This view into the north-western Skåne shows some of the prominent horsts of the landscape. From here, one can see 3 that are higher than anything in Denmark. A further 3 or 4 lies in the east and south of the landscape. The danish island Bornholm can also be considered as such. They are all NW-SE in orientation, and give a sudden boreal feel; when you hit Hallandsåsen, the woods take over, and from there, fields are in the forests and not the other way round.
As said at the former panos, these Sweden views are deeply rooted in me, and I am happy to finally getting round to panoramise some of them. As a boy I was so often in Skåne (20 minutes with the ferries from Helsingør) + having Swedish television, that I couldn't consider Sweden a real foreign country - I always feel that a DDR visit in 1986 was my first REALLY foreign experience:-)
By coincidence, it all fitted as a band of (from below) autumn colours, Øresund, Skåne, and the sky. I had to accept a few blurred twigs at the buttom; I hope you can see beyond that.
Pano made from 36 pics (RAW), 300 mm, iso-100, 1/1000 sec, f/7,1, developed in DPP (neutral, cloudy, a little brighter, - 1 saturation, moderate sharpness), stitched in PTgui pro, a little contrast adjustment in GIMP, down-scaling and sharpening in IrfanView.
Pedrotti Alberto, Hans-Jürgen Bayer, Jörg Braukmann, Klaus Brückner, Hans-Jörg Bäuerle, Friedemann Dittrich, Gerhard Eidenberger, Heinz Höra, Martin Kraus, Wilfried Malz, Danko Rihter, Arne Rönsch, Werner Schelberger, Markus Ulmer, Jens Vischer
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Comments
VG, Danko.
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rettung_der_d%C3%A4nischen_Juden
LG Jan.
Aber etwas anderes bewegt mich, nachdem ich Arne's kurzen Kommentar gelesen hatte. Gibt es in Dänemark noch Ressentiments wegen des Verlusts von Schonen?
Denmark was badly led by from 1600 to 1900, and that shows. All the losses are from wars the Danes themselves started.
The strange thing is, that there is a movement in Skåne itself to focus on the danish heritage and further independence from Sweden. LG Jan.
Your comment about DDR being a foreign country in 1986 triggers some remembering: From my west German perspective, DDR in 1984 was a lot stranger than Scotland or Italy, visited in the same time. Really good, that nowadays, all of this is growing together as Europe. (I hope nobody will take offense)
Cheers, Martin
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