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Beech forest, Eglinton Valley, Fiordland National Park

Fiordland, a land renowned for its phenomenal rainfall and majestic glacially-carved mountains and valleys, makes up the southwestern part of the South Island. The world-famous Milford Track is located here, winding its way from Milford to Lake Te Anau through a variety of environments from perpetually-wet lowland rainforest through to high alpine tussock fields, delighting visitors with scenery on a truly grand scale.

The beech forest featured in this photograph is in the upper Eglinton Valley near Lake Gunn, near the departure point for the famous Routeburn Track. The place I chose to photograph had all the stages of life in this forest contained in it, from young beech 'poles' to towering giant adult trees, through to wind-torn branches and their eventual decay into rotting, moss-covered logs on which grew the seedlings of a new generation of trees.

The mosses in particular were most impressive, forming a dense mat on rotting logs and on the ground -- I often sank knee-deep into this mattress-like layer as I walked through the forest in search of places to photograph. In fact I hardly ever saw the true forest floor at all, these mosses were so adundant.


Beech forest after snow, Chile

Forest floor, Eglinton Valley

Swamp forest, Ship Creek

Beech forest, Fiordland

Ñirre in autumn, Argentina