Naked in Eden: Ancient Memories in the Australian Rainforest

 

Gallery

 

 

 

Every rock, tree, and blooming flower, every
ecstatic sunset speaks to me of texture, form and
beauty, begging me to awaken and take notice. We
are surrounded by living, breathing art. In nature I
feel that all things are possible. ~Copyright: Robin Easton

 

 

 

 

Check out some of my birds - When I lived in the northeast I loved to feed them through the harsh winters. Here in the southwest (NM), more than food, they need water, and will come year after year to a small bowl of water. CLICK PHOTO

Don't you just love flowers? I love to photograph them flat on my belly with the sun shining through their petals. I always feel that if nature can create such stunning colors that anything in life is possible. CLICK PHOTO

"Where Have All The Flowers Gone?"
I am always intrigued by reflections and the illusions they create. I have a few in this section. The autumn reflection on the right reminds me of a Monet painting gone wild. Check out the others. CLICK PHOTO
Aaaahhh, the Colorado Rockies, one of my most favorite places on Earth. I've done quite a bit of camping here in this secret valley and climbed to about 1200' in the surrounding peaks. Once I was caught in a "white out" during the middle of summer in these mountains - pretty wild and thrilling! CLICK PHOTO
"Rode through the desert on a horse with no name . . . " Well, this guy might have had a name once but by the time I found him he was all bones and no skin! A fascinating find - an entire horse skeleton - right down to the hoof bones and the tiny tail bone. I wanted to take him home and resurrect him with wire in my living room - you know, "dinosaur done museum style." CLICK PHOTO
West coast, CA, wind surfers. I loved to go to the beach on Sundays and watch the colorful sails flit across the water. An extra bonus was watching a large flock of seagulls "chase" these 3 wind surfers. CLICK PHOTO
Windsurfers, Oil Spills And Sunsets . . .
Take  A Look At The Larger Picture.

The end (or the start, depending on whether you're heading north or south) of the Appalachian Trail, Good ol' Mt Katahdin in the north woods of Maine. North of Katahdin it gets pretty dang flat. Lots of potatoes and more potatoes. Love those potatoes! CLICK PHOTO

Check out my north woods, Maine, moose pics. Or is that pics of "mooses?" These guys were so unbothered by me that I could canoe within 10' of them before they decided to move on. Some of them are HUGE! Lots of "mooses" in the Baxter State Park area. CLICK PHOTO
Hey, Are You Taking My Photograph?
Love Being On That Water!
How fun, rafting the Rio Chama, New Mexico. I love the rapids in a "funyack." Check out this San Juan River trip. Don't you just love being on the water, in the water, listening to the water, drinking water? Water, water, water. Hey, I live in the southwest and I love that sunshine but I sure do crave water! CLICK PHOTO
In nature I forget myself and become absorbed into endless beauty and possibility. With or without a camera I become the astounding world around me. Click on the photo to see a couple of New Mexico petroglyphs and cactus. As time permits I will eventually post more of my New Mexico photos. CLICK PHOTO

 

 

*SEE PHOTOS of the World's Oldest Tropical Rainforest
at this link
http://www.drltrust.org/Gallery.htm   

When you purchase these gorgeous photos sixty
percent (60%) of the proceeds goes toward protecting
the Daintree Lowland Rainforest.

 

 

"No poem, no painting, no work of man's hand or brain is as marvelous a thing as the least of the species of living being that inhabit the earth. Each one . . . is a miracle as far beyond our comprehension as the stars. We cannot make them; we cannot understand how they were made. To destroy one . . . to wipe out a whole species . . . for all eternity, is to do so colossal a thing that the mind falters at the thought. Yet we have done it again and again and again, thoughtlessly, needlessly, wantonly, cruelly . . . many of the species that we have destroyed, or are now destroying, were among the noblest and most beautiful.
                                                                                    
  "On the Wings of a Bird" - Herbert Ravenel Sass (1884-1958)

 

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