Yellowstone hot springs
Yellowstone hot springs are really hot: water temperature in some of them exceeds the boiling point (which is 94°C at the Yellowstone elevation).
Belgian-based Russian writer Aleksandr Skorobogatov
Official Blog
Yellowstone hot springs are really hot: water temperature in some of them exceeds the boiling point (which is 94°C at the Yellowstone elevation).
It’s one of my favorite street photos, though it’s not that easy to specify why.
Obviously, it’s not that simple. If we’re talking about pure street photography, as opposed to press or documentary photography, there are lots and lots of things which by definition are beyond your control.
What does it take to get a good streetphoto? Pure luck, coincidence?
One of the places I’d like to live for a couple of years.
I have a strange fascination for the folks actually believing they figured it all out and own the truth. It must be mighty comfortable to not doubt yourself, — although most probably that’s just a manifestation of some kind of psychosis. Sometimes a harmless one, sometimes not that harmless.
A photoblog entry I’ve forgotten to mention: Blue Angels flyovers during Fleet Week in San Francisco, USA.
Trees of YellowstoneThere is something about these trees of Yellowstone, some literally cooked alive on thermal grounds, where the soil temperature could reach almost 100°C, some suffocated from minerals, which have hardened in their ‘veins’, fatally blocking the absorption of water and nutrients, and some still alive.
New photoblog entry: A day in Florence. On second thought, not in Florence only. And not just one day.
Better late than never.