Talking about something “typically Dutch”… the tulip.

And yet, it isn’t Dutch at all.

Tulips (Tulipa) originated in Central Asia and were cultivated extensively in the Ottoman Empire before arriving in the Netherlands in the 16th century. What followed became one of the most remarkable chapters in economic history: Tulip Mania. At its peak in the 1630s, individual bulbs were traded for the price of a house. Speculation drove values higher and higher—until the market collapsed almost overnight, marking what is often considered the first recorded economic bubble.

And still, the story didn’t end there.

The Netherlands refined, cultivated, and exported the tulip on a massive scale, becoming the world’s largest producer. In later years, even the Vatican received Dutch tulips as a gesture of gratitude and diplomacy—a symbol of beauty, grown from a complicated past.

This image captures a ‘Negrita’ or ‘Purple Prince’ tulip, standing among many others. Shot with a Canon 5D Mark IV and Canon 100–400mm, the telephoto allowed for selective focus—isolating form, color, and structure within the layered field of blooms.

A single flower, surrounded by history. Not just botanical, but economic, cultural, and human.

What we often see as simple beauty is rarely simple at all.

#Tulip #Tulipa #DutchTulips #NegritaTulip #PurplePrince #FlowerPhotography #NaturePhotography #Canon5DMarkIV #Canon100400 #Telephoto #SelectiveFocus #DepthOfField #Botany #PlantScience #FloralBeauty #SpringColors #Netherlands #DutchHistory #TulipMania #EconomicHistory #FirstBubble #NatureAndCulture #HiddenStories #VisualNarrative #PhotographyStory #NatureLovers #GardenPhotography #ByMaikeldeBakker #MaikeldeBakkerPhotography #throughthewonderinglens #Wonderinglens #thewonderinglens
Heavy snow, slow motion lives

Heavy snow has a way of forcing the world to slow down. Yesterday that became very tangible when I watched a van and a car carefully pass each other on an icy, snow-covered road. Weather alerts were active across the Netherlands, and for many people this meant stress, risk, and necessary travel. For me, it meant something else: a rare chance to observe how landscapes and human behavior change under extreme conditions.

This image was taken handheld with the Canon 5D Mark IV and the Sigma 100–400mm, pushed hard at ISO 12800 and f/29 to hold enough depth and structure in the chaos of falling snow. In conditions like this, photography becomes a balance between physics and patience. Snow scatters light, reduces contrast, and confuses autofocus systems — your camera doesn’t “see” snow as atmosphere, only as obstacles. You have to work with that limitation, not against it.

What fascinated me most wasn’t just the snow itself, but the rare phenomenon that accompanied the storm: lightning during snowfall. Cold air aloft combined with moisture-rich clouds from the relatively warm sea can create enough vertical energy for electrical discharge — something we still rarely witness here.

If you don’t have to be on the road during days like these: grab your camera instead. But walk carefully. Nature may slow us down, yet it always gives something back to those who stop and look.

#snowstorm #winterphotography #extremeweather #documentaryphotography
#climateobservation #weatherwatching #snowinthenetherlands #handheldphotography
#canon5dmarkiv #sigma100400 #highisophotography #lowvisibility
#roadsafety #slowdown #natureandhumans #weatherpatterns
#scienceinnature #observationalphotography #landscapeinwinter
#tilburg #013tilburg #dutchwinter #stormchasing #lightninginsnow
#environmentalawareness #pixelfedphotography
#ByMaikeldeBakker #MaikeldeBakkerPhotography #wonderinglens
#ThroughTheWonderingLens