Aeria Picture of muddy water flowing into lake in the shape of a tree for those that can't/won't click links.
Thanks for helping out with that,Possum.What a fantastic picture,as are those posted by Jonathan.Cheers
The Belmont Bear said
02:36 PM Jan 12, 2021
Thanks Jay&Dee incredible photos and its amazing what nature can do but when I read the title of your thread I was expecting this "Tree of Life" which is in Bahrain and receives 65,000 visitors a year. It is 400 or 500 years old, a single tree sitting on a hill in the middle of the desert and nobody knows where it gets water from. The local Shias told me that if a traveller touches it one day they will return to Bahrain - I haven't but who knows. Religous believers say that the tree is a leftover from the original Garden of Eden - probably a little far fetched as scientists reckon it was planted there sometime around 1580. Its an accacia so it wouldn't surprise me if we had something similar to it in some arid part of Australia.
Have a look at this. Mother Nature at her best, again.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-01-12/lake-cakora-tree-of-life-aerial-photographs-go-viral/13047686
No need for further comment.
Jay&Dee
Aeria Picture of muddy water flowing into lake in the shape of a tree for those that can't/won't click links.
On a beach so gets replaced every tide.
Thanks for helping out with that,Possum.What a fantastic picture,as are those posted by Jonathan.Cheers
Thanks Jay&Dee incredible photos and its amazing what nature can do but when I read the title of your thread I was expecting this "Tree of Life" which is in Bahrain and receives 65,000 visitors a year. It is 400 or 500 years old, a single tree sitting on a hill in the middle of the desert and nobody knows where it gets water from. The local Shias told me that if a traveller touches it one day they will return to Bahrain - I haven't but who knows. Religous believers say that the tree is a leftover from the original Garden of Eden - probably a little far fetched as scientists reckon it was planted there sometime around 1580. Its an accacia so it wouldn't surprise me if we had something similar to it in some arid part of Australia.
BB
Perhaps I should have called it ""The River of Life""
Either way, the pictures are as you say ... stunning.
Jay&Dee
"The water is soaked by tea tree oils, hence the brown colour ..."