Nidibou Photography

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National Garden | Athens

It was a cold morning with cloudy skies. We have been already deep in the second lockdown, due to COVID-19 and I desperately wanted to go outside with my camera.

So, I woke up at 05:30am, had my breakfast, filled my thermos with hot espresso, sent my sms for “exercise”, grabbed my camera bag and got out of my home.

The plan was to photograph everything that could caught my eye in the National Garden of Athens.

The National Garden (formerly the Royal Garden) is a public park of 0.15 square km (38 acres) in the center of Athens. The Garden was completed in 1840 and it was renamed to National Garden in 1920s. It is open to the public from sunrise to sunset.

It is just a 10 minutes walk from my house, so I was in front of the south entrance (behind Zappeion) at the first light of the day.

The empty street behind Zappeion

Mount Lycabettus | Surreal tree

After a while, the sky was crystal clear blue and I was entering the garden.

Green parrots have conquered the center of Athens

Even though this is not the biggest garden you have ever seen (it is not even the biggest in Athens), there are still some nice spots for photography.

Wet and lonely

The autumn colours lasted long enough this year

The famous little lake in the heart of the National Garden with its picturesque wooden bridge

Sun struggles to penetrate through the trees

The moon above the pair of trees

Spider web in front of the bicolour leaves

Leaves upon a bench

A leaf on the edge of a strange shaped branch

Part of the central lake of National Garden | Statue of Ioannis Kapodistrias (first governor of the new Greek nation), created by sculptor Ioannis Kossos in 1866

Stone patterns and leaves

Goldfishes park pond

In front of the giants | Trunks and light green foliage

Goldfishes swimming

Admiring the first Governor statue

Underwater leaves and sun rays and mud

TO CONSULT THE RULES OF COMPOSITION BEFORE MAKING A PICTURE IS A LITTLE LIKE CONSULTING THE LAW OF GRAVITATION BEFORE GOING FOR A WALK | ELLEN VON UNWERTH