Sunday, August 4, 2013

Training track at Winding Oaks Farm (Three different views)




This track is located about a mile from the oak tree posted on August 2.

18 comments:

Kate said...

The sky is different but the grass remains the same.

Anonymous said...

Lots of green, green lush grass to gallop across... and a big, big sky overhead!

Pat said...

Really like that top shot---surreal.

Janet said...

Just waiting for the horses...

Dave-CostaRicaDailyPhoto.com said...

This looks like a large oval.

Sharon said...

It looks like a big track. I like your artistic version at the top.

Small City Scenes said...

It is so much fun to let your pony run flat out on a track. Of course I was much younger then. Creak!! MB

Judy said...

I like the sky in all of them!

cieldequimper said...

Impressive shots. Do you ever see the horses?

Taken For Granted said...

I see you were shooting pictures on the third turn. The horse I bet on died before reaching the third turn. That's why there are no horses in your photos. Classic track fence and sky.

LOLfromPasa said...

Wonderful trio. This illustrates beautifully the thought I had about revisiting that gorgeous tree you shared the other day. The tree may not change but the landscape and sky might as it has here. I'm thinking you might even have snow on the ground in the winter. But thinking about it, you are in Florida and possibly no chance of snow :). Enjoy the golf.

Kay said...

So I was wondering, "Train track? Do they have a train there? That doesn't look like a train track." Oh, yeah. I get it now. Cool shots.

RedPat said...

The lean on that fence makes it look very fast to me. Strange isn't it?

Sallie (FullTime-Life) said...

That's horse country there, that is! So gorgeous and green.

Randy said...

That is some green grass.

Jack said...

This horse farm has a lot to see.

EG CameraGirl said...

Did someone beam up (as in beam me up, Scotty) all the horses?

magiceye said...

Love to see these open spaces!

"Photographers deal in things which are continually vanishing and when they have vanished there is no contrivance on earth which can make them come back again." — Henri Cartier-Bresson