Quick Search of DRB:
Lijit Search
drb rss about
suggest
advertise
subscribe
rss rss
rss
airplanes | animals | architecture | art | auto | boats | famous | cool ads | funny pics | food | futurism | gadgets | history | japan
military | music | nature | photo | russia | sci-fi | signs | space | sports | steampunk | technology | trains | travel | vintage | weird

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Caves: The World Beneath the World


"QUANTUM SHOT" #491
Article by Rachel and Avi Abrams- link


Back to the Cave!

If you are stretched and squeezed by everyday life, then you might be in perfect shape to explore caves.

Enter a narrow natural passageway that may lead to simply mind-boggling underground world - to get away from the depressing sights like these... Caves may lurk right under your feet: a fascinating and unexpected environment, which is often known only to spelunkers and dedicated Gollum-seekers.


Gruta do Lago Azul, Bonito, Brazil. (photo by www.alexuchoa.com)

"Symphony of Stones" (how aptly named) -


Garni caves in Armenia. (photo by eco culture)

Fairyland Cave Formations

Caves are a fairyland of delight, from the burning hot enclaves to the glacial ice mazes. Thousands of years of dripping water, eroding stone and budding minerals create a silent world of mystery and beauty... Graceful arches, giant crystals... silent but for the sound of water dripping and bubbling through.


A "Wishing Well" at Luray Caverns in Virginia (photo by Declan McCullagh)

The most common type of caves form when slightly acidic rainwater trickles into the crevices of limestone and gradually widens the cracks as it dissolves the stone. Centuries of water, supersaturated with minerals, dripping from cave roofs cause stalagmites and stalactites to form (see here).


(image via)

One thing to keep in mind during cave exploration: though these structures are made of minerals, they are generally extremely thin and fragile, many of them are quite rare, and can be damaged or destroyed by touch alone. Calcite (the mineral which forms many cave structures), for example, is soft enough to be scratched by a fingernail.

Some of the cave and rock formations:
- Flowstone (also known as a Bacon formation)
- Cave Pearls
- Soda Straws
- Helictites
- Anthodites (or Aragonite)
- Bottlebrush formation


(image credit: Dave Bunnell)

Probably the most comprehensive cave-exploration site on the net is that of Dave Bunnell... You can spend hours there, wandering around pages, cataloging whimsical underground structures, oozing rock and dripping stone.


(Gruta do Mimoso, Brazil)

Largest Cave Systems

We mentioned the Jeita Grotto - the largest cave system in the Middle East- in our recent Lebanon article. The longest known stalactite in the world is found there at 8.2 meters long.

- The deepest known cave is Voronya Cave in Abkhazia, Georgia and has been explored to a depth of 2191 meters.

- The longest continuous cave system yet explored is Mammoth Cave in Kentucky, covering 591 kilometers.

Let's have a short world tour of the most interesting caves, why don't we? We'll start with North America -

Already mentioned Luray Caverns in Virginia are full of celebrated speleothems formations, calcite crystals of abnormal shapes - all formed when the chambers were completely filled with water, highly charged with acid. The acid began to eat away the softer material, resulting in ornate pinnacles and arches...


(image credit: Alejocrux)

(image credit: Declan McCullagh)

One of the deepest known cave pits, Fantastic Pit in Georgia's Ellison's Cave descends 586 feet (179 meters) in a straight tunnel:


(image credit: Michael Nichols, National Geographic)

Glacial Caves and Ice Caverns

Some ice caves must rather be called "glacier caves", which can simply astound with the intensity of ice color:


(image credit: Jenna and Tim Dickinson)

Here is a wonderful page of ice caves photography by Jason Gulley:


(images credit: Jason Gulley)

No sign of Superman or Megatron there yet:


Mount Kenya's Ice Cave Bobby Model, National Georgaphic)

Ice Cave in Matanuska Glacier, Alaska - photo by George F. Mobley, National Geographic

A lot of ice caves grow "hair" - ice extrusions, some are quite strange-looking:


(image credit: Ian Mckenzie)

Brazil: Crystalline Underground Waters

Mato Grosso do Sul region in Brazil (and especially the quiet town of Bonito) boasts many marvelous underground lakes: Gruta do Lago Azul, Gruta do Mimoso, Aquário Natural. Intricate limestone formations and grottos hide the intensely-colored pools and waterfalls (many adventure tours there feature diving, some pools are more than 100 meters deep):





(images via)

Limestone caves in the same region offer fantastic exploration:








(images via)

Venezuela: Cave of the Ghost

Cueva del Fantasma is big enough for two helicopters to fly into it, but it's not technically a cave - rather, a collapsed gorge. It does, however, sport a huge waterfall right inside of it:


(image via)

Iran: tremendous cave system

Katale Khor is a cave dating back to the Jurassic period. It's one of the "snow caves" in the Southwest Zanjan province and connects to other caves - a huge underground infra-structure which can hide who knows what (definitely anti-American... wink wink). See more pictures here




(images credit: Ali Majdfar)

Can't get enough images of Iran's natural beauty? See our previous articles... a country full of great sights and dubious politics.

Vietnam: Hang Thien Cung cave

There are plenty of caves in Vietnam, and just like in China, many are illuminated with garish colors. (see here). But sometimes even artificial light takes back stage to the incredible rock textures:


(image credit: Tai Vo)

Mexico: Giant Selenite Crystals!

In 2000, one of the most unusual and splendid caves was found in Mexico by miners. Located only a mile from an upthrust of magma, this cave is 112 degrees Farenheit and at 90-100% humidity, limiting greatly the amount of time explorers can spend in it. It is a spectacular cave, with gigantic crystal formations thought to be 600,000 years old.




(photos by Javier Trueba / Madrid Scientific Films, image via)

The crystals formed underwater; as water saturated with calcium sulfate heated in the cavern selenite molecules crystallized and grew, undisturbed, to giant proportions. The cave was drained (by unknowing miners) in the 1980's and stopped the process of growth. Who knows what we may find further on, in the heat and water?

A description of one photographer's attempt to document this cave is here.



(images credit: Richard Fisher)

"It is unquestionably magical that the cool white rays of moonlight can originate deep underground in a black chamber that is, at least in my perception, white hot." (Richard Fisher, photographer, comments on the huge selenite crystals.)

A Giant Geode

Geodes are normally formed by volcanic or sedimentary geologic activity - a cavity in the rock is formed, inside which crystals begin to grow, such as amethyst, quartz or a number of others. Most geodes are small enough to fit in your hand, but this one is large enough to climb inside. The crystals found here are gypsum. - More info.


(images credit: Javier Garcia-Guinea)

The largest Geode Cave in US is located in Ohio: Crystal Cave, check it out.

Ancient Cave Cities

Khosrov Caves in Armenia served as a shelter to ancient tribes - in a perfectly cinematic location:


(image credit: 18:18)

(photos by Raffi Kojian and eco culture)

We wrote about Cappadocia cave city in Turkey before. But you might not be aware that more modern establishment makes its home there - a luxury hotel!



Considering how hot it can get outside, it definitely provides a welcome coolness:


(images via)

This PC case mod would fit right there, in that cave hotel room:


(case mod by Mashie)

Then again, there's a wildly original Stockholm subway station, seemingly built inside a natural (in reality - blasted) cave :



"Metro on Mars":


(image credit: Hannes R.)

(see if you can spot Arnold Schwarzeneggerr hiding behind a column somewhere, trying to refresh his memory)

The mystery of caves runs wild through the imagination of writers and artists. A typical adventure story might lure the hero inside some hidden world, with glimmer and sparkle, only to leave him trapped and confused. It's been said that exploring the human heart is akin to venturing into a cave: dark, mysterious realm - fraught with danger and fear - yet full of wonder and beauty.

Also Read: Psychedelic Caves
Abandoned Tunnels & Vast Underground Spaces

All images are by permission of photographers. This is on-going exploration series, please send us tips and pictures of other fantastic caves around the globe.

Permanent Link......+StumbleUpon ...+Facebook
Category: Nature,Travel

100% guarantee success in HP0-S20 exam with 352-001 online prep course and get certified in days using 70-630 practice questions.

READ RECENT POSTS:


Lovely Japanese Vintage Ads

Industrial Design with a Deliciously Cute Factor

Biscotti Bits
Mixed Links & Images

Incl. "Cat Masters Fridge Climbing"


Car Dashboards as Works of Art

New & old, weird & beautiful "dashes"

COMMENTS::

23 Comments:

Anonymous Stewart Larkin said...

Love this post,fantastic images!

___  
Anonymous Rowan Bulpit said...

Caves: intense wonder and beauty in a package!
Thank you Avi, fantastic images, I would love to visit all of those caves!

___  
Blogger bark said...

The Stockholm Metro station, Solna Centrum, is not built inside a natural cave. The station were blasted into the primary rocks, then liquid concrete were flushed to the walls. This technique were new and quite popular during the 70's.

___  
Anonymous Seb said...

There is actually quite a number of subway stations like that in Stockholm city. I havent really encountered the similar use of the natural rock covered in concrete in the subway design anywhere else than here at home actually. Though none of them are natural caves, but tunneled/blasted. Most of them feature some sort of painting on the "cave" walls. Though there is "Kungsträdgården"(featured here before i think) that is totally crazy in its decoration, really cool. Its a pity its on a line i rarely ride :(. If i was intereseted in photography and did own a decent camera maybe i would have tried submitting some pics of the different stations.

I am quite sure the cool approach in our subway layout is not intentional though but just something considered to be a practical way of doing it at the time.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hmm...the author must be rather easily impressed...
These aren't even mediocre photos of these cave structures....

___  
Anonymous Rodrigo said...

Mato Grosso do Sul is a province, not a town. By the way, very nice places! I live in Brazil and I intent to visit some of the brazilian caves this year.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

FYI, the computer case is from

http://mashie.org/casemods/asteroid1.html

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Super Awesome post. I've always loved caves. But in a way they always creeped me out too. I would like to see more posts on caves please:)

___  
Blogger Avi Abrams said...

Neat info all, post updated. Thank you!

___  
Blogger TheRight said...

Wow. I have a real urge to go into a cave right now! That one that went really deep is crazy. I would love to scale down that one.

___  
Blogger alvarhillo said...

Fantastic caves, fantastic pictures. I want recomended you a spanish cave named "El Soplao" and over all his excentrics stalagmites.
http://www.elsoplao.es/itinerario.htm
Thank you for the blog.

___  
Anonymous luis said...

If you notice on the Cueva del Fantasma pic, you'll see two tiny things in the bottom, near the lake. Those are the actual helicopters. I live in Venezuela and have been there. It is really breathtaking.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

You made me had a "Total Recall" on that last pic.

___  
Blogger Deva@mas said...

There is no words to express. simpppppply suuuuuperb

___  
Blogger yann said...

You should find pictures of The Choranche cave in France (Vercors Dept : 38) you'll can see very rare and the thinest stalagmites in Europe !!

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Don't miss this cave if you are ever in southern Arizona!!! http://www.explorethecaverns.com/cave.html

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

other great cave pictures here:
http://www.picturestoryblog.com/2008/12/high-water-sub-solomon-cave-tennessee.html
and look for Earth from Below

___  
Blogger The Biddery said...

wow very cool

___  
Anonymous fornls said...

Extremely inspiring and amazing work. You are amazingly creative!! Thanks for sharing.

___  
Blogger CoolRead said...

Great photos. Where did you get this idea? good work.

___  
Blogger Hrimhari said...

Nice collection. I believe that one pic is badly identified, tho. This one seems to be of Poco Encantado in Chapada Diamantina, Brazil (northeast): http://lh6.ggpht.com/abramsv/SQde_tocAkI/AAAAAAAAi00/3H-tDGkaWuU/s1600-h/10053456456ethgf.jpg

___  
Blogger Lauren! said...

these are sickkk

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hello

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezeXNOJvv7I - here is another one - Berkowa Cave in Poland - Fat man has no chance :)

Flinston

___  

Post a Comment

<< Home


SF ART & BOOK REVIEWS:
Don't miss: The Ultimate Guide to SF&F Writers!
Fiction Reviews: Alastair Reynolds "Chasm City"
Short Fiction Reviews: Lovecraft's "At the Mountains of Madness" (with pics)
New Fiction Reviews: The Surreal Office

READ MORE RECENT POSTS:


Star Wars Superfun Update

Big Bang explosion of creativity!


Liquid Art & Droplet Photography

One Ordinary Drop of Water!


Precariously Leaning Towers of the World

The other ones, not the one in Pisa


Sensational Japanese Contemporary Art

Visual Caffeine, Issue Two


Strangest Tanks in History, Part 2

The Power to Terrify: the First World War Tanks


Strangest Tanks in History, Part 1

From Early Tank Ideas to Enormous Pre-WW1 Steam Tanks


Intricate Japanese Movable Type Sets

Visual Caffeine: Exploring Art and Architecture, Issue 1


Impossible Plant-Animal Hybrid

This creature should not exist... but it does.


Heavy Bombers: Fearsome Angels of the Cold War

A game of fear, played with monstrous planes


The Jewish Engineer Behind Hitler’s Volkswagen

Finally, the full story behind emergence of Volkswagen


Fluid Dynamics & Liquid Photography

It's a Splash! - High-Speed Photography at its Finest


Hanging Monasteries of the World

Truly the way is narrow and the path is steep...


Steam Buses & Trucks

Ugly, smoke-belching beasties...


Historic & Elaborate Water Pumps

Most flamboyant styles for pumping water


Retro Future: Glorious Transportation Update

Making you hate your current family car since 1951


Bookshelf Heaven: Awesome "Containers" for Books

So radical... So comforting...


Jets & Clouds Effects: An Ephemeral Sky Show

Airplanes create art in the sky

FULL ARCHIVES (with previews, fast loading): 

May 2012 -- April 2012 --
March 2012 -- February 2012 -- Dec-Jan 2012 --
November 2011 -- October 2011 -- September 2011 --
August 2011 -- July 2011 -- June 2011 --
May 2011 -- April 2011 -- March 2011 --
February 2011 -- January 2011 -- December 2010 --
November 2010 -- October 2010 -- September 2010 --
August 2010 - July 2010 -- June 2010 --
May 2010 -- April 2010 -- March 2010 --
Winter 2009-2010 -- Oct-Nov 2009 -- September 2009 --
August 2009 -- June-July 2009 -- May 2009 --
April 2009 -- March 2009 -- February 2009 --
January 2009 -- December 2008 -- November 2008 --
October 2008 -- September 2008 -- August 2008 --
July 2008 -- June 2008 -- May 2008 --
April 2008 -- March 2008 -- February 2008 --
January 2008 -- Dec, 2007 -- November 2007 --
October 2007 -- September 2007 -- August 2007 --
July 2007 -- June 2007 -- May 2007 --
April 2007 -- March 2007 -- February 2007 --
January 2007 -- December 2006 -- November 2006 --
October 2006 -- Link Latte Issues -- Biscotti Issues

...


...


CATEGORIES
airplanes | animals | architecture | art | auto | boats | books | cool ads | funny pics | famous | futurism | food
gadgets | health | history | humour | japan | internet | link latte | military | music | nature | photo | russia | steampunk
sci-fi & fantasy | signs | space | sports | technology | trains | travel | vintage | weird
 
  
       



Go to Mobile Site Version
Also read DRB on iPad:
Flipboard - Cool Curators


Airplanes
Animals
Architecture
Art
Auto
Boats
Computers
Cool Ads
Extreme Weather
Food
Funny Pics
Futurism
Gadgets
History
Humour
Link Latte
Military
Music
Nature
Oops Accidents
Photography
Robots
Science
Science Fiction

Space
Sports
Technology
Trains
Travel
UE Abandoned
Vintage
Weird











Avi Abrams
Rachel Abrams
M. Christian
Simon Rose
Paul Schilperoord
Scott Seegert
Constantine vonHoffman

- Join Our Team -
Guidelines









  • Love this series of posts--I always find something I enjoy!
    Read more

  • really kool, but some ads make you sicks
    Read more

  • The beer tram is really good. I often travel with it to the school. There is another one beer tram in Pilsen. For more on both see this site: http://www.plzensketramvaje.cz/?page=kt8d5-rn2p.htm . The only thing I can add is that you get really thirsty during traveling by this tram :-))
    Read more

  • very interesting designs. thanks for featuring such inventive and creative ads.
    Read more

  • Amazing, awesome, thank you so much!!
    Read more

  • The funny thing about the tram:

    There are sensors in seats and they count how much people is siting in two halfs of tram.

    http://www.plzensketramvaje.cz/plzen/293skorep.jpg

    There is a display which displays the numbers. "Domácí" means the home team and "Hosté" means the visiting team. It is like football score, because Gambrinus sponsors the footbal league.
    Read more

  • So what's up with calling a robot "Russian"? What, all Russians are communists? Really?
    Read more

  • About the Solar Furnace, the first one in the Modern Age was set operating in Lisbon, Portugal, in that distant year of 1904. The inventor was a jesuit priest, Father Manuel Gomes Himalaya and the demonstration was in the presence of the King of Portugal. The invention, called «Pyrheliophero» (literally «solar fire furnace») was later presented in the United States, at the Universal Exibition of St. Louis in 1904. There, it received the Grand Prix.

    The enourmous machine was capable of fusing steel and stone at a staggering 3500ºC.

    After the Exibition, it was destroyed in a misterious warehouse fire, still in St. Louis.

    Returning to Portugal, Father Himalaya received support from the King, but short afterwards - in 1908 - the King and his Heir were assassinated and everithing went down the drain with the following (1910) republican revolution.
    Read more

  • The artistic Periodic Table...

    While it’s a fun idea and some of the artwork is very good, it really does show the difference between (the bulk of) artists and scientists.
    Take, for example, the text that goes with caesium.

    [caesium]…can be produced solely by nuclear reactions.

    Not true, it’s a naturally occuring element, though there’s noticeable amounts of radioactive caesium in the environment that /has/ come from man made nuclear sources.

    [caesium]…is strong enough to etch glass, flesh and bone.

    No, its hydroxide is.

    …it is one of the most biologically hazardous components of radioactive waste and nuclear fallout,

    No, it’s not as readily absorbed as many other radiopollutants.

    Really, I despair of the standard of scientific education that leads to someone being unable to glean even basic information about something without reading some sentences out of context and getting the wrong end of the stick.
    Read more

  • Lavoisier used a solar furnace in the 1770s to burn a diamond so he could prove it was made of carbon.
    Read more

  • Quite right, Skipweasle. But I mentioned the priest's furnace because it was the first to produce temperatures in excess of 3000ºC, which are similar, although far superior to those produced by the modern contraption depicted in the movie.

    Lavoisier's furnace was unable to produce temperatures higher than 1800ºC - which is remarkable in 1770 - and was a relatively small furnace, compared to the gigantic Pyrheliophoro, capable of melting a huge block of basalt.
    Read more

  • Regarding the picture of the bent propeller ...

    It is an actual photo. Most cameras with a slit shutter or a two curtain shutter as in SLR cameras will show this effect.

    The exposure of the photo begins at the top and the shutter moves down in the shape of a small horizontal slit whose width is dependent on the exposure time. The propeller turns during this time. Therefore the propeller will look bent, because the blades will move and change position during the exposure of each fractional part of the whole image.
    Read more

  • Great info on solar furnace, and this "bent propeller" bit was unexpected... Thank you.
    Read more

  • Solar furnaces have been around long before the 1930s - in the 1770s
    Lavoisier used one to burn a diamond to prove it was made of carbon.

    Link
    Read more

  • @skipweasel:
    I despair of (sic) the English writing skills of people who post comments on blogs…
    Read more

  • Vá lá!...Dêem um desconto a quem não tem o inglês como sendo a sua língua nativa. Ou acham preferível todos nós começarmos a escrever posts em 'estrangeiro'?
    Read more

  • That is a "Letournea company artic transport from the 50's
    Read more

  • The last one is LeTourneau LCC-1.
    Read more

  • The last truck is the truck that the wheels for Bigfoot V were removed from.
    Read more

  • Really great stuff, but where are those giant tow trucks that out trick these.
    Read more

  • http://warisboring.com/?p=434

    “The Overland Train Mark II was delivered in 1962 and immediatly declared obsolete”
    Read more

  • Someone should tell those japs that they have no sense of taste!
    Read more

  • Or rather I'd say it's to have so much lighting in one place and not go blind :p
    Read more

  • The last two pics are of the so-called "Snow Train", built to transport equipment to arctic radar stations.
    Read more

  • This guy's website is amazing!
    Read more

  • too bad international harvester went out of business.
    Read more

  • @Gilipollas

    You should be informed that "jap" is a derogatory and racist term stemming from World War II.
    Read more

  • I love it! An american, waxing lyrical over a garish truck, suggests that the "japs" (SIC) have no taste! c'mon !?!? :)
    Read more

  • Gilipollas said...

    "Someone should tell those japs that they have no sense of taste!"

    They have taste idiot, it just doesn't match yours. Just because someone likes different things than you do doesn't mean you are right and they are wrong.

    Using the term "jap" indicates that you have no class. Me thinks your opinion of yourself is a little too high.
    Read more

  • the Japanese trucks are just plain stupid. why in the HELL would any person want to drive a truck that has THAT much chrome all over it, when all it would do is TOTALLY distract the driver from driving? the other ones are really nice and classy, however.
    Read more

  • Amazing truck photo collection.
    I like the trailer truck best,
    because of all the wood and
    feel of home.

    thanks from tony
    Read more

  • @Anonymous: American taste is weird as well... Why the hell anyone needs 5L or 6L engine in a family car? It doesn't make sense...
    Read more

  • funny how the first "anonymous" that wanted to trash galipollas for using the term "jap" automatically labelled him an American, Because to him, obviously all Americans are bad in one way or another...too bad the guy writing the original comment was from Spain. Ever hear of a little thing called "the pot calling the kettle black"?
    Read more

  • Discount Reborn Dolls

    I would love to have this fashionable truck in my garage. Though you can't use it as everyday vehicle, it's so big. I love the interior especially the red one and the good thing about this, is you can go anywhere and you are carrying your home. Everything is available inside, I would rather choose this than a house and lot.
    Read more

  • http://www.bigfoot4x4.com/more5.html
    Read more

  • About big one at the end:

    http://www.artificialowl.net/2008/05/letourneau-lcc-1-sno-train-fort.html

    http://www.membrana.ru/particle/2663
    Read more

  • The last unidentified vehicle was a Snow Train. It was described in the Guinness Book as the world's longest road vehicle, at 540 feet. Two were built for the US Army. Subsequently tightrope walking champion Steven McPeak bought one, reparied it and drove it in the sub-zero temperatures, often alone
    Read more

  • The last unidentified vehicle was a Snow Train. It was described in the Guinness Book as the world's longest road vehicle, at 540 feet. Two were built for the US Army. Subsequently tightrope walking champion Steven McPeak bought one, repaired it and drove it in the sub-zero temperatures, often alone
    Read more

  • Loved the "Death & Taxes" poster!
    Read more

  • The ice bullets are on pre-order
    Read more

  • Great pictures.
    Read more

  • the stacked cups are available on perpetualkid.com
    Read more

  • What was Sebastian Bourdais doing in a Subaru Rally car in Australia when he's driving for Torro Rosso about a week before the race in Brazil? Are you sure you have the driver's name right?
    Read more

  • This is what Gazzetta says
    Read more

  • Great pictures.
    Read more

  • The cooling tower being demolished appears to be that of the Trojan Nuclear plant in Portland, Oregon which was recently dynamited.
    Read more

  • That's a very romantic story of two writers end up together. It must be a very good relationship as they are both have the same enthusiasm with their chosen profession, and being in the same boat, they understand each other. - Buy Reborns
    Read more

  • Actually, I'd love one of those Hitler dolls. As a target, on my BB gun shooting range...
    Read more

  • Oh my God! where did you found these pictures. They are really creepy. I like them.
    Read more

  • Wow, I like those mini nukes.
    Read more

  • Uncanny valley for that fake baby.

    I once walked by a remote abandoned house, and in the bushes, in the rain, was a collection of naked dolls like those first pictures up here, missing eyes, limbs, heads... Creepiest thing I ever saw.
    Read more

  • Oh lord, that "baby laugh-a-lot" ad is pure evil. Is it for real?
    Read more

  • Don't know why, but I've always been creeped out by dolls.

    I put together a slide show of your pics with some music (hope you don't mind). I added a few other creepy dolls I found on the web.

    http://heylookhear.com/Image/creepy
    Read more

  • There is a small island in mexico City where the ownwer tried to protect himself from evil ghosts with creepy dolls.
    Have a look:
    http://nimraithkar.blogspot.com/2005/06/un-lugar-de-misterio-dentro-de-un.html

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/mexad/2148018278/
    Read more

  • My godfather-in-law outfits his Kentucky home with an astounding display of macabre baby doll folk art.

    That link just gives a glimpse. You can Google the guy for more - but you really have to visit the property to get the full impression.
    Read more

  • How wonderfully horrifying
    Read more

  • I'm glad you touched upon those realistic "Reborn" dolls -- the whole psychology behind those things is fucked up.
    Read more

  • Hey! You've got one of my dolls pictured here (the toothy baby). I make lots of scary dolls and display them at halloween. You can see some here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/lagrotesquerie/sets/72157606203236996/
    Read more

  • Karenw - credit is added, we will feature your work more in Part 2, with more info from these comments. Thank you!
    Read more

  • DRB is great, I love weird stuff like that,Keep it up :o)

    Here are a couple more "Alien" and "Clone" sci-fi art babies to add to the collection...

    A clone: http://www.marty.com.au/sci-fi-gallery/art-sculpture/3-clone-alone.html

    and a Womb with a view: http://www.marty.com.au/sci-fi-gallery/art-sculpture/6-womb.html

    (Found on mArty Gallery)
    Read more

  • Hey, I read with interest the discussion of our beloved art of reborning (the creation of reborn babies, reborn dolls, fake babies or whatever you want to call them!) and just want to point out that the ladies taking part are very normal, gifted and talented individuals. A forum for discussion of this subject without prejudice can be found at Reborn Babies UK, there you will find very nice ladies - friendly, and definitely not wierd. PS. None of us make Hitler dolls!
    Read more

  • Priceless pics. So creepy, all you need now is the dolls house...
    Read more

  • funny stuff! reminds a little o how I was creeped out by Mexican jumping beans as a child! I searched for them again, and found them online at http://www.amazingbeans.com

    hilarious!
    Read more

  • Thank you for those photos of Dubai's airport. They are the only view I will get, because I refuse to set foot in that place - for my own safety.
    Visitors to Dubai airport have been arrested and sentenced to 4 years in jail for having *tiny* amounts of marijuana - in one case it was an invisible speck on the bottom of a shoe, which he likely got by walking on someone else's discarded joint. Another man was jailed for having 3 poppy seeds left over from a bread roll.
    Read more

  • Finally I know where that picture I've got as desktop background was taken (Chittorgarh Fort).
    Read more

  • Check out Rubel Farms Castle in Glendora, CA
    Read more

  • Neuschwanstein was reconstructed on a ruined castle in the 19th century.
    I suppose the original one looked much less dramatic.
    Burg Eltz, however, is the real thing.
    Constructed in the middle ages, never fell, despite being under siege serveral times, and still owned by the family who build it.
    There's even a "siege castle" on the opposite side of the valley!
    The siege castle is in ruins while the castle besieged is still standing...
    Read more

  • What a fantastic post--I'd love to go visit each and every one of these castles....maybe someday. Have you been to these?
    Read more

  • http://www.lovelandcastle.com/

    Loveland OH
    Read more

  • Hi there, fab article!!
    Ever heard of "la scarzuola" the surreal and utopistic town created by architect Tomaso Buzzi. It's location is in Italy, in Umbria region.

    More info about the history of this fascinating place almost unknown even to 90% of italians...
    http://www.bellaumbria.net/Montegabbione/citta_buzziana_eng.htm

    And here are some shots from flickr
    http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=scarzuola&w=all&s=int

    It's truly another world!!
    Read more

  • NurseExec - we've seen some of the castles in Germany, including Neuschwanstein. Switzerland castles, for example, around the Thun Lake, impressed us the most.

    Great suggestions, everyone! Keep them coming.
    Read more

  • Another crazy castle is the Pena Palace in Sintra Portugal
    Read more

  • I have a poster of Neuschwanstein on my wall at the very moment...tho I believe the angle of the picture is different than yours posted here.

    This one is taken from up the mountain looking back down at the castle into the lake, most likely during early or very late winter.

    It is on my wall to remind me what a man's castle is supposed to look like. Didn't know the historical perspective, sorry poor bugger...lol.
    Read more

  • These are awesome! Amazing what people used to be able to do with simple tools. Take a look at the Chateau de Chenonceau at www.chenonceau.com. It literaly straddles the Loire river in France. Also has an interesting history. It was owned also entirely by women throughout it's existence. Cheers.
    Read more

  • The castle and white church tower emerging from the mist in the photo just below that of Moszna castle in Poland is not from a castle in Eastern Europe, but from 14th Century the castle and walled city of Bragança, a town in northern Portugal, in Western Europe.

    And the Pena Palace in Sintra, near Lisbon, Portugal, as mentioned by the previous Anonymous, is indeed quite crazy and beautiful. No wonder: one of the architects was the german Baron of Eschweige, who was also one of the designers of Neuchwanstein Castle...

    Pena Palace was rebuilt in the 19th Century over the ancient ruins of an old monastery by the german-born Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg, the prince consort of Portugal.

    It's well worth a visit, but do noto forget to visit «the real thing» in Portugal: the medieval towns of Óbidos (similar to Carcasonne, in France), Marvão, the small 12th Century village and castle of Sortelha, the Roman and Moorish town of Mértola, or the big Templar Castle of Tomar. Inside it, fully restored, is the center of Templar Europe in the 14th Century: the enourmous round fortified church, with quite strange inscriptions and icons, where it is said the Holy Grail was once kept.
    Read more

  • Wow! Absolutely Stunning!

    Jiff
    www.privacy-center.be.tc
    Read more

  • The "Unknown" bottom left castle (the one up the small street with the blue and red flag) is Le Chateau de Nyon in Nyon, Switzerland (right near Geneva).

    I've been up that street, and from the castle's terrace you can see a beautiful panorama of the alps, Lake Geneva, and the city itself.

    Voltaire used to live right beside it, incidentally.
    Read more

  • yea, just saw carcassonne on rick steves today :P it looked pretty cool!
    Read more

  • boldt castle on heart island, new york.
    Read more

  • Krak des Chevaliers in Syria should definetly be on the list!
    Read more

  • chateau de chillon in montreux, switzerland. small but beautiful location. http://www.flickr.com/photos/pearbiter/566128230/sizes/l/
    Read more

  • Can you say disgustingly oversaturated?
    Read more

  • Have you checked out Boldt Castle on Heart Island on the St. Laurence (sp) river near Alexandria Bay, New York?
    Read more

  • I want to go! *sigh
    Read more

  • I'm surprised you didn't mention Castel del Monte. Talk about haunting.

    "It has neither a moat nor a drawbridge and may in fact never have been intended as a defensive fortress."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castel_del_Monte_(Apulia)
    Read more

  • Casa Loma in Toronto is a fasinating castle to explore for Americans who can't make it over the pond.
    Read more

  • Traquair House, in Scotland, is quite picturesque. I also find it interesting because it is still in the family, and the family still lives there. I don't know if it qualifies as a proper castle or not, but it looks like one, particularly from the rear. Traquair also offers gorgeous, if pricey, bed and breakfast accomodations. www.traquair.co.uk Stirling is another lovely castle in Scotland, with a spectacular view of the town below.
    Read more

  • I adore the Coral Castle (and apparently so did Billy Idol--"Sweet Sixteen" is about it). I would like to point out, though, that he quarried much of the coral from right behind where he built the wonderful place. I visited on a road trip to the Keys a few years back, and you can see the big hole behind the castle.

    It may not be as gilded or gorgeous as the other castles mentioned, but it was a lovely place to visit, and I highly recommend it if you're nearby!
    Read more

  • Beautiful pictures!

    Prague Castle in the Czech Republic is gorgeous and fascinating.
    Read more

  • This is the Moorish Castle in Sintra, Portugal where i proposed to my now wife!
    http://hashassin.deviantart.com/art/Moorish-Castle-47757226
    Read more

  • How about a mention of Alcazar de Segovia, in Spain?
    http://www.blogdeturismo.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/alcazar_segovia.jpg
    It's believed to be the inspiration for Walt Disney's Cinderella Castle!
    Read more

  • Some of those castles would be very defensible in case of zombie attacks.
    Read more

  • This view from Kumbalgarh reminds me of Myst.
    Read more

  • I used to live in Prague, so we traveled to countless castles across Europe (the best years of my childhood!). Neuschwanstein is simply amazing! My parents live near there and go visit regularly, i guess because they get bored??? Schloss Linderhof is another amazing castle, built by the same king i believe. I'm looking forward to my next visit to Europe so i can go back and revisit my childhood. Everyone should go see the castles of Europe if given the chance.
    Read more

  • Take a look at the Chateau de Chenonceau at www.chenonceau.com. It literaly straddles the Loire river in France.

    Chenonceau actually straddles the Cher, a major tributary of the Loire. The fact that it spans the river may have spared it -- French revolutionaries resisted sacking it partly because it was a river crossing and thus valuable to them. It's a gorgeous castle with a fascinating (and slightly soap opera) history, and definitely should be included. The grand ballroom over the river is something to be seen. And so is the room of Louise of Lorraine, who turned the castle into a convent as she mourned her husband, King Henri III. The room is decorated in symbols of mourning and of her faith.

    If the Coral Castle is included, a rather more modern (and considerably more bizarre) "castle" could go on the list: the House on the Rock. This strange residence started out as an artistic retreat for the architect, who began construction by hand, hauling materials up a natural stone pillar in Wisconsin. Eventually it mutated into a very surreal tourist attraction. I suppose in a way it was his own Neuschwanstein.
    Read more

  • Fantastic Post!
    Thank you DRB-Team for the great time I always have on your site, it just so amazing what you are collecting and presenting us 365/year!

    Keep up the amazing work!
    Read more

  • Thank you Lukas... encouraging.
    Great info, everybody!
    Read more

  • If only I had 10 million dollars to spend. Keep taking my dollar and a dream to the grocery store to play the lotto but still no luck. Lol.

    Another awesome post and spectacular pictures. Thanks for always finding a way to awe me.
    Read more

  • Great post. Spain has many beautiful spots and there are endless palaces and castles and monasteries in picturesque locations. Try the Alcazar in Segovia or the Alhambra in Granada or the sights in Cuenca.
    Read more

  • portmierion is NOT a castle it's a whimsical collection of various styles of italian architecture.
    Read more

  • Beautiful! I love old castles.

    I was surprised not to see Heidelberg, which is gorgeous.

    Another fascinating one is Slain's Castle, in the northeast of Scotland. Bram Stoker stayed there and it is apparently the inspiration for Dracula's Castle. It's not so pretty to look at, but the precipitous and isolated location make it a dramatic and eery example.
    Read more

  • I visited about 20 castles during some eight years in Europe.... none in this article, and usually small unrenovated ones, free to visit on a serviceman's pay. But Heidelberg is one that would deserve to be in the next article. And I visited that one several times....
    'Walled cities' might be a good topic for another series.
    Read more

  • The Czech republic has some great castles like Krumlov and Sternberk.

    Also Austria the most spectacular castles are definitely the Hohenwerfen and Hohensalzburg.

    The great teutonic fortress of Marienberg made of red bricks is definitely worth seeing too.
    Read more

  • The view from Neuschwanstein "that launched 10,000 epics" and Maxfield Parrish's most famous painting are definitely more than coincidence.
    Read more

  • As an absolute castle-lover living in the middle of Europe, I was pleasantly surprised to see some real gems in your article.

    I have added some of your examples to my 'must visit' list for my next vacation, so thanks for inspiring me!
    Read more

  • Dracula's Bran castle????the bran never been dracula's castle actualy is in Brasov-Transylvania,and Tepes was the ruler of Wallachia,he only born in Sighisoara in Transylvania and returned only when asked the hungarian king's support(btw.Transylvania was hungarian kingdom those times,Tepes was romanian ruler and the Bran castle was a post at the border where the merchants paid when they passed the borders),i live in Transylvania,to 44 km where Dracula born
    Read more

  • Great pictures and some good ideas for travels too - there's something magical about wandering around the towers and tunnels of an old fortress.
    I would add Crac de Chevaliers in Syria; an old crusader castle, and without doubt the best preserved one that I have ever seen. In parts it's in such good condition it's almost as if the crusaders were still living there!
    Thanks for sharing.
    Read more

  • Wasnt Bran castle the castle of the female ''vampire'' ?

    Anyway a nice picture is Hohenzollern.

    Ekzt castle is actually used by several families.
    Read more

  • How about Bishops Castle in Colorado. Admittedly it is not like old Ludwigs castles, but a castle no less.
    Read more

  • I had the priviledge of visiting both castle in Bavaria depicted in your photo. To the right of Neuschwanstein is Hohenschwangau, which belong to Ludwig's father. It is a small lovely gem and well worth seeing.
    Read more

  • Am I the only one who finds the idea of a 125mph elevator terrifying? o.o
    Read more


Send us your topic ideas, site suggestions, rants or sweet unpublished poetry. We love to hear from you.



Misc.:
Custom t-shirts
China Tours