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Sorry somewhat misled by your post! On second thoughts is it the Nahe at Bingen? Looking at the railway layout it could be between Bingen Hbf (further away on the right and a total misnomer) and Bingen (Stadt) way out of shot on the left..

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Orient XI, congratulations - you're right!

 

It's Bingerbrueck, now part of the town Bingen, where the small river Nahe flows into the greater Rhine.

Bingerbrück - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Here another view taken from a passenger's ship on the Rhine:

 

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And perhaps you know about the famous "Mice Tower", a customs tower built in 1298 on an island in the Rhine which lies in Bingerbrück's limits:

 

 

M8.2, 'lux 75, 2011.

This area is one of the most romantic parts of the Rhine-county with lots of middle-aged castles, ruins and towns. Enjoy it with some good friends and a elder bottle of better Rhinewine!

 

Again it's your turn Orient XI.

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Where is this unique landscape to be found?

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As Idaho is still too far east and Oregon too far south, is it the south-eastern part of Washington State perhaps?

I noticed a photo taken by outdoor-photographer Walter Bibikow similar to yours from the Wheat Fields, Palouse Region, Washington State.

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Yes you are perfectly correct. The photograph of this unique landscape was taken from a small Cessna flying north from Latah Wa. towards Lake Coeur d'Alene. The land is made up from dunes made from dust blown up the Columbia valley and mixed with lava from the Cascade volcanoes. The sides of the dunes are steep and it is often terrifying for a city dweller to sit in a combine harvester as they descend the dunes, you fell that at any moment you may topple through the windscreen and fall into the reaping blades below. It gives a whole new meaning to the term "Grim Reaper":D.

Congratulations once again — I look forward to seeing your entry.

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