View allAll Photos Tagged park
The Park
The Park at the Euromast in Rotterdam was designed around 1850 by the well-known landscape architects father and son Zochers. These men could paint with nature; they designed the water features and the picturesque vistas of sun-drenched fields.
The park has a dark green hill garden, a French style garden for the Herenhuys and fields of deep blue flowering bells in the spring. More than a hundred years old, the monumental plane tree on the lawn along the Westzeedijk is the thickest tree in the city with a circumference of almost 6 meters.
The old trees fizzle with insects under the bark and bats in the crown. Owls are brooding in the hollows and the spotted woodpecker can be heard tapping the wood. Freshwater mussels live in the water and the blue heron hunts for fish.
And now it is just the start of the spring feeling, there are no leaves on the trees yet, but still it's possible to enjoy a walk in the park with you're dog and enjoy the beautiful sunrise light.
it was a nicer day so i went out to the park , spring is around the corner . the red currant bush in my garden is starting to flower .
the great thing about winter is that the leaves don't get in the way ! . you see much more detail in the trees in the winter
this is a 7 exposure HDR .
Well we have to get used to this place!
It's the forbidden park at night, but it's very big and green, we go there twice a day....we will walk downtown and the most secret streets of the town....
The girls are really less worry than me, they will be happy to come back to the beach in September....maybe I will take them to a beach near the town, where there are no laws about dogs, but we have to go there by car, so....
Well, happy Sunny Sunday!
Övedskloster is a village in the municipality Sjöbo.
After the stage of the city name comes from the monastery associated premonstratensorden based on the location of the 1160s. The monastery turned into secular hands years 1535th Övedskloster Castle, park and access roads with alleys and Ovid church is one of the biggest attractions Sjöbo.
This place used to be a convent, but after the Danish reformation it was remade into a more secular place owned by the Danish crown - before it was given to Otto Lindenow. When the Swedes got hold of Scania after the peace of Roskilde the castle changed owner to Carl Mauritz Lewenhaupt. In 1753 it was bought from the then current Lewenhaupt by his brother-in-law, Hans Ramel, who ordered the building of the current castle. This was made 1765-1776, in roccoco style after drawings made by the architect Carl Hårleman - but he was not alive to do watch over the building himself, that was instead made by another famous architect of the time: Jean Eric Rehn. The castle is still owned by the Ramel family.