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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.

Tomorrow’s “3B” image is entirely occupied by just part of that particular fall.

“3B” is the fruit of a much longer lens than was this post’s photo.

Both images were taken within a very short (and very careful) walking distance of each other, a few minutes either side of 4.30 pm on 10 November 2022.

The pictured fall is on the Namibian side of the Kunene River – one of very few “permanently” wet rivers to flow atop Namibian soil.

All such perennial rivers have sources in neighbouring nations.

Their “Namibian reaches” are usually Namibian on one side, only; if you look across them, whilst standing on Namibian soil – or rock or sand – you will be looking across to Angola, Zimbabwe, Botswana or South Africa.

Published in Americas and Eurasia and Africa nature and travel photographs