR
Lining a dirt road near the remote western coast of Madagascar, ancient baobab trees grow skyward as they have for centuries. After spending 20 hours in what the locals call "taxi brousses" (literally, "bush taxis") we finally made it to the famous "Avenue of the Baobabs," tired, thirsty, and not a little giddy from the scene before us. Surrounded by ancient giants, we watched day fade into night, as we fed mosquitoes and waited til just the right moment to snap the photo above. A Land Rover drove through the shot during the 30-second time delay, giving it a nice touch.
Labels:
Africa,
baobab,
Madagascar,
nature,
night,
Photo Friday,
stars,
time delay,
tree
Location:
Morondava, Madagascar
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
CLOUDS SWALLOW THE HIMALAYAS
Watch clouds engulf Lobuche's 20,000-ft peak.
The Himalayas tower far above everything. Even clouds often struggle to reach the summits of the world's tallest mountains.
Yet, in the right conditions, a quick-moving storm can engulf the highest of Himalayas in a matter of seconds, as seen in the time lapse series of images above.
Yet, in the right conditions, a quick-moving storm can engulf the highest of Himalayas in a matter of seconds, as seen in the time lapse series of images above.
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One of the images from the time lapse video showing Lobuche |
After watching a cloud bank crawl slowly through a nearby valley, we set up the camera to try out time-lapse photography. Every 30 seconds for 15 minutes, we took a photo of the scene above, as clouds engulfed a pair of 20,000+ peaks before our eyes.
Pros typically use a tripod and a remote control for time lapse shots...we used a pile of rocks, a wool hat, and a frost-bitten finger. The results, while not exactly pro-quality, we felt were worth posting anyway.
Hope you enjoy.
If you like this one, here are a few others (taken by pros) that are way better: time lapse nature photography.
Labels:
EBC trek,
Freezing,
High Altitude,
Himalayas,
Lobuche,
mountain,
Nepal,
night,
peak,
photography,
stars,
time lapse
Location:
Lobuche, Sagarmatha Park, Nepal
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