Sign up
Log in
How it works
Discuss
Latest
Articles
Critique
General
Themes & Competitions
Tips n Tricks
Blog
Browse
Latest
Popular
New Faces
Trending
Curated
Who to Follow
By Day
By Tag
Log in
Sign up
Browse
Blog
Discuss
Ace Membership
Invite Friends
Search
Previous
Next
Photo 505
Mind Blowing Thought
“It might be helpful to realize, that very probably the parents of the first native born Martians are alive today.”
~Harrison ‘Jack’ Schmitt, Apollo 17 moonwaker, New Mexico native~
12th January 2019
12th Jan 19
11
6
Share
Embed Code
Subscribe to RSS feed
Jane Anderson
@janeandcharlie
I was on 365 for almost three years, took over a year off, and have now returned. I plan to post a combination of photos...
1063
photos
51
followers
26
following
291% complete
View this month »
1056
1057
1058
1059
1060
1061
1062
1063
Photo Details
Views
139
Comments
11
Fav's
6
Album
365
Exif
View Info
Sizes
View All
Privacy
Public
Featured
on the
Trending
page
Flashback
View
Tags
rocks
,
shadow
,
landscape
,
badlands
,
hoodoo
,
new mexico
Charlie
Strange earth scape.
January 12th, 2019
Ranger Biscuit
Badlands by Farmington! Loved our time there together.
January 12th, 2019
Joan Robillard
ace
Lovely
January 12th, 2019
Harbie
ace
Ah...I was wondering where this was taken. Has a surreal quality to it.
January 12th, 2019
bkb in the city
Beautiful landscape shot
January 12th, 2019
Dawn
ace
An interesting landscape
January 13th, 2019
Thom Mitchell
Beautiful landscape!
January 13th, 2019
aikimomm (phoebe)
This is awesome!
January 13th, 2019
Denise Wood
Amazing landscape :)
January 13th, 2019
Jane Anderson
@bigdad
@ranger1
@joansmor
@harbie
@bkbinthecity
@Dawn
@rhoing
@aikimomm
@gilbertwood
Thanks so much for commenting on my photo of the "Marscape." This is really the Bisti Wilderness in northern New Mexico.
January 14th, 2019
Margo
Fav
January 15th, 2019
Leave a Comment
Sign up
for a free account or
Sign in
to post a comment.
close
365 Project
close
Thanks so much for commenting on my photo of the "Marscape." This is really the Bisti Wilderness in northern New Mexico.