A gorgeous pop of pink to get you through the midweek slump.
The Atacama Desert in northern Chile is one of the driest places in the world, but after several spells of heavy rain this year, the normally barren landscape has been transformed into a vibrant floral wonderland.
For the past couple of weeks, the desert has been covered in a stunning 600-mile sea of hundreds of millions of wild pink flowers.
Photo credit: EPA/Mario Ruiz
According to
National Geographic, the phenomenon, known as
desierto florido (desert in bloom) happens once every five to seven years, and corresponds with the warming of the Pacific Ocean off the coast of northern Chile.
The Atacama region normally gets less than 4 millimeters of rain per year, but unusually strong rains in March of this year saw seven years’ worth of rain fall overnight.
To put that into perspective, Ireland gets somewhere between 750mm and 1,400mm of rain every year.
Photo credit: EPA/Mario Ruiz
Sadly, the rainfall caused major flooding that killed at least seven people in the area.
If you’d like to experience this extraordinary sight first-hand, you’ll have to
win the lotto move fast. The flowers are expected to disappear this month.
Return flights from Dublin to Santiago start at
around €1,200. From Santiago, it’s a two hour flight to Calama, the nearest airport to Atacama.
Below, we've gathered some of the best photos from around the web of the area as it currently looks. #WishWeWereThere
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Photo credit: La Mula.Pe. (Originally published here)[/caption]
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Photo credit: EFE/Mario Ruiz[/caption]
Photo credit: Carlos Aguilar, AFP
Photo credit: Carlos Aguilar, AFP
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Photo credit: EFE/Mario Ruiz[/caption]
Photo via Twitter/toroco_vallenar