Showing posts with label landmarks of Charleston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label landmarks of Charleston. Show all posts

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Postcards from Charleston

The world famous Rainbow Row in down town


Impressive thunder clouds


Colorful Oleander flowers on Battery Street


Beautiful architecture on Kings Street


Colorful Rainbow Row

I have so many pictures left from all the beautiful places and corners in Charleston and I will show you them in small series like this.
I hope you'll enjoy and have a great weekend!





My NEW CALENDARS 2009 are available now!
For Charleston fans, my CHARLESTON - CALENDAR 2009
For Key West fans, my KEY WEST - CALENDAR 2009
For Florida fans, my FLORIDA - CALENDAR 2009
For Flower fans, my FLOWER - CALENDAR 2009
You will love it!

Wednesday, July 09, 2008

Drayton Hall Plantation - Impressions #2

Drayton Hall Plantation House back view


Look from the Ashley River back to the house


Palmetto tree at the shores of the Ashley River


Many small benches are inviting you to sit down, looking out to the river, to relax and to enjoy


Big white Heron is fishing in the pond
(click on the picture to see the bird better)



Spanish Moss hanging from the old oaks


One of the many big Oak trees, some are even more than 250 years old


A group of young birches are spending shadows on a hot summer afternoon


History information for tourists and visitors of Drayton Hall




Today's efforts are encompassed within the Heritage Landscape Project funded by a generous endowment created by Gail and Parker Gilbert of New York and Charleston. The goal of this project is not to restore or recreate the landscape as it appeared at one point in time, but rather, to establish a balance between the 18th-, 19th- and 20th-century landscapes.

The result of such a philosophy is a layered landscape. Visitors today see a Victorian garden mound and reflecting pond, live oaks that are over 250 years old, a camellia planted by Richmond Bowens in the 1920s, and the ha-ha, a landscape feature created as a barrier to keep sheep and other livestock out of the formal gardens in the 18th and early 19th century. They have the opportunity to understand how the grounds have changed over the course of time.


Read more about here

Sunday, June 29, 2008

My Wordless Sunday #21 - in Charleston, SC



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