Driving through South Africa I am often fascinated by trees. Sometimes it is a solitary specimen that has me asking how it came to be where it is - a lonely weeping willow at the roadside of a national highway, or a dead blue gum trunk presumably struck by lightning - its remains still defiantly standing erect. So often the formation of a clump of trees adds great interest to an otherwise boring landscape (why does the Free State come to mind?). And then there are those frequently seen rows of trees, implausibly positioned along the ridge of some distant hill or kopje looking for all the world like a mohawk haircut in but not of nature. Today what caught my eye was a simple row of blue gums - an obvious wind break alongside agricultural lands. And one solitary hay bale - I could not help but wonder where its siblings had gone and why this one remained behind. In panoramic mode, I tried to keep the composition to the photographer's 'rule of thirds'.
I think it works.
This would easily be a country life photo winnner, great balance and colour interplay
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