The Sun and The Fog
"This is one of the coolest vineyard photos I've ever seen. The sun breaking through the fog above the ghostly forms of this vineyard evokes Middle Earth or some otherworldly landscape. I'd never in a million years guess that it was shot in Sonoma County" -- Alder Yarrow
INSTRUCTIONS:
Download this image by right-clicking (Mac users, click and hold) on the image and selecting "save link as" or "save target as" and then select the desired location on your computer to save the image. Mac users can also just click the image and drag it to your desktop.
To set the image as your desktop wallpaper, Mac users should follow these instructions, while PC users should follow these.
PRINTS:
If you are interested in owning an archive quality print of this image, or any of the other vineyard images featured here on Vinography, you can purchase one on the Michael Regnier Photography web site for $85.
ABOUT VINOGRAPHY IMAGES:
Every week, Vinography features a new image from photographer Michael Regnier for readers' personal use as desktop backgrounds or screen savers. We hope you enjoy them. Please respect the copyright on these images.
Digg it! -
Add to del.icio.us -
Add to Stumbleupon -
Add to Reddit
J. Gómez Pallarès
wrote:Some times, I feel like a stranger in my own country and time, because I feel exactly as a man coming from the Middle Ages or from the ancient Roman times or feeling like an Explorer of ancient Egipt. I love ancient times because they had the right way to understand nature and the seasons running though the year.
Michael Regnier's pictures make me these times alive, as you have said, as if they were taken directly in the Middle Ages or in that vineyard en the Roman valley of the Hiberus river, near Caesaraugusta!
May I ask you for offering this image as a post next sunday on muy blog, obviously quoting your blog, Regnier's authorship and the possibility to buy them?
Thanks, Alder, and thanks too for your comment on the wine writers, some days ago. I wrote an answer to you, unfortunately not published because of muy poor hability with machine computers, but I very much appreciate the reasons you and Vonegut give to amateurs (in the very best and intensive sens of the word) wine writers, as me!
Cheers
Joan
Vinography Unboxed: Week of March 10, 2013 Bilancia Wines, Hawke's Bay, New Zealand: Current Releases Vinography Images: Across the Valley Drinking Off the Grid Vinography Images: Behind the Gate Vinography Unboxed: Week of February 24, 2013 The Best of Napa's 2011 Cabernets: Tasting at Premiere Napa Valley Great Dirt is Not Sentimental: Ted Lemon on Terroir Vinography Images: Vineyard Bowl 11th Annual Pinot Noir Summit: March 16th, San Francisco
Masuizumi Junmai Daiginjo, Toyama Prefecture Wine.Com Gives Retailers (and Consumers) the Finger 1961 Hospices de Beaune Emile Chandesais, Burgundy Wine Over Time The Better Half of My Palate 1999 Királyudvar "Lapis" Tokaji Furmint, Hungary What's Allowed in Your Wine and Winemaking Why Community Tasting Notes Sites Will Fail Appreciating Wine in Context The Soul vs. The Market 1989 Fiorano Botte 48 Semillion,Italy