Blooming Tuscany by Rericha by Rericha

Best place to enjoy the weekend. by Bokehm0n by Bokehm0n

Processed with VSCO with e6 preset

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Desolate by thelena_photography by thelena_photography

Sliding down sand dunes, running through blowing sand, getting to a place I have been wanting to photograph for a while just as the last colour of the day leaches out of the sky … gold. The broken piers at St Clair Beach in Dunedin were most certainly worth the wait!

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Foret de Hal by landscape by landscape

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Merci pour les vues, favoris et commentaires, ils font très plaisir.
Bonne semaine à vous 🙂

Thanks all for the views, favs and comments, very appreciated.
Have a nice week 🙂

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Fogged in by espenhaagensen by espenhaagensen

Dreamy landscape

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Sunrise #5465 by Tim_Brown by Tim_Brown

Sunrise #5465

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…. by Efemir by Efemir

Khan Al-Khalili (Cairo, Egypt)

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Glasshouse Mountains At Dawn. Qid, Australia by ralphied by ralphied

Glass House Mountains National Park is a heritage-listed national park in the Australian state of Queensland, 70 km (43 mi) north of Brisbane. It consists of a flat plain punctuated by rhyolite and trachyte volcanic plugs, the cores of extinct volcanoes that formed 27 million to 26 million years ago. The mountains would once have had pyroclastic exteriors, but these have eroded away.

The Glass House Mountains were named by Captain James Cook as he sailed north up the coast of what is now Queensland in 1770 as part of his voyage aboard his ship HM Bark Endeavour. They were so called as the shape of the mountains reminded him of the huge glass furnaces (glasshouses) back in his native Yorkshire.

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Cornmeal ‘DE HOOP” … by magdaindigo by magdaindigo

Tour of Europe 04 2016 
Day 8
Hellevoetsluis. In evening light.
At last, a windmill! We drove through a big part of Holland , eh without spotting one windmill? What are the chances eh? LOL
We are nearly there!
In 1697, there was a wooden mill on the site where now is the dry dock .
Dirk Jacobsz Goutswaart is mentioned as the first miller .
This mill, at the end of the 18th century, had to make way for the dry dock.
This, the stone mill “De Hoop” built in 1801 .
After this , until the restoration of 1992-1993 are an architect , a goldsmith and various artists used the mill.
Now the miller and partner occupy the ground floor and first floor.
It is still open to the public on week-ends.

Thanx for your visits and comments, M, (*_*)
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Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

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