Yearly Archives: 2018
Time loops and folds in the waters and fjords of British Columbia’s Strait of Georgia. As you turn into the deep channel of Desolation Sound – given it’s morose name by the dyspeptic Captain George Vancouver when he first explored the area in bad weather in 1792 – it is almost as if time ceases to exist. […]
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Posted in Canada,Nature,Sailing,TravelTags: BC,boats,British Columbia,Canada,Desolation Sound,landscape,Melanie Cove,nature,Photo Blog,sailing,travel,Travel Blog,Ursula Wall,waterscape
It is no wonder that northern Europeans flock to the south coast of Spain in droves! Cheap, delicious food; blue skies and a wonderful temperate Mediterranean climate; and history and culture around every corner: my husband and I became as infatuated with Spain’s Costa Blanca (White Coast) as any other tourists. Our visit in mid-May last […]
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Posted in History,Spain,TravelTags: Alicante,architecture,Castillo de Santa Bárbara,flowers,history,landscape,Photo Blog,Santa Barbara Castle,Spain,travel,Travel Blog,Ursula Wall
Music makes everything better! The annual five-day Easter long-weekend musical feast that is Byron Bay Bluesfest always delivers up such a range and variety of wonderful talent that it is hard to know where to start. Rubbing shoulders with big names from around the world, lesser-known Australian performers proudly hold their own. I look forward to these […]
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Posted in Australia,music,PortraitsTags: Australia,blog,Byron Bay Bluesfest,environmental portrait,environmental portraits,lights,low light,music,musicians,people,performance,performers,Photo Blog,portrait,portraits,singers,Ursula Wall,women
According to a myth in the Kaningara area of the Sepik region of Papua New Guinea (PNG), men used to give birth to children while the women controlled the spirit houses. The women had a set of magic flutes with which they communicated with the spirits, and this is how men were created. One night when the […]
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Posted in Culture,Papua New Guinea,TravelTags: animism,animist,architecture,arts and crafts,environmental portrait,landscape,Middle Sepik,Photo Blog,Religious Practice,Sepik River,Ursula Wall
They say every journey begins with a single step. Even so, when I heard that the penultimate leg of our walk for the day was the ominously named “1000 steps”, I worried. In Nepal, “steps” always means up, not just forward! I can outstrip a lot of people on the flat, but present me the slightest […]
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Posted in Landscapes,Nepal,Religious Practice,TravelTags: buddhism,buddhist,environmental portrait,flowers,landscape,Namo Buddha,Nepal,Photo Blog,travel,Travel Blog,Ursula Wall,walk
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