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DPChallenge Forums >> Individual Photograph Discussion >> Rural landscapes
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08/12/2007 07:12:25 PM · #1
Unfortunately these were shot just a little to early for the rural landscapes challenge. Just wanted to share them with you and maybe get some comments.

08/12/2007 07:13:42 PM · #2
These are beautiful. The first one in particular doesn't seem to have any distinction between sky and ground - lovely.

Not so sure about them being rural though.
08/12/2007 07:15:20 PM · #3
Number 4 is great. I think they are Rural they are certainly not in the city and countryside differs from country to country .. Well done.
08/12/2007 07:16:03 PM · #4
I thought rural just meant "not in city". :/
08/12/2007 07:39:59 PM · #5
I tend to think rural means not in the city too - but it usually still means inhabited. These to me look more like wilderness, rather than countryside.

Not looking to get in to a long debate about it though :) The pictures are great.
08/12/2007 07:41:25 PM · #6
Hehe well then I guess Iceland is one big wilderness :)
08/12/2007 07:44:24 PM · #7
Rural indicates sparsely populated. Urban means big cities. Neither means wilderness, hidden beach, etc. I would guess that for purposes of the challenge, anything without a skyscraper is going in the rural bin and something from Oregon or Iceland will win.
08/12/2007 07:55:32 PM · #8
Rural definately means populated but these Icelanders stick a house anywhere... LOL

I imagine there will be a few DNMC's floating around and voters will need to use a bit of imagination. especially if the shot includes no people or houses.
08/12/2007 08:01:44 PM · #9
LOL yes we do :)
08/12/2007 08:05:20 PM · #10
To me rural means farmland.
08/12/2007 08:05:39 PM · #11
Originally posted by MAK:

Rural definately means populated but these Icelanders stick a house anywhere... LOL

I imagine there will be a few DNMC's floating around and voters will need to use a bit of imagination. especially if the shot includes no people or houses.


Well mine has NO houses and NO people...but it screams RURAL...so that will just confuse the DNMC police even more. They won't know if they are coming or going..LOL!
08/12/2007 09:54:31 PM · #12
Originally posted by Delta_6:

To me rural means farmland.


So a forest would be urban then. Gotcha. ;o)
08/12/2007 09:58:39 PM · #13
Originally posted by cpanaioti:

So a forest would be urban then. Gotcha. ;o)


There's more than two types of landscapes - it doesn't have to just be 'rural' or 'urban'
08/12/2007 10:57:58 PM · #14
Rural means country/farming type of life, most usually identified by the simple hardworking life of the farmer.

From Dictionary.com:Ru·ral[roor-uhl]–adjective
1. of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the country, country life, or country people; rustic: rural tranquillity.
2. living in the country: the rural population.
3. of or pertaining to agriculture: rural economy.

So basically, none of the shots offered up quite meet the definition.

They're just gorgeous, not rural!.....8>)

The words "Pastoral Landscape" are quite often used to describe the typical rural setting.

Weathered barns, old trees, weeping willows around a moss-banked pond, spring houses and root cellars all come to mind.

And of course, a 70 year old tractor rusting into the ground where it stopped, 32 years ago.....8>)

Message edited by author 2007-08-12 23:04:05.
08/12/2007 11:03:31 PM · #15
Originally posted by cpanaioti:

So a forest would be urban then. Gotcha. ;o)


Originally posted by Gordon:

There's more than two types of landscapes - it doesn't have to just be 'rural' or 'urban'


Yeah.....like moonscapes, mountainous terrain, sea-lashed rocky coastlines, verdant dales, frigid arctic wastelands.....8>)

08/12/2007 11:08:41 PM · #16
The challenge is not "landscape". It is "urban landscape" or "rural landscape". I'm sure several people will try to push the envelope and then bitch about receiving a DNMC.
08/12/2007 11:14:04 PM · #17
Originally posted by dfstevenson:

The challenge is not "landscape". It is "urban landscape" or "rural landscape". I'm sure several people will try to push the envelope and then bitch about receiving a DNMC.


Personally I do believe I will grant a great deal of latitude on this challenge.

Having traveled a great deal, rural settings are very much open to interpretation for me, as I have witnessed a wide variety of vistas which were indeed rural, even though they were located along the sea coasts, or up high in the mountains.

Ray
08/12/2007 11:16:50 PM · #18
Ray - your "nature's palette" was a wonderful photo.
08/12/2007 11:18:16 PM · #19
I agree with Ray - rural landscape is quite a broad term, dependent very much by the land, and as a voter who has traveled signficantly, I plan to vote with great latitude in the term "Rural".

Originally posted by RayEthier:

Originally posted by dfstevenson:

The challenge is not "landscape". It is "urban landscape" or "rural landscape". I'm sure several people will try to push the envelope and then bitch about receiving a DNMC.


Personally I do believe I will grant a great deal of latitude on this challenge.

Having traveled a great deal, rural settings are very much open to interpretation for me, as I have witnessed a wide variety of vistas which were indeed rural, even though they were located along the sea coasts, or up high in the mountains.

Ray
08/12/2007 11:29:33 PM · #20
Originally posted by NikonJeb:

Rural means country/farming type of life, most usually identified by the simple hardworking life of the farmer.

From Dictionary.com:Ru·ral[roor-uhl]–adjective
1. of, pertaining to, or characteristic of the country, country life, or country people; rustic: rural tranquillity.
2. living in the country: the rural population.
3. of or pertaining to agriculture: rural economy.

I think Jeb hit on the head with this description. :D
08/12/2007 11:54:38 PM · #21
I am assuming, for the sake of this challenge, that these images should show the hand of man. "Rural", by definition, is still settled land. If it's not settled, it is "wilderness" basically. I see the differentiation between the two as between dense urban experiences and more spread-out, rural experiences.

This does not seem to me the right challenge for one of my marsh/seascape sunrise/sets. We'll see how it goes.

R.
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