What is your favorite (or call it "greatest") bioregion in the world?

brianlux
brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,664
We currently have an on-going "greatest country in the world themed" thread.  Why not make it real!?  After all, countries are really just artificial designations on land with (mostly) lines drawn on maps that are otherwise invisible (unless you want to build a wall around your country or use a river marks the edge).

So what is your favorite bioregion?  The boreal forest of we we call "British Columbia"? The arid deserts of the Great Basin? The Savanna grasslands of what is referred to as northern "Australia"?

One of my favorites is Cascadia, a name given what is referred to as "a great green land on the northeast Pacific Rim.  It looks like this:


And you can learn about it here:


"It's a sad and beautiful world"
-Roberto Benigni

«1345

Comments

  • cincybearcat
    cincybearcat Posts: 16,836
    Is this where we cut down every bio-region for all of their faults?

    hippiemom = goodness
  • HughFreakingDillon
    HughFreakingDillon Winnipeg Posts: 39,485
    Is this where we cut down every bio-region for all of their faults?

    nah, just the southern parts of the nearctic ecozone
    By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.




  • CM189191
    CM189191 Posts: 6,927
    Is this where we cut down every bio-region for all of their faults?

    Pun intended?


  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,664
    edited April 2019
    Is this where we cut down every bio-region for all of their faults?

    LOL!

    But seriously, that's the beauty of bio-regions-- none of them as they naturally occur have intrinsic faults.  Except the Pacific Rim which have numerous faults and can really shake up some shit now and then!  But that's OK too because even earthquake faults are without malfeasance.  Bio-regions maintain a balance.  (Humans have upset those balances, but that's only a temporary situation but, this isn't about all that.)

    Sooooo, Cincy, assuming you haven't spent you entire life in an urban environment, are there any bio-regions you appreciate above others?  Would you rather spend time deep in a forest, explore the canyons of an arid desert region, turn over rocks at low tide in tide-pools in search of madreporite echinoderms, suntan in the nude in Antarctica?
    Post edited by brianlux on
    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni

  • Smellyman
    Smellyman Asia Posts: 4,528
    Palawan was the most beautiful place I have ever visited.  Jungles, mangroves, reefs, plant and bird life.




  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,664
    Smellyman said:
    Palawan was the most beautiful place I have ever visited.  Jungles, mangroves, reefs, plant and bird life.




    Looks like paradise!
    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni

  • HughFreakingDillon
    HughFreakingDillon Winnipeg Posts: 39,485
    brianlux said:
    Smellyman said:
    Palawan was the most beautiful place I have ever visited.  Jungles, mangroves, reefs, plant and bird life.




    Looks like paradise!
    took the words right out of my mouth brian!
    By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.




  • lastexitlondon
    lastexitlondon Posts: 14,904
    brianlux said:
    Smellyman said:
    Palawan was the most beautiful place I have ever visited.  Jungles, mangroves, reefs, plant and bird life.




    Looks like paradise!
    Its one of the  best looking places in the  world  by the looks of it.


    this song is meant to be called i got shit,itshould be called i got shit tickets-hartford 06 -
  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,664
    I'm not sure I would like living in a desert but some of my favorite places to visit have been deserts.  Some favorites...

    Arches National Park:

    Zion National Park:

    Bryce Canyon National Park:





    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni

  • oftenreading
    oftenreading Victoria, BC Posts: 12,856
    I agree, Brian; I love deserts. Love to hike in them, love to just enjoy the stark scenery. 

    But for a wonderful place to live, it’s hard to beat where I live. Green and lush and bursting with life. 
    my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf
  • mcgruff10
    mcgruff10 New Jersey Posts: 29,123
    Smellyman said:
    Palawan was the most beautiful place I have ever visited.  Jungles, mangroves, reefs, plant and bird life.




    Wow that's absolutely gorgeous!
    I think my favorite bioregion is the Rocky Mountains: Alberta, Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and Colorado.  I'd head out there any day of the week.
    I'll ride the wave where it takes me......
  • JPPJ84
    JPPJ84 Hamburg, Germany Posts: 3,464
    Lofoten Islands in Norway and Karijini NP in Western Australia!

  • HughFreakingDillon
    HughFreakingDillon Winnipeg Posts: 39,485
    when I see pics as gorgeous and colorful as the waterfall one above, it always looks somewhat "fake" or touched up to me. Is that the case, or is the photographer just that good at capturing the lighting just perfectly?
    By The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.




  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,664
    JPPJ84 said:
    Lofoten Islands in Norway and Karijini NP in Western Australia!

    Beautiful!
    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni

  • JPPJ84
    JPPJ84 Hamburg, Germany Posts: 3,464
    when I see pics as gorgeous and colorful as the waterfall one above, it always looks somewhat "fake" or touched up to me. Is that the case, or is the photographer just that good at capturing the lighting just perfectly?
    Of course it’s been a bit photoshopped but Karijini is breathtakingly beautiful and the colors are so vivid!
    talking about colours... Landmannalaugar in Iceland looks like a pastel picture!

  • Jason P
    Jason P Posts: 19,306
    Abundant farming regions are overlooked because they lack the scenery 
    Be Excellent To Each Other
    Party On, Dudes!
  • Smellyman
    Smellyman Asia Posts: 4,528
    edited April 2019
    I think what we will find in this thread and hope it keeps going, nature in it's pristine condition is mind numbly beautiful. 

    Wayag indonesia.



    and I am biased,but I could spend my life traveling the entire western US and Canada
    Post edited by Smellyman on
  • JPPJ84
    JPPJ84 Hamburg, Germany Posts: 3,464
    Smellyman said:
    I think what we will find in this thread and hope it keeps going, nature in it's pristine condition is mind numbly beautiful. 

    Wayag indonesia.



    Wow!!
  • mcgruff10
    mcgruff10 New Jersey Posts: 29,123
    I agree, Brian; I love deserts. Love to hike in them, love to just enjoy the stark scenery. 

    But for a wonderful place to live, it’s hard to beat where I live. Green and lush and bursting with life. 
    I absolutely love the desert!  I have some great memories in Joshua tree np, Arizona and New Mexico. I do have to spend some more time in Vancouver, place looks amazing.  What is the name of the hippy colony in the middle off nowhere. 
    I'll ride the wave where it takes me......
  • brianlux
    brianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 43,664
    Even places close to urban areas can be beautiful.  This is from a walk we took spring before last on the east side of Folsom Reservoir with lupine in full bloom, not far from the sprawling greater Sacramento metropolis:


    "It's a sad and beautiful world"
    -Roberto Benigni