Gerd Ludwigのインスタグラム(gerdludwig) - 4月11日 01時01分
Visitors take full advantage of photo opportunities from this year’s “super bloom” outside the limits of Antelope Valley Poppy Reserve, even posing beneath power lines.
This year’s wildflower bloom has drawn thousands to natural parks and preserves throughout Southern California—many just to take in the stunning sights and others who use the phenomenon as a subject in photographs. Inside the parks, however, people are being urged to stay on the pre-made paths when visiting, as poppies and other wildflowers can be easily destroyed by human activity.
@ナショナルジオグラフィック @National Geographic Travel @thephotosociety #California #superbloom #AntelopeValley #poppies
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wandering.robin
Y’all are wild. It says in his caption “even off the reserve” which means there is no trail to stay on in these people’s case. I understand that it’s wrong regardless but sheesh he’s not telling people to do this. And yes it’s still wrong to do it anywhere but ffs learn to read.
summiewummie
this is sad. nature is all we have. all humans do is destroy true beauty for personal gain. completely oblivious to the harm being caused. #dontdoomthebloom
trauci
Interesting that you would write the post reminding people to stay on the path but then post a photo that appears they aren’t. ??♀️
forestgreen303
Apparently this post shows these people don’t care to stomp onto a Poppy flowers, they there for themselves with NO CARE!
shona_leax
@natgeo would tell you to stay on the path. They aren't about destroying nature for a single picture.
itsnoneofyourbusinesseleanor
For f*cks sake, can you just stop ruining nature for everyone so that you can get a stupid photo?
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