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I always have had, and still have, a great curiosity about the world. I’m fascinated by people, by different cultures with their seemingly infinite variety of manners, customs, food, clothing, and housing; by all the different ways in which people do life. After years of travelling my fascination has not lessened but the differences have coalesced into one immutable truth: that we are all far more alike than we are different. Far more often than not our encounters with people opened our hearts.
As much as I’ve wanted to know about the peoples of the world, I’ve also wanted to explore its beauty. Away from the noise and busyness and crowds of the cities our encounters with the natural world always nourished our souls.
Following on from my recent post of my favourite photographs of people, I’ve now chosen my favourite landscape photographs. As with the photographs of people it was really hard to hone it down to just a few. I’d originally selected 100! Here then are those that made the final cut.

Back in 2011 one of the first places we went to when we began our nomadic journey was Tuscany. We stayed in a farm house near San Gimignano, and this photo was taken in the surrounding area.

One day in Bali we got up at 2am and went to climb an active volcano in the dark. This is the view, all steamy from the bubbling volcano crater, that we were rewarded with as the sun rose.

This is in Vang Vieng in Laos. We decided on only one night there because we’d read that the town had become a backpacker drunk party. It was nothing of the kind and we could have happily spent a few days there. I think it’s about the prettiest place in Laos.

This is a small portion of the cascading emerald pools of Kuangsi Waterfall, 32 km from Luang Prabang, Laos. We didn’t swim (the water was surprisingly cold) but we did hike the trail up one side of the falls, across the top and down the other.

Torres Del Paine National Park, Chile. We’d planned to do some trekking but the previous two days there had been a roaring freezing gale which left us with time for only a day tour. The place was so magnificent, and the day was so shiny and sunny, that we had no complaints.

We travelled to the far north of Chile through the Atacama desert to San Pedro de Atacama. From there we did a day trip to see the extraordinary landscapes of the Valle de la Luna, a few kilometres outside the town.

From San Pedro de Atacama we did a three day overland tour across the Bolivian altiplano, an uninhabited high desert with no roads and an ever-changing landscape with lakes and flamingoes. It was one of the highlights of all our travels.

The Bolivian altiplano. Every one of those tiny white dots is a flamingo. Further on in the journey we got really close to some of them.

Finally we arrived at the great Salar de Uyuni, one of the biggest salt flats in the world, covering an area of 10,500 sq km.

On South Plaza Island, Galapagos we hiked through a cactus forest and were surrounded by iguanas. The iguanas feed on the cactus and are very territorial, each guarding its own tree. We visited eight of the islands and each one had its own unique vegetation and wildlife.

After traveling around South America for six months we went to Cyprus for two months to recover. This is at Cape Greco on the south coast.

Sometime later we decided to cross the Pacific to visit Australia and New Zealand. We stopped on the South Pacific island of Samoa on the way over and stayed for five days. It was a mini tropical vacation. On one of our walks we saw this fabulous rock formation.

New Zealand is without doubt one of the most beautiful countries in the world. This shot was taken on the road from Queenstown to Dunedin.

The top of Mount Ruapehu on New Zealand’s North Island, with Mount Ngauruhoe in the distance. Mount Ngauruhoe was the famed Mount Doom in The Lord of the Rings trilogy of films.

In the Whakarewarewa thermal valley in New Zealand the Pohutu Geyser erupts up to twenty times a day. We waited and waited to see it. Many in our group wandered off, but most of us waited, determined to see what all the fuss was about. At first it started bubbling and steaming. It looked a little like soapsuds frothing up on the rocks. We continued to wait. Is that it? Then it got a little stronger, a little higher, but it still wasn’t all that spectacular. We waited some more. And then it went. With a giant whoosh it exploded higher and higher into the sky, as high as thirty metres. I was afraid it would stop any second and that it would be over before I’d had a chance to really take it in. But no. It went on and on, shooting into the sky, a giant natural fountain of boiling water and steam. We watched for fifteen or twenty minutes and it was still going when we walked away completely awed.

And now we’re in Australia, in Kakadu National Park in the Northern Territory, or the Top End as it’s known. We took a sunrise cruise on Yellow Water, a backwater of the South Alligator River.

From the top of the escarpment at Ubirr, looking out over the valley, still green from the wet season rains.

Very early morning after a sleepless night on a train from Izmir to Konya, Turkey – through the train window.

The landscape of Cappadocia in central Turkey is one of the most extraordinary to be found anywhere, especially when seen from a hot air balloon at sunrise.

Cappadocia. The rock is soft and hundreds of feet deep. There are entire underground cities and many of the “chimneys” have been hollowed out to form homes, monasteries, and churches.

“Vast, Echoing and God-like”: the burnt-orange desert of Wadi Rum, Jordan. We spent a night here in a Bedouin tent and the next morning rode camels to an escarpment, which we climbed to watch the sunrise.

Twice we rented a perfect casita from friends in La Manzanilla, Mexico. The first time we stayed for four months, and the second time for two months, both times pure heaven. This is the view from the patio with the sunset reflected in the pool.

The road from the highway (I use the term loosely) down to San Pedro La Laguna on the shores of Lake Atitlan, Guatemala is one of the worst “paved” roads we’ve ever experienced with so many potholes they become the road. Oh but it’s so worth it – for views like this and villages like San Pedro, which can be seen in the distance.

From the village of Sapa in North Vietnam we spent the day hiking from village to village through and around the rice fields escorted by a young six-month-pregnant local woman who knew every crevice and terrace of the area.

Sunset at Jericho Beach, Vancouver, Canada. We’re a bit of a drive from Jericho now, but will no doubt make the trek often enough in the summer. Summer of 2016 we housesat for friends who live just a five minute walk away so we were at the beach almost every day.
Today I wake up empty and frightened.
Don’t go to the door of the study and read a book.
Instead, take down the dulcimer,
let the beauty of what you love be what you do.
There are a thousand ways to kneel and kiss the ground,
there are a thousand ways to go home again. – Rumi
Next post: A summer trip to Vancouver Island
All words and images by Alison Louise Armstrong unless otherwise noted
© Alison Louise Armstrong and Adventures in Wonderland – a pilgrimage of the heart, 2010-2018.
inspiring photos as always Alison 🙂 xx
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Thanks Danila. There’s so much beauty in the world!
Alison
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Beautiful landscapes and great photography!
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Thanks so much Jennifer. I’ve been poking around your blog, and have saved it. I’ll be coming to Japan April 27 to May 15. So far I’ve booked accommodation in Tokyo, Shinkansen to Kanazawa May 6, then bus to Shirakawa-Go and accommodation there. On the 9th I’ll go to Kyoto. I’m a bit apprehensive about being able to communicate, but apart from that I’m really excited.
Alison
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That’s so cool you will be coming to Japan! It looks like you have a lot of fun places planned. You shouldn’t have too many problems not being able to speak Japanese, though it might be more challenging in places like Kanazawa and Shirakawago. I find people are usually quite helpful if you need it though. Have a great time!
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Beautiful places. Great photos 🙂
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Thank you so much.
Alison
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Have to agree with you about New Zealand 🙂
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We were endlessly blown away by NZ. Every day more beautiful scenery, and so much variety!
Alison
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Gorgeous photos and gorgeous parts of the world!
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Thanks Cindy. There’s so much beauty in the world!
Alison
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Exceptional photos, every single one! I feel like I just took a trip around the world. I need to tap into your knowledge of Chile. It’s moving up our list and your photos show the reason why. Let’s chat next time we meet for breakfast. Thanks again for this escape through your imagery. Hope to see you and Don soon!
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Thank you so much Kelly! It was fun revisiting all the places we’ve travelled to put the post together. There are several posts on Chile. Our bus trip north was a bit unconventional but worth it. We skipped Valparaiso and wish we hadn’t – have a look at Thirdeye Mom’s posts about Valpo. Then of course there’s all the hiking in Patagonia – really beautiful country.
Yes, let’s get together again soon. We’re both under the weather with hacking coughs ATM so you don’t want to see us just yet 🙂
Alison
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Fascinating post, Alison, and magnificent images. I enjoyed every one…the salt flat reflection is memorable among many others. Your photos and narrative brought back great memories of traveling to many of these amazing places. Love your Rumi passage.
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Thank you so much Jane. It was a sweet journey going back through all the places we’ve been. I’m glad they sparked some memories for you too. I’m a huge fan of Rumi!
Alison
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touching the earth
in gratitude
for your splendid
colorful atmospheric
expressions 🙂
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Thank you for your
kind words, your
gratitude, and for touching
the earth. Each small gesture
adds to the whole
filling the cosmos with joy.
It’s why we’re here 🙂
Alison
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Incredible work with this again.
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Thank you so much Robert.
Alison
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Beautiful images Alison. You have a excellent eye and these photos are wonderful!
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Thanks so much Tim/Anne. I’m glad you enjoyed the photos.
Alison
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Fabulous photos, every one is amazing but I especially like the ones in Bolivia. Never been but it looks incredible.
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Thanks so much Jon. Bolivia was really one of the great highlights of our travels. It really is incredible.
Alison
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Glorious photos celebrating the landscape. Hard to choose my favorite from so many beauties. Some places I have been and others still await. Love the introduction … a definition amen from me!
Peta
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Thanks Peta, glad you enjoyed them. I think the cure for any kind of ‘us-and-them’ thinking would be if everyone travelled.
Alison
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So many wonders you’ve seen. Exquisite shots, every one of them.
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Thanks so much Tish. We have been very lucky to see so much beauty.
Alison
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Breath taking photo’s, thank you so much for sharing these beautiful travel memories! Your photo’s are just making me itch to visit these beautiful places myself….one day!
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Thank you for your kind words. I hope you get to travel to some of these places! And you’re welcome – I love to share the beauty of the world.
Alison
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Just spectacular – thank you for posting
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Thank you! And you’re welcome.
Alison
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these are quite simply, stunning –
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Thanks so much Beth.
Alison
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Gorgeous captures of beauty, Alison. (I shared this on Twitter, too)
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Thanks TSMS – for your kind words, and for the share!
Alison
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Ahhh Alison… These photos really make me want to travel for months again. I miss seeing Mother Nature at her finest, I miss listening to the sound of crushing waves, I miss the calmness of highland villages, I miss watching the skies turn red then purple as the sun sets. And the fact that it’s been cloudy and rainy since the last few weeks here in Jakarta certainly makes me want to go somewhere even more. Thanks for sharing this stunning collection of images around the world with us all, Alison!
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Thanks so much Bama, and you’re welcome. I do understand the wanderlust! It’s endlessly rainy here in Vancouver too. What saves me is I live very near a 4km forest track around a golf course. I try to walk it every day, even in the rain, that way I get out into nature at least a little bit. the trees seem to calm me.
Alison
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All the photos are really wonderful 😀
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Thank you so much Anne. I’m glad you enjoyed them.
Alison
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That is a stunning collection of images. Basically all of them from South America are my favorites. Plus the cathedral rock in NZ. Oh, and the camels in the desert. You have been fortunate to see some of the most beautiful places on Earth!
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Thanks Jeff. Of course I want to improve! Always I’m looking at other’s work and thinking I would like to be able do better than what I’m doing. You have some gorgeous landscape shots that have left me breathless, and envious. I know, I know – I need to get a tripod and experiment with long exposures. Anyway I’m quite pleased with this lot. South America is amazing. Have you been? I really recommend it. As for Cathedral Rock – I have no idea how I was lucky enough to get that shot with no people in it! New Zealand is another of the world’s beauty spots. And yes, we’ve been very lucky.
Alison
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Wow wow wow! Inspiring!
I get to go to Hawaii in a week. So I’m looking forward to some spectacular beauty!
Hope all is well with you two. love.
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Thanks Jane! So glad you like them. It was so much fun going back and choosing them. Have a great time in Hawaii! We both have hacking colds, but that’s the worst of it. All is well.
Alison xox
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…and there are a thousand pixels of magic in each of those photographs. My, how I enjoyed.
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Thank you so much Suzanne. I am glad you enjoyed them.
Alison
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Just gorgeous, of course makes me want to go to every place you’ve captured, starting with Tuscany!
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Thanks Amanda. Get travelling girl! Tuscany is gorgeous. We were there in late Summer but I think Spring may be even better.
Alison
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As I was going through your photos, I kept saying that’s my favourite, only to find ones I like even more. Wow, you have captured the beauty of our great planet. I’m partial to your Chile/Bolivia photos (and love Wadi Rum with camels in foreground)…maybe it’s the sun/dryness of the desert I’m craving! Wonderful photos Alison!
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Thanks so much Caroline. So many are my favourites, including a bunch that never made the cut. The high deserts in Chile and Bolivia are quite extraordinary, and definitely worth a visit. I was lucky to get those camels in the shot of Wadi Rum.
Alison
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Fabulous pictures. I’m sure it was very difficult to pick which ones to share. A nice summary of your travels. My favourite picture is the… oh never mind, I can’t pick a favourite.
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Thanks Darlene. It was difficult to make the final choice. Like the collection of people shots, perhaps I’ll one day do another post with all the images that didn’t make the cut. I can’t pick a favourite either.
Alison
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Amazing photos! Absolutely amazing. Thanks so much for sharing them.
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Thank you so much Donna, and you’re welcome!
Alison
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All stunning, Alison – the funny thing is that I’ve been to many of the locations shown here and yet your photos made me feel like I was in a whole new place every time! Some made me catch my breath, and all reaffirmed why I travel!
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Thanks Lexie. I think we all see things a little differently, and it depends on so much – mood, weather, alertness, age, company (or not), expectations, even our upbringing, etc. I’m glad you like my view of these places we’ve both been to.
Alison
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You’re blessed to have been to so many beautiful places. The photos are stunning!
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Thanks Linda. We have indeed been very blessed.
Alison
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Great collection of photos, but even more important all the amazing experieces you had at each of these incredible places. I struggle to find a favourite photo…they are all beautiful 😄
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Thanks so much Gilda. I couldn’t find a favourite either 🙂 and yes It’s wonderful to have the photos, but how lucky we are to have had the experiences. The photos bring back so many wonderful memories.
Alison
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Jaw-dropping!
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Lol thanks Kate xox
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Surely there is no other post on the entire WWW as lovely as this one. Words fail me, so I’ll just savor the beauty and allow silence to speak in my behalf.
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Oh what a lovely compliment Lisa! Thank you so much. I’m so glad you enjoyed the post.
Alison
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I mean this – your landscapes made me gasp and made me teary eyed. So gorgeous.
Your images of Vang Vien made me regret not going there. Sadly limited time also kept me away from Kuangsi when I visited Luang Prabang. Your perspective if the place is magnificent. Next time around I guess.
But you’ve perked up my spirits knowing what awaits in South America (we are heading that way and will sail there in 2019/2020). These pictures are the poster child for the term ‘OMG’ in the urban dictionary.
Your pictures of Galapagos, New Zealand and Australia make me long to return there (again, next time around).
Turkey is on the list and I’ve obviously got more exploring to do in North America (these pictures are calling me to my home continent)
And then you throw SaPa in there and make me so sad to leave SE Asia for our Indian Ocean Crossing. If I wasn’t so determined to complete a circumnavigation, I’d move to Vietnam for a few years.
Thank you for this tour through your lens. You’ve inspired me to up my Landscape game. I have much to aspire to.
Hug from Thailand.
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Thank you so much Lisa – I am touched by your response.
South America is truly amazing with a huge variety in cultures and landscapes. We spent 6 months there and only saw half the continent. We didn’t even get to Brazil, Colombia, or Venezuela.
I also could return to Galapagos and NZ – both glorious. Being Australian I must also say the same about Australia of course 🙂 but I did find the far north there particularly to be visually stunning.
I don’t know that I actually know that much about landscape photography. I work with depth-of-field, ISO, and exposure but not much else. I long to try shooting long exposure shots with a tripod but am reluctant to carry one around with me. I know one day I’ll succumb.
I’m so glad I’ve inspired you a little 🙂
Alison
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Interestingly, one of my photography mentors (Pete DeMarco) was just instructing me to focus on the basics and experiment with the exposure triangle when I’m shooting a scene. I have a tendency to cling to ‘Program’ mode’ but plan to get out of my comfort zone as we head across The Indian.
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Good luck with your experimenting! I mainly shoot in aperture manual, but will also use full manual for non-moving subjects. After a while the exposure triangle becomes something you don’t need to think about too much.
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I don’t ever tell bloggers their photos are “stunning” because that word is so overused. But Jeeesh, woman…these are ALL simply freaking stunning. I like the one of Salar de Uyuni the best I think. Or is it the one of…never mind. Say hi to Don.
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Thanks so much BF. I can live with stunning 🙂
Alison
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What an incredible amount of work and learning it must have taken you to get to this level as a photographer, Alison. Thank you for sharing this wonderful labour of love.
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Thanks so much K9, and you’re welcome. Yes, it is definitely a labour of love, and it’s that that has kept me going. I think I’ve learned as much from looking at the photos of others as I have from going out and doing it.
So looking forward to the start of Oly skating this afternoon! Yay! Finally it’s here!
Alison
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Awesome photos Alison. You have traveled to so many places. I love the first photo best of all. Tuscany is beautiful.
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Thank you so much Arlene. Yes, Tuscany is beautiful. We absolutely loved it. We have travelled a lot – soooo lucky!
Alison
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Such amazing diversity. The memories must be incredible.
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Yes to both these statements. We were amazed by the diversity around the world, and even within countries. NZ for instance is a small country with quite amazing diversity in the landscape. And the memories are so rich. Going back through my photos to create this post brought back many many wonderful memories.
Alison
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This post is inspiring wanderlust in Ohio. What incredibly beautiful images!
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Thanks so much Troy. May the wanderlust take you over 🙂
Alison
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yes its true ! the natural world always nourished our souls.
All the pictures are very nice. Its shows the blessings of this nature, a beautiful world, we are blessed with! I am very grateful for this blessing and we should all be grateful for that!
Also many thanks to you too for sharing this natural beauty of world with us.
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Thanks adminselfjourney, and you’re most welcome. We love being out in nature – probably more than anything. I guess our souls know what they need. It seems to me that gratitude- for everything – arises more easily when we are surrounded by the natural world.
Alison
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Thank you! I really like that you reply back every one and considers everyone’s feedback.
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I love the focus on nature. It’s something a lot of people overlook when they talk about/post pictures of travel. I love the memories you shared with every picture.
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Thanks so much. I’m glad you enjoyed it. Travel for us has always been as much about getting out of the towns into nature as it has been about the towns and the people. And it brought us so many wonderful experiences, and now wonderful memories.
Alison
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Beautiful photos!!
Kindly check my blog at:-
travelrahul.wordpress.com
Cheers
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Thanks so much Rahul. I’m glad you enjoyed them.
Alison
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Wonderful job, Alison. And what I would expect from you, naturally. 🙂 We live in an incredibly beautiful world. It’s all around us. Thanks for the reminder. –Curt
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Thanks Curt. I do like your expectations 🙂
We do live in an incredibly beautiful world. How lucky we are to have been able to see so much of it.
Alison
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Very lucky, Alison. I’d even say blessed. On the other hand, we have put in the effort and made decisions that allowed us to do so. –Curt
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It’s a different world, Dave, and one I am not totally comfortable with. I still prefer backpacking down into the Canyon. But on the other hand, I am truly grateful that I had the experience of rafting through the heart of the Canyon and getting to see it in a wholly new way. –Curt
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I think you meant to put this comment on your own blog?
A.
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Right you are, Alison. Not quite sure how I managed that one… 🙂
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Wow! What wonderful collection from your world-wide collection! I have to take time to go through them again – but one of my favourites is the Samoan Rock Formation – dynamic! And I like what you did on the Jericho Beach image Alison!
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Thanks so much Michael. I’m glad you enjoyed them. I too love that rock in Samoa – it was pretty powerful. And Jericho at sunset will always come up with the goods.
Alison
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I don’t see how you whittled your choices down to those you did, given all the beautiful places you have been in the world. Your photography is stunning. We hope to see most all those places yet in our lives. Torres del Paine will be next on the list for us. Hope all is well with you and Don.
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Thanks so much LuAnn. It was difficult to whittle it down to even this many. I may do a future post of another selection. So excited for you guys going to Patagonia. I know you will love it.
Alison
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Thanks Alison. And I would welcome another post of your landscape shots. 🙂
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Stunning, Alison! I was listening to a podcast recently in which the speaker said it is consciousness that makes our universe interesting. The idea was that without consciousness, the rocks and planets and dust clouds are just sort of empty places. It is our appreciation of them that makes them beautiful, and while I can appreciate that thought on the one hand, seeing these pictures it is hard to imagine them as anything but the fullness of a Love that is baked right in. They are resplendent, in and of themselves. They are resounding with presence…
Peace
Michael
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Thank you so much Michael. I love that phrase – the fullness of a Love that is baked right in. So beautifully expressed. As you say they are resounding with presence, and that presence seems to transfer itself to me and brings me back here, again and again.
I actually don’t agree with your speaker. I think it is consciousness that makes our world. I don’t believe anything would exist without it. It’s all consciousness.
Yes, peace.
Alison
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exquisite
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Thank you Joan
Alison
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I also am extremely fascinated by other cultures.
So much to be learned!
Thanks for these photos of the different places that you have visited.
They are absolutely beautiful.
How much I have been able to see through your eyes!!
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Thanks so much Mary, and you’re welcome. Exploring the world, both people and places is such a passion for me.
Alison
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You’ve seen such beauty and captured the land so well…I appreciate your fine works Alison 💫🙌❤️ hope your days are treating you well many smiles from etown 💦❄️💦❄️☀️
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Thanks Hedy. Such beautiful places to capture! greetings from sunny(!) Vancouver.
Alison
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It’s the most beautiful city on the world especially when it’s sunny ☀️💫 been dealing with some computer issues will be back! Hoping you have a snappy week dear Alison ☀️💫☀️
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So much beauty you have seen around the world and your photographs are superb. I do agree with you about New Zealand a small treasure of a country. How are you both? I hope life is treating you kindly. Have you more travels planned?
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Thanks so much pommepal. There is so much beauty in the world and I feel blessed to have seen so much of it. Don is well, I have a horrible cold, but apart from that life is good. Japan and China coming up in the spring.
Alison
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Pleased to hear you are well, apart from the cold, and your next travels sound exciting. I’ll pop myself in your cyber backpack….
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Wow! Each one of these places is so astonishing and picturesque, Alison and Don! Such a great collection of stunning pictures and experiences!
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Thanks so much Agness. We feel very blessed to have been able to go to all these places: so many amazing experiences!
Alison
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