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  • Cockade 3161m, Elephant 3109m and flat-topped Mlambonja Buttress 3007m (right), from the Xeni Valley near Xeni Cave, Mdedelelo Wilderness.  Xeni Peak is the broad-tapered sun-lit, free-standing column immediately left of uMlambonja Buttress (1961 p54).  The lower, closer, sunlit peak superimposed on Mlambonja Buttress is Mount Helga 2702m. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F4, 24/2.8D. Kodak E100SW. December 1996.
    Xeni Peak uMlambonja Drakensberg.jpg
  • The first greens of spring along the uMlambonja River in the Cathedral Peak area of the Drakensberg.  The river banks are lined with Mtchichi (Leucosidea sericea) the common woody shrub of the Drakensberg.  The major peaks Inner Horn 3005m, Outer Horn 3005m, Bell 2930m and Cathedral Peak 3004m are visible from left to right in the background.  The name uMlambonja (or uMlambonje) means valley of the hungry dog.  uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
    uMlambonja River Valley Cathedral Pe...jpg
  • The uMlambonja River in the Cathedral Peak area of the Drakensberg.  The major peaks Inner Horn 3005m, Outer Horn 3005m, Bell 2930m and Cathedral Peak 3004m are visible from left to right in the background.  The name uMlambonja (or uMlambonje) means valley of the hungry dog.  uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
    uMlambonja River Cathedral Peak Drak...jpg
  • Scaly Peak 2752m, Greater Injasuthi Buttress 3202m from Pt 2062, Leslie's Pass, Central Drakensberg. Ukhahlamba Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F4, Nikon MF Nikkor 35-135/3.5-4.5 AIS. Kodak E100SW. April 1997.
    Scaly Peak Drakensberg.jpg
  • Storm engulfs the Cathedral Ridge, viewed from Ntonjelana Pass in the uMlambonja Wilderness area of the Drakensberg.  The major peaks of the ridge are from left to right: Cathedral Peak 3004m, Outer Horn 3005m, Inner Horn 3005m and Mitre 3023m.  The Bell 2930m is barely visible  because it is superimposed on Cathedral Peak (left).  uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Chinon CM5, 28/2.8. Fuji RD. November 1988.
    Storm engulfs Cathedral Ridge Draken...jpg
  • Rainbow Wall from Juniper Peak 1,862m (6,109ft), Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area, a public land administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).  The Class 3 scramble is accessed from the Oak Creek Canyon Trailhead and the Arnight Trail (10.5km / 6.5 mi round trip).  Excellent views of Brownstone Wall and the south fork of Pine Creek.
    AJH_090808_2948_DRV.jpg
  • Fynbos on Waaihoek Peak, Hex River Mountains, Cape Province, South Africa. Zebasberg 1,899m in the background. Nikon F90, Sigma 24/2.8. Singh-Ray ND grad filter. Fuji RDP. 1994
    Fynbos, Western Cape
  • Rainbow Wall from Juniper Peak 1,862m (6,109ft), Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area, a public land administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).  The Class 3 scramble is accessed from the Oak Creek Canyon Trailhead and the Arnight Trail (10.5km / 6.5 mi round trip).  Excellent views of Brownstone Wall and the south fork of Pine Creek.
    AJH_090808_2956_DRV.jpg
  • The restaurant terrace at Cathedral Peak Hotel is doused by a passing summer-afternoon thunderstorm.  The Drakensberg escarpment is one of the highest rainfall areas in South Africa, receiving more than 1,500mm per year.  About 85% of annual rainfall falls during the summer months (ie October to March), most of it directly as a result of orographic effects and the associated violent thunderstorms, like this one.  They are typically preceded by a mid-morning build-up of fluffy cumulus cloud and fully developed by midday.  Lightning and heavy rain is frequently accompanied by hail or sleet.   Just as quickly, they dissipate by mid-afternoon, often setting the stage for spectacular sunsets.  uKhahlamba Drakensberg Park, Kwa-Zulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F100. Nikon AF Nikkor 24-85mm f/2.8-4D.  Kodak E100VS.
    Red Umbrellas Cathedral Peak Hotel D...jpg
  • Warner Wetlands ACEC (Area of Critical Environmental Concern) and Hart Lake, Hart Mountain Road, Plush, Oregon.  The distant peaks, all in the Fremont National Forest, are, from left to right: Drake Peak 2,562m (8,405 ft), McDowell Peak and Crook Peak forming the northern end of the Warner Mountains.
    AJH_111007_4938_DRV.jpg
  • Mamndeni Valley with the winter colours of rooigras (Themeda triandra) and black fire break from a controlled burn. Beyond (L to R) Old Woman Grinding Corn 2986m, Ship's Prow Pass, snow-covered Champagne Peak 3377m, Monk's Cowl 3234m, Cathkin Peak 3149m. From Chimney Pot (Maqomfa) 1894m. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F4, 28-70/3.5-4.5D. Kodak E100S. July 1997.
    Mamndeni Valley Drakensberg.jpg
  • Outer Horn 3006m (9,860ft) silhouette and crepuscular rays, Bell 2930m and Cathedral Peak 3004m, Cathedral Peak Hotel.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Nikon F100, 70-300/4-5.6D. Kodak E100VS.
    Outer Horn Silhouette Drakensberg.jpg
  • A full moon sets at first light behind One Tree Hill in the Cathedral Peak area of the Mlambonja Wilderness, Drakensberg.  The sheer cliffs of the Clarens Sandstone Formation form the edge of the Little Berg and house many of the caves containing Bushman paintings for which the area is so well known.  uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
    Moonset One Tree Hill Drakensberg.jpg
  • Intunja 2408m (lowest peak, with hole), Amphlett 2620m, Turret 2670m, Sterkhorn 2973m, Cathkin Peak 3149m (10,330 ft), Monk's Cowl 3234m (10,611 ft) and Champagne Castle 3246m (10,650 ft) from Arendsig,  Mdedelelo Wilderness.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F100, 70-300/4-5.6D. Kodak E100VS.
    Cathkin Ridge Silhouette, Drakensber...jpg
  • Outer Horn 3006m (9,860ft) silhouette and crepuscular rays, Bell 2930m and Cathedral Peak 3004m, Cathedral Peak Hotel.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Nikon F100, 70-300/4-5.6D. Kodak E100VS.
    Cathedral Ridge Silhouette, Drakensb...jpg
  • A full moon sets at first light behind One Tree Hill in the Cathedral Peak area of the Mlambonja Wilderness, Drakensberg.  The sheer cliffs of the Clarens Sandstone Formation form the edge of the Little Berg and house many of the caves containing Bushman paintings for which the area is so well known.  uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
    Moonset, One Tree Hill, Drakensberg-...jpg
  • Intunja 2408m (lowest peak, with hole), Amphlett 2620m, Turret 2670m, Sterkhorn 2973m, Cathkin Peak 3149m (10,330 ft), Monk's Cowl 3234m (10,611 ft) and Champagne Castle 3246m (10,650 ft) from Arendsig,  Mdedelelo Wilderness.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F100, 70-300/4-5.6D. Kodak E100VS.
    Cathkin Ridge Dawn, Drakensberg.jpg
  • Reflections on the uMlambonja River in the Cathedral Peak area of the Drakensberg.  The earth tones of a sandstone boulder of the Clarens Sandstone Formation are complimented by springtime greens along the river bank.  uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
    Reflections uMlambonja River Drakens...jpg
  • Sunset silhouette of the Horns, Drakensberg, South Africa.  Crepuscular rays (God beams) diffracting at the neck between Inner Horn 3005m / 9858ft (left) and Outer Horn 3006m / 9860ft (right).  The saw-tooth profile of tiny peaks to the left is a group called The Chessmen.  Inner Horn was first climbed in 1925; Outer Horn in 1934.  The names are believed to have been derived from the Zulu name for nearby Cathedral Peak.  However, under some lighting conditions, as seen here, the gap between the Horns resembles antlers or deer horns.  One of the last free ranges of the San people or Bushmen, the Drakensberg is steeped in San folk lore.  Nikon F100, 70-300/4-5.6D, Kodak E100VS.
    Horns, Drakensberg-2004.jpg
  • Tseketseke Valley between Cleft Peak 3281m (summit out of frame on left) and Column 2926m and Pyramid 2914m (right). Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Chinon CM5, 28/2.8. Fuji RD100.
    Tseketseke Pass Drakensberg.jpg
  • Leonotis leonurus - known by many common names: wild dagga, narrow-leafed Minaret Flower, Lion's Ear and Lion's Tail - on the slopes of Mike's Pass, with the Horns, Bell and Cathedral Peak outlined by clouds beyond.  Northern Drakensberg.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F100, 20/2.8D.  Fuji RVP.  28 April 2004.
    Leonotis leonurus, Drakensberg.jpg
  • Sunset silhouette of the Horns, Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Crepuscular rays (God beams) diffracting at the neck between Inner Horn 3005m / 9858ft (left) and Outer Horn 3006m / 9860ft (right).  The saw-tooth profile of tiny peaks to the left is a group called the Chessmen.  Inner Horn was first climbed in 1925; Outer Horn in 1934.  The names are believed to have been derived from the Zulu name for nearby Cathedral Peak.  However, under some lighting conditions, as seen here, the gap between the Horns resembles antlers or deer horns.  One of the last free ranges of the San people or Bushmen, the Drakensberg is steeped in San folk lore.  Nikon F100, 70-300/4-5.6D, Kodak E100VS.
    Horns Drakensberg.jpg
  • Machapuchare 6,993m (22,943ft), West Face from Annapurna Base Camp, Nepal.  Sacred to the god Shiva, the peak is forbidden to climbers, and has never officially been summited.  It is commonly known as the "Matterhorn of Nepal" or the "Fish's Tail".  Nikon F90, 80-200/2.8, Agfa CT100.  Photo: 2 November 1993.
    Machapuchare West Face, Nepal-1993.jpg
  • Machapuchare 6993m (22,943ft), West Face from Annapurna Base Camp, Nepal.  Sacred to the god Shiva, the peak is forbidden to climbers, and has never officially been summited.  It is commonly known as the "Matterhorn of Nepal" or the "Fish's Tail".  Nikon F90, 80-200/2.8, Agfa CT100.  Photo: 2 November 1993.
    Machapuchare.jpg
  • Pyramid 2914m and Column 2926m from Tseketseke Pass. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
    Pyramid Column Drakensberg.jpg
  • Climbers on the Standard Route (west face) of South Ifidi Pinnacle 3033m (9,950 ft) (MCSA 1952).  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5D. Fuji RDP. 1994.
    South Ifidi Pinnacle Drakensberg.jpg
  • Photographer's shadow, sunrise Mike's Pass. Weathered basalt decomposes to form red clays. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F100, 24-50/3.3-4.5D. RVP. April 2004.
    Photographers Shadow Drakensberg.jpg
  • Gavin Raubenheimer and Andre Dalais back at Keith Bush Camp in the uMhlwazini Valley, after summiting Monk's Cowl 3234m (10,611ft), behind.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5. Fuji RD. October 1995
    Monks Cowl Climbers Drakensberg.jpg
  • Andre Dalais clowning around on the Standard Route, Monk's Cowl 3234m (10,611ft).   Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5. Fuji RD. October 1995
    Andre Dalais, Drakensberg
  • Mount Hood 3,426m (11,239 ft), viewed from Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_06a_June-2020.jpg
  • The south face of Chacraraju Oeste (West) 6,112m (20,050ft) and Chacraraju Este (East) 6,001m (19,690ft).  Below Chacraraju, small lakes are visible in the valley of Laguna 69.  To the right of the lakes is the long north ridge of Yanapaccha 5,460m (17,910ft), with the west face viewed head-on.  The normal route for Yanapaccha follows the right edge of the central rock rib, then climbs directly towards the summit.  Right, Brad Johnson with Portachuelo de Llanganuco behind.  Viewed from the trail between Pisco Base Camp and Laguna 69, at approx. 5,000m (16,400ft), Cordillera Blanca, Peru.
    AJH_080619_1581-87_DRV.jpg
  • Tugela Falls 183m max clear drop (614m overall) and Amphitheatre with Beacon Buttress 3121m and Sentinel 3165m (right). Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 35-135/3.5. E100SW. December 1996.
    Tugela Falls Amphitheatre Drakensber...jpg
  • Red dawn and reflection in a wetland marsh near Tugela Falls on the Amphitheatre summit plateau.  In profile, left to right are Eastern Buttress 3047m, Devil's Tooth, Inner Tower and Mount Oompie. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 24/2.8D. E100SW. December 1996.
    Red Dawn Summit Wetland Drakensberg.jpg
  • Mount Hood 3,426m (11,239ft) at sunrise, viewed from Mount Tabor Park in Portland.  The left skyline is Cathedral Ridge, and the right skyline is the Southeast Ridge.  The bulge in the Southeast Ridge is called the Steel Cliff.  Mount Hood is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat attributed to Global Warming associated with World Climate Change.  Nikon D700. AF300/4.
    AJH_02b_February-2019.jpg
  • Real Yellowwood (Podocarpus latifolius) and Mountain Cabbage Tree (Cussonia paniculata), right, below the summit of Eastern Buttress and the Amphitheatre, from the valley of the Tugela River.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5D. Fuji RDP. September 1994.
    Yellowwood and Cussonia Drakensberg.jpg
  • The three summits of Sterkhorn 2973m, also known as Mount Memory or Mount Mandela, seen backlit at sunrise from Keith Bush Camp as morning mist dissipates in the uMhlwazini Valley.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 50-135/3.5. Fuji RD. October 1995
    Sterkhorn Silver Lining, Drakensberg...jpg
  • Mount Hood 3,426m (11,239ft) viewed from Mount Tabor Park in Portland.  The left skyline is Cathedral Ridge, and the right skyline is the Southeast Ridge.  The bulge in the Southeast Ridge is called the Steel Cliff.  Mount Hood is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat attributed to Global Warming associated with World Climate Change.  Nikon D700. Nikon AF Nikkor 300mm f/4 IF-ED.
    AJH_160916_9117.jpg
  • Mount Hood 3,426m (11,239ft) at sunrise, viewed from Mount Tabor Park in Portland.  The left skyline is Cathedral Ridge, and the right skyline is the Southeast Ridge.  The bulge in the Southeast Ridge is called the Steel Cliff.  Mount Hood is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat attributed to Global Warming associated with World Climate Change.  Nikon D700. AF300/4.
    AJH_130118_0285.jpg
  • Southwest face of Churup Oeste (West) 5,493m, seen from Laguna Churup 4,450m.
    Churup Summit
  • Mount St Helens ash eruption, 2005, viewed from Portland, Oregon.  As if to signal the 25th anniversary of the devastating 1980 eruption, Mount St. Helens released this symbolic outpouring of ash and steam at 17:30 on Tuesday evening, March 8, 2005.  Volcanic ash rose to 36,000 feet and fell as far away as 125 miles east of the mountain. The eruption began with practically no warning, an hour after a magnitude 2.0 earthquake on the volcano's east side, and lasted 30 minutes.  Mount St. Helens, a 8,364-foot (2550m) volcano, is located about 40 miles (60km) northeast of Vancouver, Washington, Portland's sister city across the Columbia River which divides the states of Oregon and Washington.  The river in the photograph is the Willamette River, which divides Portland's east and west sides.  The Columbia River is not visible in this image; it runs perpendicular to the Willamette.  Mount St. Helens was named for British diplomat Alleyne Fitzherbert whose title was Baron St. Helens.  The mountain was named by Commander George Vancouver and the officers of H.M.S. Discovery while exploring the northern Pacific coast from 1792 to 1794.  Mount St. Helens erupted violently at 08:32 on Sunday, May 18, 1980.  Nikon F4S, 70-300/4-5.6D. Fuji RVP100F..
    Mount St Helens Eruption 2005.jpg
  • Illumination Rock 2,909m (9,543ft) and Illumination Saddle 2,865m (9,400ft).  Illumination Rock is a spectacular spire of rotten basalt on the southwest side of Mt Hood, a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  Powerful glacial forces have eroded down a former rock ridge, leaving this sprire shaped like the fin of a fish.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat.
    Illumination Rock, Mt Hood
  • Hiker on Arendsig Ridge, above the uMlambonja River Valley. The red grass is rooigras (Themeda triandra). Above the cliffs is the Ngwavu Plateau and the Ganabu Ridge rising to the left. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F100; 24-50/3.3-4.5D. Kodak E100VS.
    uMlambonja River Valley Drakensberg.jpg
  • Castle Crags from Illumination Saddle 2,865m (9,400ft), with Leuthold Couloir (FA 1932) far left, and the Yocum Ridge above the couloir.  Castle Crag is a spectacular spire of rotten basalt on the southwest side of Mt Hood, a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  Powerful glacial forces have eroded down a former rock ridge, leaving this fantasy sprire.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat.
    Castle Crags, Mt Hood
  • Southwest face of Churup Oeste (West) 5,493m, seen from Laguna Churup 4,450m.
    Churup SW Vertical
  • Mount Hood 3,426m (11,239 ft), viewed from Mount Tabor Park, Portland, Oregon, USA.
    AJH_181011_4686_MA.jpg
  • Mount Hood 3,426m (11,239ft) at sunrise, viewed from Mount Tabor Park in Portland.  The left skyline is Cathedral Ridge, and the right skyline is the Southeast Ridge.  The bulge in the Southeast Ridge is called the Steel Cliff.  Mount Hood is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat attributed to Global Warming associated with World Climate Change.  Nikon D700. Nikon AF Nikkor 300mm f/4 IF-ED.
    AJH_160224_8039_MA.jpg
  • Southwest face of Churup Oeste (West) 5,493m, seen from Laguna Churup 4,450m.
    Churup SW Face
  • The three summits of Sterkhorn 2973m, also known as Mount Memory or Mount Mandela, seen backlit at sunrise from Keith Bush Camp as morning mist dissipates in the uMhlwazini Valley.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 50-135/3.5. Fuji RD. October 1995
    Sterkhorn (Mt Memory), Drakensberg.jpg
  • Chacma Baboon - Papio ursinus - eating insects in a fern garden, below the Amphitheatre, Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park (former Royal Natal National Park), South Africa.  The Tugela River is visible in the background.  Nikon F90, 50-135/3.5. Fuji RDP-II.
    Baboon Papio ursinus Drakensberg.jpg
  • Sean Bartleet climbing the West Ridge of Mount Jefferson 3,199m (10,497ft), via the Milk Creek/West Ridge route; Grade II, Class 4.  This route is approached from Pamelia Lake and Point 4400 (ft).  Nikon F100, 24-50/3.3-4.5D, Kodak E100VS.
    West Ridge, Mt Jefferson
  • Mount Hood 3426m (11,239ft) casts its own shadow at sunrise, viewed from Mount Tabor Park in Portland.  The left skyline is Cathedral Ridge, and the right skyline is the Southeast Ridge.  The bulge in the Southeast Ridge is called the Steel Cliff.  Mount Hood is a stratovolcano in the Cascade Volcanic Arc of Northern Oregon.  The mountain's twelve glaciers are thinning as a result of glacial retreat attributed to Global Warming associated with World Climate Change.  Nikon F4, AF300/4. Kodak E100VS
    Mount Hood Shadow, Mt Tabor Park.jpg
  • City of Portland skyline with MAX transit train crossing the Steel Bridge and distant Mount Hood, Oregon, USA.  The redbrick building in the foreground is Union Station.
    Portland Steel Bridge Union Station ...jpg
  • Giant lobelia (Lobelia deckenii keniensis) foreground, lichens and giant tree groundsels (Senecio keniodendron) - one in bloom - thrive in the high-precipitation, high-altitude  equatorial climate of Mount Kenya.  These plants are at 4375m (14,355ft), below Midget Peak 4700m (15,420ft), shrouded in afternoon mist.  Nikon F4. 28-70/3.5D. Kodak E100SW.
    Lobelia and Groundsels, Mt Kenya
  • James Voortman, Andrew Haliburton, José (Pepe) Ramos-Vara, Carl Fatti and Brad Johnson on the summit of Pisco, at dawn on 22 June 2008.  Behind, from left to right, are the summits of Huandoy Norte (North) 6,395m and Huandoy Este (East) 6,068m.
    Pisco-Summit-Cordillera-Blanca.jpg
  • Flat-topped Cathkin Peak 3149m and Sterkhorn 2973m at sunrise from Monks Cowl Forest Station, Mdedelelo Wilderness. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 24/2.8D. Fuji RDPII. April 1996.
    Cathkin Sterkhorn Drakensberg.jpg
  • Photographic study of the Masongwana River in the Cathedral Peak area of the Mdedelelo Wilderness. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F4, 75-300/4.5D. Kodak E100SW. October 1996
    Masongwana River Drakensberg.jpg
  • Pennine Alps at dawn; inversion mist in the Val Ferret, Italy.  From the Torino Hut 3371m (11,060ft), Col des Planards.  The Matterhorn 4477m (14,690ft) is the distant peak immediately right of centre.  Nikon F4, 28-200/3.5-5.6.  Fuji Velvia RVP50.
    Italian Alps and Matterhorn.jpg
  • Pennine Alps at dawn; inversion mist in the Val Ferret, Italy.  From the Torino Hut 3371m (11,060ft), Col des Planards.  The Matterhorn 4477m (14,690ft) is the distant peak immediately right of centre.  Nikon F4, 28-200/3.5-5.6.  Fuji Velvia RVP50.
    Italian Alps
  • Rope of three descending the southwest ridge of Pisco Peak 5,752m, Cordillera Blanca, Peru.  Nikon D200, 17-50/2.8.
    Climbers on Glacier, Peru
  • George Zaloumis & Carl Fatti mountain biking down Mike's Pass in the Cathedral Area, with the grand backdrop of peaks: Sterkhorn, Cathkin, Monk's Cowl and Champagne Castle, from left to right beyond. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
    Mountain Biking Mikes Pass Drakensbe...jpg
  • Mountaineer looks across Drakensberg summit plateau towards the cliff edge of the Amphitheatre and frozen Tugela Falls, with the peaks of Beacon Buttress 3121m and Sentinel 3165m beyond.  Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 28-70/3.5D. Fuji RDP. 1994.
    Mountaineer Amphitheatre Drakensberg.jpg
  • Rain squall in the upper Ndedema River basin, Mdedelelo Wilderness, Drakensberg. Viewed from Skoongesigt Cave, the four main peaks (left to right) are Sugar Loaf 2723m, Point 2949, Little Saddle Left 3073m and  Little Saddle Right 3081m. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Chinon CM5, 28/2.8. Fuji RD. December 1988.
    Ndedema Rain Squall Drakensberg.jpg
  • Peaks from left to right: Inner Tower 3044m, Devil's Tooth 2941m and Eastern Buttress 3047m, viewed from Ntaba Ndanyazana 3084m, Ifidi.  The prominent right skyline of Eastern Buttress is the Southeast or Singati Arete (FA 1947), accessed from Singati Cave, via the Singati Ridge running directly to the arete from lower right. Ukhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.  Nikon F90, 35-135/3.5. Kodak E100SW.  December 1996.
    Singati Ridge Arete Eastern Buttress...jpg
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Andrew Haliburton

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