
Winter in Europe through the eyes of drones
• Winter in Europe through the eyes of drones
Drones offer a look at the coldest time of the year, and snow-white with the unusual side.

Snowy bridge in Germany. (Photo by Julian Stratenschulte):

Northern Albania in winter. (Photo Florion Goga | Reuters):

Autumn and winter in eastern Germany. October 30, 2016 and January 17, 2017

Forest and lake in East Germany. November 12, 2016 and January 17, 2017.

The ice floes on the Danube in Budapest. (Photo: Attila Kisbenedek):

Swans winter the Danube in Belgrade, Serbia. (Photo by Andrej Isakovic):

A picture taken from the ice of the Danube in Budapest. (Photo: Attila Kisbenedek):

The field in East Germany in the spring and winter, 16 May 2016 and 17 January 2017. Click to see the changes. (Photo by Patrick Pleu):

Winter Olympic park after snowfall in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Michael Dalder | Reuters):

a snowy landscape in the area of the Harz Mountains, Germany. (Photo by Julian Stratenschulte):

The leisure boat in ice. (Photo by Julian Stratenschulte):

Winter forest near the Harz Mountains, Germany. (Photo by Julian Stratenschulte):

Winter road. East Germany, 16 January 2017. (Photo by Patrick Pleul):

The ice floes off the coast of the Oder River. Oder forms part of the boundary between Poland and Germany. (Photo by Patrick Pleul):

Parthenon Temple on the Acropolis, Greece. (Photo by Antonis Nikolopoulos | Eurokinissi | Reuters):

A flock of birds over the winter lake in Bucharest, Romania. (Photo by Daniel Mihailescu):

The power of nature. A local hunter found the fox, frozen in the ice on the river Danube. Animal fell into the river before the frost and could not get out. When struck cold, ice bound the Danube, and the fox was in captivity. To remove it, the locals had to cut a block of an electric saw with the animal. Hunter Franz Stele, who found the poor fox, said that he saw and other frozen in the ice of animals, including deer and wild boars. (Photo by Johannes Stehle):

Marienburg - perhaps the most famous and most beautiful castle in Lower Saxony. His charm is partly due to the fact that he never intended to be a defensive structure. It was built in the middle of the XIX century, when the castle lost military importance. (Photo by Julian Stratenschulte):
