New life, lamb Number 1. Photo taken earlier this morning during the one walk I am permitted to take each day.
A few years ago (perhaps 4 or 5) Number 1 would have appeared in late January but the changing climate has meant that these early lambs didn't survive because of the increasingly wet winters and early spring (never more so than this year). So now the farmer has adapted by delaying lambing.
English Longhorns and one White Park youngster on the Bridehead estate. White Parks are descended from Britain’s original wild white cattle.
Loxia 85 on A7RIV
Tibet's giant monasteries require a small army of staff just for maintenance. This is South Sakya, in Tibet. It's very original, having been spared in the Cultural Revolution period (1960s), when 6,000 monasteries were destroyed.
Peter T wrote:
New life, lamb Number 1. Photo taken earlier this morning during the one walk I am permitted to take each day.
A few years ago (perhaps 4 or 5) Number 1 would have appeared in late January but the changing climate has meant that these early lambs didn't survive because of the increasingly wet winters and early spring (never more so than this year). So now the farmer has adapted by delaying lambing.
I congratulate you on a lovely image with a great message - New Life.
It brings to my mind Leonard Cohen's words:
There is a crack, a crack in everything
That’s how the light gets in
P.S, What a pity I sold my Contax Sonnar 180mm F2.8