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Red Peonies in spring this year (2025)
They do not last long but make a nice display for a few days.
Cyclamen 78
A gift from my sister for my 78th Birthday.
Plockton Wester Ross.
Nearly every visitor takes a photo of this group of houses. I have tried to make it a little different with the flowers in front.
More Poppies. I think the correct name for them is"poppy orientalis". Still one of my favourites.
Some Clematis flowers
In our Aberdeen Garden
Sweetpeas in a Vase
The Old Salmon Fishing Hut
This old salmon fishing station is on the bank of the river Dee in Aberdeen. I was trying to make this image more abstract and less easy to decipher at first glance. If you walk along the Dee from the Duthie Park towards the old bridge over the Dee you will recognise this view.
Drum Castle with Snowdrops
My AI friend tells me this :-
The rocks bottom left, with the pinkish colour) are granite.
Here’s why:
Colour: The pink hue comes from potassium feldspar (K-feldspar, orthoclase), which is common in Aberdeenshire granites.
Texture: The surface shows blocky, crystalline faces and jointing, which are typical of granite.
Geology of the area: Glen Tanar is underlain mainly by the Grampian Granite intrusions, many of which are pink to red due to feldspar. This is the same family of rocks as the famous Peterhead granite, which has been quarried for centuries.
A Highland Burn
Actually this is the burn that runs through Glen Tanar in Aberdeenshire. I think it is actually called The Water of Tanar. The pink red rocks on the bottom left really are that colour and what drew me to make this image.
The Approach of Winter
A reminder that colder days are on the way.
Algarve field with Tree
A Warm Morning in the Algarve
Midmar Recumbent Stone
This is the remains of a Bronze Age chambered cairn situated in Midmar Churchyard in Aberdeenshire. The most prominant parts are the 2 Flanking stones and between them the recumbent stone. Most of the rest of the cairn has disappeared with the stones having been reused by later peoples. The hill opposite is the Hill of Fare where it is proposed to site a windfarm. You can't actually see the hill from the churchyard as it is hidden by trees. I have taken the liberty of removing the trees from the image so that the juxtaposition of the recumbent stone and the windfarm is obvious.
This waterfall is on the path to The Bone Caves near Inchnadamph in the Scottish Highlands. The Bone Caves are very worth a visit. I made a short video of a walk we made to them a few years ago. You can see it below.
Click opposite to see the Bone Caves video.
An old fashioned street lamp in Duthie Park. The setting sun behind making it look lit.
This tree's shape reminded me of an over energetic dancer!
Haddo House in Aberdeenshire
"Tall Trees". A walk in Countesswells forest near Aberdeen
Crathes Castle in the Snow.