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Month: May 2024

“Landscape” view/ much closer view (#7B in series: Parachilna Gorge)

 

 

At 3.50 pm on 07 June 2023 my feet were very close to where they had been when I took the “7A” image, just three minutes earlier, whilst enjoying a leisurely walk through part of Parachilna Gorge.

I was, nonetheless, effectively able to get nearly eight times closer to one of the previous photo’s four peaks – by looking through a 400mm lens, as opposed to 54mm.

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“Landscape” view/ much closer view (#7A in series: Parachilna Gorge)

 

 

This series’ “7” posts both feature a “landscape” photograph, but “7B” will offer a much closer view of one of the “7A” landscape’s four peaks.

Both featured images show just part of what is a striking landscape through all 360 degrees; that holds true through the entire length of Parachilna Gorge.

The gorge is on the western side of the northern Flinders Ranges, and is easily accessed from the nearby “town” of Parachilna.

Parachilna is within daytripping distance of Wilpena, but a much better idea is to stay two nights at Parachilna’s truly-wonderful hotel. (the hotel pretty much is the “town”)

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“Landscape” view/ much closer view (#6B in series: Flinders Ranges)

 

 

Even on the greyest of days – when an Australian outback  “landscape” appears to offer a rather limited “colour palette” – a closer view is almost guaranteed to confound your initial impression.

The post’s “6B” image was taken within a few minutes of the “6A” photo, and their vantage points were not very many footsteps apart.

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“Landscape view/ much closer view (#6A in series: Flinders Ranges)

 

 

In June 2023 my beloved and I visited the Flinders Ranges, (plus other outback South Australian places) and the Northern Territory’s “Red Centre”.

Nearly half a century had passed since our most recent trip to Wilpena Pound and nearby places.

It was more than forty years since we had last been in the NT, together.

Both regions proved as singular and beautiful in 2023 reality as they had been in our memories of the 1970s.

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“Landscape” view/much closer view (#5B in series: glacier’s size, in Alaska)

 

You may be surprised to know that this post’s featured image involved a considerably shorter lens than did the “5A” photo, taken 38 minutes earlier, when we were still offshore.

When I took the above photo, we had for some minutes been strolling along the rather young beach which had formed/emerged as the glacier retreated – and lost its former status as a “tidewater” glacier.

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“Landscape” view/much closer view (#5A in series: glacier’s size, in Alaska)

 

First, please have a close look at this post’s image.

It offers a much closer view than that presented in “4A” of this series.

When I took the “5A” & “5B” images we really were much closer to the same glacier’s snout, but for the “5A” image I also deployed a telephoto rather than a wide angle lens.

Now, have another look at the “4A”image, which shows all of this glacier’s snout, rather than a small portion thereof.

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“Landscape” view/much closer view (#4B in series: boat’s size, in Alaska)

 

 

This series’ “4A” image was dominated by several square kilometres of a glacier, but also included what appeared to be a very small boat.

The very same boat is the obviously-substantial star of “4B”.

For eight nights and almost nine days my beloved and I were among the 16 people (12 passengers) who were comfortably accommodated and very well fed on MV Catalyst.

The boat also carried kayaks for us all, and towed the tender that speedily transported us to and from many of Glacier Bay’s glorious shores.

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“Landscape” view/much closer view (#4A in series: boat’s size, in Alaska)

 

 

In some places and circumstances a human’s eyes and brain find it nigh-impossible to gauge just how close – or how far away – is whatever you are looking at, intensely.

The absolute (and relative) sizes of things – things-natural and things-manufactured by humans – can likewise remain an almost total mystery, until one is actually in or on the man-made thing, and/or within not very many metres of a landscape feature’s “face”.

One such place and circumstance: Alaska’s Glacier Bay, when “exploring” it by boat.

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“Landscape” view/much closer view (#3B in series: Epupa Falls)

 

 

 

The taking of this chapter’s “A” and “B” images saw my feet move hardly at all, between shots.

(in this series, each numbered chapter has an “A”/ “landscape” post and a “B”/“much closer” post)

For this post’s “much closer” image a much longer (more than 8X longer) focal length did the walking, metaphorically – my telephoto lens greatly narrowed the field of view, and brought the waterfall’s “centre” very much “closer”.

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“Landscape” view/much closer view (#3A in series: Epupa Falls)

 

 

Present in all four featured images from “2A” through “3B” in this series: the most forceful/active of Epupa Falls’ many waterfalls.

In “2A” it accounted for a minute portion of a very big landscape.

This post’s image was taken from directly in front of that fall – within its spray zone.

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