Mon, Oct 21, 4:42 AM CDT

Grove, Minus One

Photography Landscape posted on Mar 10, 2011
Open full image in new tab Zoom on image
Close

Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.


Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.

Description


At our local beach ...

Comments (30)


)

wysiwig

1:33AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

Studies have shown that plants have rudimentary feelings and sensations. There is the famous experiment where loud rock and roll caused house plants to grow away from the speakers while classical music made them thrive. This is a wonderful capture but I wonder what the other trees are feeling about their fallen neighbor.

)

helanker

2:05AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

HMM ! Maybe there is something about what wysiwig writes here :-) We had two huge poplars, which became way too large, so we desided to cut them down. They had severel "children" near by, that we desided to let be. Strange things happened when we cut down the large two trees. One should think the smaller trees would have more chances to grow, but they lost most of their leaves all three and the rest of the summer, they stood there with only leaves on the top. Was it fear or did the large trees still feed them untill we cut them down? Dont know. But I know, I like this shot very much and wish we had such old dry and beautiful trees on our beach.

)

awjay

2:22AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

super capture

)

Schaefchen

2:46AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

super wonderful claase photo

)

bazza

3:14AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

Lovely capture of this trunk Tara very nice work!!

)

jayfar

3:47AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

Very nice capture Tara, my wife would love a piece of that in our garden!

)

cfulton

4:23AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

I like the capture and the title! Clive

)

durleybeachbum

5:14AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

Marks comment is so interesting...Mozart played in the classroom proved to enhance performance esp. in maths, whereas pop seemingly destroyed abilities already present. Anyway...super pic and a very clever title

)

blondeblurr

7:20AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

It looks so sad - maybe these type of trees have a very shallow root system and a storm surge and the saltwater did the damage ? ... Just like washed up driftwood (a very large piece!) - but where is the beach ? Or is that volcanic type of beach soil/sand and stones you have there ? (I guess, we are very spoiled with our beautiful beaches) never-the-less an impressive scene, BB

)

bmac62

8:33AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

Extraordinary still life. BB above doesn't know the beauties of an inland sound...Puget Sound in this case. Sandy ocean beaches and sandy inland beaches have many things in common but here we have very little surf...it is inland, many miles from the ocean as the crow flies. Here we have standing, surrounding timber on tens of thousands of acres. Trees at some point die, float downstream and become beach logs. You've created a wonderful atmosphere here. Fascinating comment by wysiwig above. You've got us all thinking and talking among ourselves. Well done.

)

Meisiekind

9:11AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

What a wonderful and fresh new angle at your lovely Picnic Point! Amazing shot Hun!

)

Merrylee

10:27AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

Just as beautiful as the ones standing...

)

barbdennist

10:53AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

This nice shot makes me want to go to the beach. I love strolling along the beach and looking at the driftwood.

)

Faemike55

11:02AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

Very lovely capture!

)

MrsRatbag

11:04AM | Thu, 10 March 2011

A wonderful shot of the before and afterlife of trees...they may be a common sight here but I never get tired of them!

)

goodoleboy

6:00PM | Thu, 10 March 2011

Woodsman, spare that tree! Lighting effects nice and stark in this fine foto.

)

npauling

6:39PM | Thu, 10 March 2011

The sea looks to have taken another victim. A lovely capture but it is such a shame to see a mighty tree fall.

)

kenmo

6:45PM | Thu, 10 March 2011

Well spotted...!!!

)

Katraz

2:18AM | Fri, 11 March 2011

Nice shot well seen.

)

moochagoo

2:54AM | Fri, 11 March 2011

Love those big trees washed. (I remember Olympic mountains beaches).

)

dochtersions

7:22AM | Fri, 11 March 2011

Great perspective and compartments. That many tribes vertically, and the big ones horizontally to the front.

)

mariogiannecchini

8:07AM | Fri, 11 March 2011

Very lovely capture ! Great lighting on trunk ! My plants have grown so much and good with classical music and opera in the 10 years that I lived alone in the 80s.

)

makron

4:01PM | Fri, 11 March 2011

Very nice capture. Wonderful shot.

)

RodS

4:34PM | Fri, 11 March 2011

Beautiful old tree, and a great photo of it, Tara! I love the light on this very spectacular!

)

NefariousDrO

4:50PM | Fri, 11 March 2011

Very nice! I'm fascinated by the subtle greening of moss growing on parts of the tree. Wonderful photo!

)

hipps13

12:21AM | Sat, 12 March 2011

a place for a sit to watch and stare even to think what goes on in the mind wonderful capture, Tara May your comment sure made me smile and I so thank you, my friend makes a warm soul cherish have a wonderful weekend warm hugs and love, Linda Kaye

)

lyron

4:21AM | Sun, 13 March 2011

Cool shot!!

)

beachzz

10:57PM | Sun, 13 March 2011

A beach has so many treasures--your foto shows how many different kinds there are. This is beautiful!!

)

fredster66

3:05PM | Tue, 15 March 2011

Great find and photo!

waheednasir

12:15AM | Wed, 30 March 2011

i like this, interesting capture..:).


5 71 0

Photograph Details
F Numberf/5.0
MakeCanon
ModelCanon PowerShot SX20 IS
Shutter Speed1/250
ISO Speed80
Focal Length5

00
Days
:
19
Hrs
:
17
Mins
:
57
Secs
Premier Release Product
Fashion Halter Tank & Super Micro Skirt G8F-G8.1F
3D Figure Asset Addons
Sale Item
$9.85 USD 40% Off
$5.91 USD

Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.