A selection of my favorite moments from my trips
Fish Anyone?! 🙂
Stockfish drying in a traditional method on racks in the Lofoten Islands.
Once dried, the arctic cod fillets are then exported to the world!
The Dancing House is one of the most interesting Prague houses built at the end of the 20 th century. The frontispiece consists of two towers that represents a man and a woman, dancing together.
Seljalandsfoss is one of the best known waterfalls in Iceland and it’s possible to walk behind it, but I gotta tell you the mist coming from it doesn’t make it that easy at all to take a picture! It’s pretty crazy! But the feeling you get when you get out of there all wet from head to toe with your gear is amazing!
This waterfall of the river Seljalandsá drops 60 metres over the cliffs of the former coastline.
Tried to capture the sunrise two days in a row with this one but sadly it was too cloudy and raining. Maybe I’ll have more luck on my next trip ;).
Kirkjufell (which means Church mountain) is a 463m high mountain on the north coast of Iceland’s Snæfellsnes peninsula.
Meet the Village of Riomaggiore , that dates from the early thirteenth century, situated in a small valley in the Liguria region of Italy. It’s is the most southern village of the five Cinque Terre.
Located in the heart of Burgundy and one of my favorite villages from my visit there, the beautiful town of Semur en Auxois!
One of the things I loved in Lofoten is that you have no idea what might happen the next minute, the sun could be shining with blue sky! Or you might turn around and have this happening behind you! 🙂
It wasn’t easy taking this one, you don’t see it much in the photo but there was a lot of mist coming from the waterfall accumulating very, very fast on the lens! I was soaking wet but it was really fun taking it!
Svartifoss is a waterfall in Skaftafell in Vatnajökull National Park in Iceland, and is one of the most popular sights in the park. It is surrounded by dark lava columns, which gave rise to its name.
The tiny pitch-black church in Budir, west of Iceland.
The first church was built there in 1703. It was later demolished and a new one constructed. In 1816, the parish was abolished and the church was dismantled. One of the ladies of the parish fought strongly for a new church and eventually received a royal permission to build a new one, which stood ready in 1848. In 1987, it was reconstructed and consecrated the same year.