Photo print by Barry Noel of Rangitoto Island. Printed on quality art paper and mounted on a matt board ready for framing. A beautiful flat non-reflective finish.
Rangitoto Island is the largest, youngest and one of the least modified of about 50 volcanic cones and craters in the Auckland volcanic field. It erupted from the sea in a series of dramatic explosions around 600 years ago, and is now extinct. It dominates the local seascape and a visit there is like stepping into another world. The island is a public reserve managed by the Department of Conservation and is famed world-wide as a botanical gem.
With the explosive growth of plant life since it erupted from the sea 600-700 years ago there are now more than 200 species of native plants, including 40 species of fern. Many of the plants are unusual hybrids, like the tree-perching epiphytes which grow on the ground and sub-alpine moss cushions thriving at sea level. The island's predominantly pohutukawa forest is the largest in the country.
Rangitoto is a taonga (treasure) with many special places. National reserves like Rangitoto protect natural, historic and cultural heritage for all New Zealanders, and help safeguard the biodiversity of the planet. The tangata whenua of Rangitoto have a spiritual, cultural and historical relationship with their taonga.
Rangitoto's name is derived from the phrase "Te Rangi i totongia a Tamatekapua" - the day the blood of Tamatekapua was shed. Tamatekapua was chief of the Arawa canoe which arrived about 1350 and was engaged in (and lost) a major battle with the Tainui at Islington Bay.
Barrys passion for photography is evident in his photographs. Long exposures and a lot of patience are required to capture scenes in the early hours of the morning and under moonlight revealing the fresh and vibrant beauty of our world. Barrys time in the Pacific Islands has given him a close affinity with the many different moods of nature. He especially feels at one with the quietness and the promise each new days dawning brings.
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