#ScenicSaturday 18th November 2023

My photos in this continuing series show our beautiful world. Maybe they’ll encourage viewers to help save it from human carelessness.


As I rarely travel in November, this month’s series concentrates on the forest where I live. Those who love the seas or oceans may feel a little left out, so I’ll try to compensate for that next month!


Today’s photo shows a moody River Wye. Low November clouds form mist that shrouds the distant trees lining much of this waterway. Bare branches skeleton the sky. The water, brown with seasonal run-off from the many Welsh and English fields the river cuts across, flows swift to meet the broader Severn Estuary, thence into the Bristol Channel, and finally into the vast and deep Atlantic Ocean. And so the rain that falls in Wales eventually rises from the deeps to the surface and rises as vapour to form new rain to fall again. The natural cycle sustaining life on Earth.

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Feel free to comment, like, and share these posts so the joy of natural beauty is spread to as many people as possible. It will help us protect the environment.


I post every Saturday here, but also post a picture of natural beauty at the end of each day, with the hashtag , on FaceBook and Twitter. Join me there and comment, share and like if you wish.

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10 thoughts on “#ScenicSaturday 18th November 2023

  1. Pingback: #ScenicSaturday 18th November 2023 | In the Net! – Pictures and Stories of Life

    1. Thank you, Lynette. I wish I could confirm I took this around sunrise, but if I’m up at that time, it’s to write. I’m not sure where that colouring arose from, but my guess is it’s an atmospheric effect. The shot was actually taken closer to sunset with the hidden sun behind me. Maybe it picked up a distant pink reflection from far away clouds.

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