The valley
The valleys in the Dolomites region of Italy are numerous and numerous, but Funes is undoubtedly one of the most eye-catching. When I accidentally saw a photo here from a travel magazine, I was amazed, and my heart was longing for this trip to the hinterland of the Alps.
We set off from the small town of Ortisei, all the way along the valley, the water is clear, the leaves are full of streams, and the autumn is boundless. The rustic houses are scattered in the landscape. When we walked to the best shooting point on the tripod, we were immediately dragged into the beautiful picture. In front of the valley, the valleys are undulating, the grass is green, the traffic is sloppy, the cattle and the sheep are at ease; the jagged Geisler peaks in the distance, with a kind of unruly and fierce, under the blue sky, as the ancient coagulation waves; the valley waist At the most beautiful point, the Santa Maddalena spire church built in 1394 stands on a hillside like a beautiful navel. It was at sunset that the mid-autumn trees in the valley lined up in yellow and green, and in the setting sun, they radiated a warm and charming light. Silently, all the people were muted by such a scene. Or stand or sit, watching the last light slowly slide over the church spire, and finally dye the distant Geisler peak reddish, the valley clear. Along the path along the church, you can reach the highest point of the peaks of the Geisler mountains. But unfortunately, time is limited, you can't overlook this paradise from a higher place, and you can't have a drink on the large terrace of the wooden restaurant next to the legendary Geisler Peak, in the opposite view of the world's most photographed mountain. It is.