old woman on the pavement
Drakeholes bricks
Quadrimage 1 : Geosymetrie
Lacock: Bide Brook
Palm House 2
Leopard Lacewing / Cethosia cyane
Duck attack mixed up
On The Line
The highlight of my day
Moth and lichen
Isel-Brücke
Isel-Brücke
Lichen from the Whaleback hills
Masterwort / Astrantia major
Marsh Lane Bridge
Seats
One of my favourites to photograph
IMG 1303
Cat on paving
Reebok
Spread those wings
The beauty of the Common Loon
Balconies
Sharp and soft
Purplish Fritillary / Boloria chariclea
The art of nature - Lecidea tessellata
Sewing Basket
Droplets of sap on Limber Pine cones
Sunlit Organ
Details of a quilt
Modern quilt
Emerald waters
Comb Tooth fungus / Hericium coralloides
Chand Baori Step Well
Layers and stripes
our brains are wired to see faces
Sharp-tailed Grouse
Delicate edging of a lily pad
Rauten
Die zwei Vertrauten unter Rauten
Kreuz & Quer
Red and green - meant for each other
The last bit of colour before winter
Camera File
Alveari moderni
Alveari moderni
patterns in nature
Looking Up from the Reception Area of the Sheki Ol…
Beautiful Leafhoppers - Cuerna alpina
DSC 1369
Owl butterfly
nice curtains
Pale Enargia (Enargia decolor)
Wall with diamond-shaped patterns
A fancy fungus
red admiral
Thirteen-lined Ground Squirrel
Two of a kind!
The Amulet of Power
Gorgeous Iris
Common beauty
DSC03761edit
Wilson's Snipe - what a beauty
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Chand Baori Step Well
Chand Baori in Abhaneri village in eastern Rajasthan, India, is one of the most overlooked landmarks in the country. It is one of the oldest stepwell in Rajasthan, and is considered to be among the biggest in the world. Chand Baori looks like anything but a well. This incredible square structure is 13 stories deep, and lined along the walls on three sides are double flight of steps. 3,500 narrow steps arranged in perfect symmetry descends to the bottom of the well 20 meters deep to a murky green puddle of water. Built during the 8th and 9th century by King Chanda of Nikumbha Dynasty, provided the surrounding areas with a dependable water source for centuries before modern water delivery systems were introduced. (Amusing Planet)
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