In one of the few occasions of our getting the timing right, we took a walk through Golden Canyon to Cathedral Rock early in the morning when the light was just right. The colours in the rocks were just amazing.
This belongs with the photo under sail, as it is one of the little coves we visited on our sailing trip off Mull and Iona. This is Balfour Bay on Erraid, a tiny island off south-west tip of Mull. It featured in R.L. Stevenson's novel, Kidnapped, and is named after David Balfour. You can only get to the island by boat or on foot across Erraid Sound at low tide
One of the best ways to see the islands off the West Coast of Scotland is by boat - indeed, most visitors access them by ferry. Even better than the ferries, however, is the chance to sail around the islands, gliding in and out of the all the rarely-visited inlets and channels, such as Balfour Bay. It's the most peaceful way to travel, and a glorious way to spend some time.
The little church of St Adalbert's in Krakow's Rynek Glowny.
Krakow's Rynek Glowney, with the church of St Mary's
It was a misty, cold day when we went to visit the sites at Auschwitz and Birkenau, adding to the bleakness of the place. For me, on this day, the weather simply and powerfully increased the sense of the misery of the place. Spending four or five hours walking around the two camps in the cold and the mist creates a cumulative chill. To spend days, weeks, months and years in such a place must have reached unimmaginable conditions. This shot looks along the watchtowers; the barracks are those used to quarantine incoming prisoners.
As a historian-type I'm generally interested in how people respond to events and to past events, and how they document them.
Before visiting Auschwitz-Birkenau, I decided that I would take photographs of the site. I wanted to try and capture something of the mood and atmosphere as I saw it, as well as writing about it.
It's very hard to take any photos at both sites without including people in your composition. These guys were there with a camcorder and a rather hefty tripod, filming. This is them as they walked back along the train-tracks
This quotation is engraved into the floor of the Great Court of the British Museum
Mine stack at the Levant mining site on the Cornish coast.
The lighthouse in the background is the Pendeen Watch.
The Eden Project at dusk. They have late night opening in the Christmas season, called 'The Festival of Lights' and turn one of the outdoor areas into an ice rink.
I can never quite believe this place used to be a clay pit.
Hannah Swithinbank has been a member since 5 December 2007 and goes by Swiv.
Currently in Scotland.
Subscriber since December 2007!
I am studying for a PhD in Ancient History and I travel in my spare time on my spare scholarship money!
Or: I fit in my studying and teaching around my travelling and amateur photography.
It depends on your point of view.
You can also find Hannah at www.flickr.com/photos/swiv.