TRAVELING around Iceland is a dream of everybody. You’ve to
be brave to tolerate the coldness and walk its barren landscapes, to spend time
observing puffins and Icelandic horses in their heavy winter coats, and the
turf-roofed houses are giving you cozy dreams. If you’re on the fence about
traveling to Iceland, here are several reasons why exploring this amazing
country is the best decision you’ll ever make.
Friday, 7 April 2017
Friday, 17 March 2017
The World's Largest Photography Award Reveals its Stunning Shortlist
Swirling tornadoes, glittering
ice caves and a breaching killer whale: The world's largest photography awards disclose
its stunning shortlist. There’re some of the entries to have made the 2017 Sony
World Photography Awards, now in its 10th year. You can see a vast tornado over
a deserted highway in Texas, whereas another captures of an almighty killer
whale breaches off the northern coast of Hokkaido in Japan, tossing silver
shards of glimmering water into the air as it breaks the surface.
Thus, the 49 countries are represented
in the shortlist, with the winners to be revealed on April 20 in London. These
are just some of the moment’s judges for the Sony World Photography Awards have
picked out for this year's shortlist. For the 2017 competition, the largest in
the world, now in its 10th year - photographers from across the planet entered
a record 227,596 images across the awards' Professional, Open and Youth
categories. This was indeed a truly global reach to the Sony World Photography
Awards judging this year - the images were more diverse and broad ranging than have
ever seen before.
Labels:
Photography
Wednesday, 1 February 2017
A Gigantic Crack Found in Arizone Desert Spotted First Time Using Drone Technology
A massive Two-mile crack is found
in the Arizona desert, as Giant fissure in the earth is spotted for the first
time using drone technology. This is first ever time, when AZGS had used drone
footage to review the fissures in this way. The huge crack formed between March
2013 and December 2014, and it is thought the fissure may have grown after
heavy rains in the fall of 2014. They’re experimenting with drone technology as
a tool for mapping fissures and other surface features like, landslides masses.
It seems a fresher crack, and could have been an underground void that reached
the surface after a monsoon in 2016.
The fissures, which are fairly
common in the Arizona desert, formed after 'extensive groundwater withdraws in
the Sonoran Desert. Moreover, a cluster of the cracks subsists around Eloy, and
in Cochise, La Paz, Maricopa, Pima and Pinal Counties, with the first having
opened up near Eloy in 1929. The giant fissures are precarious to people
off-roading and riding ATVs in the area, and also pose a risk to roaming
livestock who can fall in and get stuck. Therefore, it is also unsafe to stand
near the edge of a fissure due to the risk that it could suddenly cave in.
Labels:
Amazing Nature
Wednesday, 9 November 2016
The Mother of 300 Trees
“Saalumarada Thimmakka” 105 years
old women inspiring people of all generations with her unbelievable dedication
to our planet. The one century old women planted about 300 trees, influenced by
the fact that she and her late husband Sri Bikkala Chikkayya found themselves
childless after 25 years of marriage. They are hailing from rural Karnataka,
southern India, the motivated couple dealt with this despondency by nurturing,
watering, and making the plants a part of their family.
She explained their verdict to
cultivate trees to CNN. It was my destiny not to have any children. Because of
that, we decided to plant trees and raise them and get blessings. We have carefully
treated the trees just like our children. This cheering notion is particularly
impressive considering the environmental conditions they faced the landscape is
arid and has very slight rainfall. Hence, to properly care for the trees, the
couple carried water for quite a lot of kilometers, but just like a protective
parent, Chikkayya planted thorny bushes to protect the bunch from animals. Her
great selfless efforts have since received the devotion they deserve.
After year of efforts, finally she
has a foundation established in her name called the “Saalumarada Thimmakka
International Foundation” that’s dedicated to conserving the environment as
well as supporting schools, education, and providing healthcare for those in
need. Therefore, after years of caring for her plant children, she has someone
to look after her in her advanced years an adopted son named Sri Umesh. She incessantly
inspired by her environmental efforts, and acts as president for her
organization and runs a nursery that provides trees to farmers, carrying on her
legacy for years to come.
Labels:
Amazing Nature
Friday, 28 October 2016
The Most Beautiful Roads in Europe
For driving lovers, The
Grossglockner High Alpine Road in Austria is perhaps the most eye-catching road
in Europe, running across the mountains from Bruck in the state of Salzburg to
Heiligenblut in Carinthia via Fuscher Törl. The talented nature photographer
“MikoÅ‚aj Gospodarek” has been travelling to the road every year since 2008 to
take pictures of it in the diverse seasons. The photographer has built up an
unbelievable series of pictures showing numerous points along the route, which
is peppered with mountain peaks, stunning glacier lakes and remote roadside
huts.
These roads are big tourist
attraction thanks to its lovely vistas and thousands of visitors pay the toll
to drive along it from May to October. The Austrian road with highest mountain
was first mooted by a team of Austrian engineers in 1924 when they were
ridiculed for their ambitions plans. Almost 11 years later the Grossglockner
High Alpine Road was officially opened in August 1935. This road provides a
one-of-a-kind journey for those who choose to travel on it. The road is like an
ornament of ribbons situated between green mountain pastures, colorful flower
meadows, rocky rubble, ice and snow. Because it nestles up against hills,
follows the course of the natural ground and fits the mountains like a glove.
Whooshing waterfalls, the shrill whistling of marmots and the howling wind in
the summit regions make a memorable high alpine soundscape.
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