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Thread: Images from a Danish graveyard

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Location
    Killearn, Scotland
    Posts
    10,746
    Goodness! He must be very patient or very lucky to get such a wonderful photo!
    Your tree photo is beautiful too, Randi.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
    Posts
    20,177
    Is that animal a squirrel? Or if not, what is it?

    If it is one, they (or at least that one) look totally different from the ones here!
    I meant," said Ipslore bitterly, "what is there in this world that truly makes living worthwhile?"
    Death thought about it.
    CATS, he said eventually. CATS ARE NICE.

    -- Terry Pratchett (1948—2015), Sourcery

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Sweet Home Alabama (ZULU -6)
    Posts
    4,269
    Randi, Your pictures are wonderful. I wish I had traveled to Denmark while I lived in the Netherlands. This was a trip that was planned but just never got around to it.
    Because of one picture you posted on the Magnolia tree I had to google Magnolia because what you were calling a Magnolia is what we in the south refered to as a Tulip tree. The Tulip tree as we call it is one of the first to bloom in the spring. When I looked it up sure enough it is called a Tulip Magnolia and it appears there are many different varieties in different parts of the world. Our southern Magnolia is a huge tree with very big blossums. I got to see one grow from just a stick with one leaf to a monster so big you could sit under it in a rain storm and it took several minutes before the rain finally reached you. This is a picture of the Southern Magnolia.



    The cluster as seen in this shot is probably a foot across.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2002
    Location
    Kansas, USA
    Posts
    20,902
    What wonderful pictures Randi! I love the squirrel. Ours don't have the furry tufts in their ears here. I always loved walking in cemeteries. They are so peaceful.
    No matter what anyone does, someone some where will be offended some how!!!!
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  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    Copenhagen, Denmark - GMT+1
    Posts
    15,952
    KK, this guy is quite patient when he goes out with his camera. I was not there the day he got that shot, but I'll ask him how long he had to stand there and just wait.

    The squirrels we have here are different from the ones you have in the US - yours are mostly grey, aren't they? I never really noticed the tufts in the ears, not sure all of them have these.

    Kokopup, I didn't know until recently that there are different kinds of Magnolia trees. The ones you have in the south are very impressive and so beautiful. I know that they are the State flower/tree in Mississippi and I've seen pictures of them from Willow Oak. The Dogwood trees are nice, too.

    A pity you didn't make it to Denmark, I think you would have liked it!

    This is one I shot last year, not half as good as the other one, but I love the tree.




    "I don't know which weapons will be used in the third World war, but in the fourth, it will be sticks and stones" --- Albert Einstein.


  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Sweet Home Alabama (ZULU -6)
    Posts
    4,269
    Randi, the way this tree is growing reminds me of the Live Oak that grows in the coastal region of the southern US. This is a very impressive tree and one that would have attracted me as a kid because of it easy access for climbing.
    A tree similarly shaped was my favorite as a kid. I built tree houses and ladders into the limbs all through this tree. It was a Mulberry tree that was cut down years later when I was grown. I heard the man that had the task of cutting the tree was cursing me with every cut. I had probably put 100 lbs of nails in that tree, over the years, and this managed to repeatedly dull his saw.

    This is the Southern Live Oak Tree.


  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    Copenhagen, Denmark - GMT+1
    Posts
    15,952
    Wow, that tree is wonderful!! I would have loved to climb that, too - yes, I did climb trees when I was a child.

    I heard the man that had the task of cutting the tree was cursing me with every cut. I had probably put 100 lbs of nails in that tree, over the years, and this managed to repeatedly dull his saw.
    LOL! I can just imagine his cursing.

    There are quite a few of these trees at the cemetary, but I don't know the name of them. They look quite spooky when it gets dark. I will see if I can find the name of them.



    "I don't know which weapons will be used in the third World war, but in the fourth, it will be sticks and stones" --- Albert Einstein.


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