My N.24070 received a comment focusing on the central passage, namely, the one showing the last Dolomites east of the river Piave. Since these mountains are among the most amazing also for me, I have chosen to give precedence, within the queue of waiting Dolomitic panoramas, to the present work.
For those who have the patience to sweep all the labels, I think that an exercise could be useful - at least, for me, it was. The exercise is: Try to estimate how much you believe to know the Dolomites, from 0 to 100, and do this before and after the sweep... chance there is that you come up with two somewhat different estimates!
Remarks:
1) the well-known Campanile di Val Montanaia is not to be seen here, because its feature is precisely that of lying hidden inside a circle of higher mountains among which the Monfalcon di Montanaia (find it at 127°), Croda Cimoliana and Cima Montanaia (find them little right, and behind).
2) of course, in order to locate/understand better the present view, it is recommended to have a look at the wider panorama beforehand.
33 images, 200 mm (x 1.5), 1/500 sec, f/10.
Sebastian Becher, Michael Bodenstedt, Alvise Bonaldo, Hans-Jörg Bäuerle, Gerhard Eidenberger, Andrea Gasparotto, Leonhard Huber, Walter Huber, Heinz Höra, Thomas Janeck, Martin Kraus, Matthias Krell, Wilfried Malz, Werner Maurer, Gianluca Moroni, Uta Philipp, M. R., Jan Lindgaard Rasmussen, Danko Rihter, Patrick Runggaldier, Arne Rönsch, Christoph Seger, Matthias Unterhofer, Jens Vischer
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Kommentare
Herzlichst C
Tanti saluti, Hans-Jörg
Your pano forced me to have a look at my four years old #6748 - just to learn, how many of "your" peaks I had seen then. (For instance: I remembered the Bosconero and, of course, the Col Nudo, but the name "Sfornio" appeared as something totally new to me although I find it in my own pano...)
Apart from those personal brainstormings: Very good pano, Alberto!
Wer dieses Bild sieht, dem offenbart sich eine neue Welt!
Another useful exercise would be to find somebody that really knows these mountains (maybe, for having climbed on them) and corrects the (probably many) errors that I put in the labelling... I used two sources, namely: 1) Udeuschle and, with precedence in case of conflicting data, 2) the Tabacco 1:25000 sheets 016 (Dolomiti del Centro Cadore) and 021 (Dolomiti di Sinistra Piave). Although the Tabacco cartography has a wide reputation for reliability (diversely from some Kompass sheets concerning our regions), it is not guaranteed that, in certain wild sections full of rock towers, I always made the right associations...
Concerning taxonomy, I think that for the eye and, probably, also for the climbers, there is no doubt that these are indeed Dolomites. For the scholar, these actually does not belong to Section 31 - "Dolomites" of the SOIUSA, but rather to Section 33 - "Carnic and Gailtaler Alps", Subsection "Prealpi Carniche". But then, going down one further step in the subdivision tree, the name that one finds for the Supergroup is "Dolomiti Friulane", q.e.d. !
Die Idee "Schlußakkord" gefällt mir... Ich hatte eine musikalische Idee auf der anderen Seite: eine kurze Einleitung mit nichts als Wolken, wie ein Takt mit nur Begleitung, eher die Melodie sich aufhebt, vgl zB Mozart, KV 595, erster Satz - muss man immer von jemandem zuverlässig kopieren...
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