Reclaimed By Nature
A community dedicated to examples of nature fighting back and reclaiming aspects of human civilization. Be it whole buildings, simple structures, or smaller items.
Rules:
-
Post only content that features nature overcoming man and man-made objects. Original content is especially welcomed.
-
Please use mainstream webhosting sites (Imgur, Flickr, Youtube, Vimeo etc).
-
Please try and give credit to the original photographer and Original Poster when possible.
-
Reposts are fine, as not everyone spends all day on Lemmy. However, please do a quick search and make sure the content hasn't been posted recently.
-
Be civil and hold yourself to the site wide etiquette. No bullying or harassing. If you have a problem with a post or comment, please report it, tick the 'other' box and cite the rule break in the comment section or send a modmail.
view the rest of the comments
This is an awesome picture. For some reason my brain can’t accept it without more context. I have no idea if OP would be able to answer. But is it off season? Do they clean it during on season? Is it abandoned? If none of those do people ride it like that?
I'm from Sweden but I haven't been there specifically, I pieced together from some sparse clues that there are times when hell literally freezes over on top of Åreskutan and life just seizes to happen for a while.
I found it on Wikimedia.
https://twistedsifter.com/2014/11/snow-covered-ski-lift-in-sweden/ Photographer: Anders Carlsson
The ice on the lift would have happened fairly quickly. Sometimes overnight if the humidity is high enough.
In English it’s called Rime Ice which happens as fog (or a cloud in this case) freezes as it condenses on cold surfaces.
It’s really beautiful, but a huge pain in the ass for lift operators since each chair will need a significant amount of beating to clean it off.
I’ve never seen it this thick in person, but I’ve been to the tops of lots of mountains where it’s pretty common.